Title: Qualitative methods
1Qualitative methods
- Caroline Green
- November 2007
2Quantitative and qualitative data
- What are the differences?
- Quantitative numerical data
- Qualitative - non-numerical data
-
3Qualitative data
- Non-numerical data, mostly in the form of
meanings - what people say
- pictorial e.g. graffiti
- content of stories, songs,myths
- uncategorized, unedited recordings of
behaviour -
4Qualitative approaches
- Protocol analysis (Ericcson and Simon
(1980,1983,1993)) - Grounded theory (Glaser and Strauss(1967),
Strauss and Corbin(1990)) - Action research (Lewin(1946))
- Ethnography
- Feminist research
- Discourse analysis
5Protocol Analysis
- Verbal protocols recordings of what people say
when carrying out a task under instructions to
verbalise all thoughts. - Used most in problem solving tasks to provide
extra information about strategies etc
6Grounded theory
- Advocates research with no prior commitment to
expectations. - Theory emerges from repeated sampling of
qualitative data from local circumstances in
their social context
7Action Research
- Used when social change envisaged social change
effected consequent changes observed. - Tied to applied work context is participative
8Ethnography
- Used more in anthropology sociology
- Concentrates on field research of and within the
lifestyle of the social group of interest. - Strongly associated with intensive participant
observation
9Feminist research
- Exposure of male bias in theory and research
- Aims at ultimately, a world free of male, or
perhaps any oppression. - Research tends to be action oriented with
interventions aimed at some measure of increased
awareness
10Discourse analysis
- Discourse constructs our social world
- Looks at what people do with their talk and the
social actions performed with speech
11Positions in the qualitative-quantitative debate
- No qualitative data
- Qualitative data convert to quantitative data
- Qualitative data can support quantitative
findings - Qualitative and quantitative methods equal but
different - Quantitative methods only
12Contrasting principles of the 2 approaches
- Hypothetico-deductive method
- vs
- Inductive analysis
13Contrasting principles of the 2 approaches
14Contrasting principles of the 2 approaches
- Positivism
- vs
- Constructivism relativism
15Contrasting principles of the 2 approaches
- Knowledge facts gained from the world
- Vs
- Knowledge social construction
16Contrasting principles of the 2 approaches
- Significance testing
- Vs
- Data gathering and analysis not separated
17Contrasting principles of the 2 approaches
- Research on subjects population sample
- Vs
- Research with participants
18Contrasting principles of the 2 approaches
- Structure and control elimination of extraneous
variables - Vs
- Flexibility look for all possible contributory
information
19Contrasting principles of the 2 approaches
- Numbers
- vs
- Human meanings in social contexts
20Contrasting principles of the 2 approaches
- Laboratory or controlled environment
- vs
- Naturalistic
21Contrasting principles of the 2 approaches
- Reliability tests
- vs
- Reliability no overall qualitative agreement
22Contrasting principles of the 2 approaches
- Validity tests
- vs
- Validity set of criteria
23Criteria for achieving validity in qualitative
research
- Trustworthiness and genuineness
- Triangulation
- Respondent validation
- Peer agreement
- Independent audit
- Internal coherence
- Reflexivity
24Practical issues in qualitative research
- Can be very time consuming to conduct
- Can take more of participants time compared to
an experimental approach - Analysis can be resource intensive
25Bibliography
- Richardson, J.T.E. (Ed).(1996) Handbook of
Qualitative Research Methods for Psychology and
the Social Sciences. Leicester BPS Books - McQueen, R. and Knussen, C. (2006) Introduction
to Research Methods and Statistics in Psychology.
Harlow Prentice Hall. Chapter 12. - Eysenck, M. (Ed.) (1998). Psychology an
integrated approach. Harlow Addison Wesley
Longman. Chapter 21.
26Web reference
- http//jan.ucc.nau.edu/mid/edr725/class/index.htm
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