Title: Analysis Pointers
1Analysis Pointers
- INFO 272. Qualitative Research Methods
- 22 April 2008
2Admin
- Office Hours today 1230 to 130 (this week
only)
3Outline
- Weak and Strong Analysis
- Fallacies of Interpretation
4Weak analysis
- Analytical findings should not simply reflect the
initial constructs/concepts from your interview
guide - Your analysis is not an exercise in verification
5Example Voices of the Poor
- A massive, multi-national World Bank, qualitative
interview project - Interview guide emphasizes well-being and
findings suggest that again and again people
distinguished between well-being and wealth.
6Strong analysis Close attention to language
- What distinctive terms does the interviewee
introduce? - How do they divide up the social (and material)
world into elements? - What relationship is posited between these
elements?
7Strong analysis Typologies and Taxonomies
- Gospel
- Worship
- Praise (faster beat)
- Hi-life
- Hip-life
- Francophone
- Gbeho
- Hip-hop (American)
- Rap (American)
- RB (American)
- Kuul, Kulz, Cool
- Celine Dion
- Westlife(?)
- Old School, Old Skuul, Old Skull
- Phil Collins
- Also contains Hi-life (but not hip-life)
- acapella
- Instrumental
- Country Music
- Reggae
- Regular
- Bob Marley
- Lovers Rock (i.e. Celine Dion, I will always
love you, reggae style)
from interviews about music in Accra, Ghana
8Strong analysis mapping out the diversity of
instances
- What are all the different forms of Internet scam
stories success stories protection stories
victimization stories - What are all the different instances of
technology in a museum and their different
properties?
9Strong analysis how questions
- Not what is the relationship between two
variables? causation or correlation questions - Instead How does this system work? process
questions
10Strong analysis checking saying against doing
- What people say is often not what they do
- Even if you dont carry out observation you can
relate an interviewees concrete examples in
interviews to their statements about general
attitudes, opinions
11Fallacies of Interpretation
- The fallacy of the missing middle
- Internet Scammers Robin Hood or Common
Criminal? - Suggesting a dichotomy between two terms that are
not mutually exclusive or collectively exhaustive
Boyce, Chap. 18, Bauer and Gaskell
12Fallacies of Interpretation
- The adversarial fallacy
- That among two sides in a conflict, one is
innocent and the other guilty (or truthful and
fallacious) - Triangulation of multiple perspectives is not for
the purpose of establishing an external truth or
for taking sides
Boyce, Chap. 18, Bauer and Gaskell
13Fallacies of Interpretation
- Imputing motive and (in general) mind reading
- You cant definitively read motive from observed
behavior - You only know what peoples intentions are when
they tell you (and even this is imperfect)
14Fallacies of Interpretation
- The fallacy of disproportionate evidence
- Available evidence is uneven
- The State generates more documentation than
ordinary people. - What perspectives are missing from your data?
Boyce, Chap. 18, Bauer and Gaskell
15Final Word
- Stay close to your data!
- Read and re-read your transcripts, fieldnotes,
and any other data! - Dont forget to code!