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Qualitative Research

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The fact that her son was murdered on Father's day has increased resonance. ... He was in the bar only because it was father's day. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Qualitative Research


1
Qualitative Research
  • Involved with
  • Meaning
  • Understanding
  • Interpretation
  • Does not involve statistics

2
Skills required to carry out Qualitative research
  • Theoretical and critical skills
  • Social sensitivity and empathy
  • Good Social and interactive skills
  • Good powers of observation

3
  • Quantitative comes from the positivist tradition
  • Qualitative comes from an alternative philosophy
    involving social construction and phenomenology
  • Qualitative is becoming more popular within the
    social/behavioural sciences

4
Sources of Data
  • Interviews unstructured, semi-structured
  • Diaries
  • Visual data such as art works graffiti
    adverts TV programmes, photographs
  • Written data books, comics, newspapers, adverts,
    essays etc. Can be modern or old!

5
Comparison between Qualitative and Quantitative
research
Qualitative Quantitative Soft Hard Flexible
Fixed Subjective Objective Political Val
ue free Exploratory Confirmatory Grounded Ab
stract
6
The 3 broad strands of qualitative research
Epistemology Methodology Methods
Strand 1 Reliability validity
Epistemology Empiricism
Discovery of valid Representations using induction
Content analysis Protocol analysis
Strand 2 Generativity and grounding
Contextualism understanding the context of
ideas
How do people interpret their world?
Grounded theory
Interpretive analysis and deconstructing texts
Strand 3 Discursive and reflexive
Thematic analysis and Discourse analysis
Constructionism we make our world
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9
Semiotics
  • The study of signs encompasses all forms of
    communication
  • What underlies the ability of signs to carry
    certain meanings in society
  • 2 components of a sign signifier and signified

10
Signs
  • Linguisitic signs
  • Explaining meaning
  • Visual signs

11
The 3 levels of meaning in semiotics
  • 1. The sign itself and the way it conveys meaning
  • 2. The referential system in which the sign is
    organised, and the context within which the
    process of signification takes place
  • 3. Cultural system or systems of knowledge within
    which the codes and signs operate

12
Roland Barthes
  • Signs denote and connote extra associations
  • E.g. Rolls Royce car
  • Barthes refers to this as convergence of signs
    and their connotations to shape a particular
    message.
  • Myth

13
Six procedures for creating connotation in
photographs
  • 1. Trick effects to create myth
  • 2. Poses and positioning
  • 3. Objects included in the photograph
  • 4. Photogenic technique
  • 5. Aestheticism
  • 6. Syntax

14
Semiotic analysis of adverts
  • Adverts make use of signs and myths
  • They have multiple connotations
  • Social myths are transferred to the adverts
    product

15
Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis or IPA
  • IPA is a qualitative method advanced by Jonathon
    Smith.
  • It has its roots in phenomenological psychology
    and symbolic interactionism
  • It stresses the life world of the participants
  • Role for both context and language.
  • Explores participants views of the world

16
Problems with IPA??
  • Findings in IPA are the product of and
    complicated by the researchers perspective -
    subjectivity.
  • But, the researchers own conceptions are
    necessary to make sense of those personal worlds
    through their interpretations.
  • This is accounted for by the REFLEXIVE section in
    any qualitative report.

17
Thematic analysis
  • Looks at verbal data usually transcribed from
    tapes made during interview sessions.
  • The researcher reads and re-reads the transcripts
    until they are thoroughly immersed in the data.
  • The researcher begins to pick out sections of
    data, and relate them to themes.

18
Thematic analysis
  • Themes are then merged and deleted to come up
    with more overall categories.
  • The researcher should then look for the main
    points emerging from the data. And, also any
    gaps that they can see.
  • Finally, the researcher should develop an
    explanatory framework to account for the various
    themes.

19
Thematic analysis
  • This is part of an interview with a mother, about
    the murder of her son in a pub.
  • my daughter was out at the time. Having a drink
    with her husband. Not knowing that (S her son)
    was in the same pub. It was Fathers day. I was
    minding the children.

20
Thematic interpretation
  • Focus on personal feelings and resonances of the
    language.
  • The fact that her son was murdered on Fathers
    day has increased resonance. Her son was a
    father, and she was his mother.
  • What other themes did you come up with?

21
Discourse analysis DA
  • Language is not neutral
  • Discourse constructs social life. It is not
    always the words used that convey the meaning,
    but other factors such as pauses.
  • Discourse is manufactured out of pre-existing
    linguistic practices.

22
Discourse analysis.
  • DA is concerned with action orientation or
    function orientation of discourse
  • Functions of discourse include blame, making
    excuses.
  • All discourse is occasioned.
  • Discourse analysis looks at the words
    themselves, and their function.

23
Discourse analysis
  • Difficult to teach people how to do discourse
    analysis, it is better to learn by doing.
  • It involves abstracting yourself from the words
    themselves, and coming at them from a different
    slant completely.
  • It is a move from seeing language as
    representative of psychological realities, to a
    focus on the ways in which accounts are
    constructed and to the functions they perform.

24
Discourse analysis
  • This is the transcript again try to think about
    the function that the language is serving
  • my daughter was out at the time. Having a drink
    with her husband. Not knowing that (her son) was
    in the same bar. It was Fathers day. I was
    minding the children.

25
Discourse analysis interpretation
  • The son was in the bar on the day he was killed.
    However, he was not always in the bar i.e. he
    didnt have a problem with alcohol, he did not
    habitually drink a lot. He was in the bar only
    because it was fathers day.
  • So the mother is trying to protect her sons
    image through her use of language.

26
Focus groups
  • Popular and widely used method in qualitative
    research.
  • Involves an informal small group discussion on a
    particular topic, or set of issues.
  • Based around a set of questions the focus group
    schedule.
  • Researcher acts as a moderator, and poses the
    questions.

27
Focus Groups
  • Data is taped and transcribed.
  • The data is then analysed, most commonly by
    thematic analysis.
  • Can involve single groups, or several groups, or
    one group on several occasions.
  • May also involve some kind of video clip or
    activity, like a rating exercise for a product.

28
When not to use Focus Groups
  • If the researcher wants to categorise or compare
    types of individuals.
  • If the researcher is looking for a specific
    answer
  • Not really appropriate to use content analysis
  • Small unrepresentative groups, so generalisation
    is not advised.

29
Practical Problems with Focus Groups
  • Can be difficult to recruit and organise
    appropriate people.
  • Moderating the group is a difficult skill.
  • The large amount of data is time consuming and
    difficult to analyse e.g. ideally, interactions
    between group members should also be analysed.

30
Running Focus Group Research
  • Prepare materials e.g. the focus group schedule.
  • Recruit your participants.
  • Select a venue.
  • Run the session.
  • Transcribe the data.
  • Data analysis.

31
Writing up a Qualitative Report.
  • Abstract summary of what was found.
  • Introduction background and overview of
    methodology.
  • Method number of participants, ages, gender,
    ethical issues and any other relevant
    information.

32
  • Analysis NOT a results section.
  • Account of how quotes were selected e.g.
    generation of themes through repeated reading of
    key sections and discussion with colleagues.
  • Include embedded quotes and interpretation and
    justification to summarise a theme.

33
  • Discussion findings should be related to
    material in the introduction.
  • Reflexive section this is where the researcher
    states their position in relation to the
    analysis. They can say why they put a particular
    interpretation on something, or why they left
    certain things out. It is where the hidden is
    made visible.

34
  • References as usual
  • Appendices as usual
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