Title: SWP22RES RESEARCH FOR SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE A
1SWP22RES RESEARCH FOR SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE A
- MARTIN RYAN
- LECTURE TWO - Quantitative and Qualitative
Approaches to Research
2HYPOTHETICO - DEDUCTIVE / QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH
REPORT(KELLEHEAR, 1993)
- 1. LITERATURE REVIEW
- 2. THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
- 3. METHODS
- 4. RESULTS
- 5. DISCUSSION
3HYPOTHETICO - DEDUCTIVE / QUANTITATIVE
RATIONALE FOR RESEARCH
1. READ FIRST - LITERATURE REVIEW2. HAVE AN
IDEA - THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
4- 3. GO OUT IN THE WORLD TO TEST IT. HOW IS THIS
TO BE DONE? - METHODS4. WHAT WAS FOUND OUT?
- RESULTS
5- 5. WERE YOU RIGHT IN THE FIRST PLACE? -
DISCUSSION
6The hypothetico-deductive design is
called that because it tests hypotheses
(hypothetico-) and it does this by testing a
general theory in the form of a hypothesis
(prediction for testing) on a particular sample
of cases.A hypothesis can be defined as a
theory-based prediction of the expected results
of research or an educated guess
7- It moves therefore, from the general (theory) to
the particular (deductive) sample of a study. - Deductive reasoning is forming a theory,
making a deduction from the theory and testing
this deduction or hypothesis against reality.
8PHASES OF QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH PROJECT (CHERRY,
2000)
- 1) SELECTING A MANAGEABLE RESEARCH PROJECT
- 2) CONDUCTING THE LITERATURE REVIEW
- 3) FORMULATING THE HYPOTHESIS OR A TESTABLE
RESEARCH QUESTION
9- 4) SELECTING A RESEARCH METHOD
- 5) CHOOSING THE POPULATION OR A SAMPLE
- 6) CHOOSING SCALES OR MEASURES TO TEST YOUR
HYPOTHESIS
10- 7) DATA GATHERING
- 8) ANALYZING THE DATA
- 9) DRAWING CONCLUSIONS FROM THE ANALYSIS
- (From CHERRY, A. (2000) A RESEARCH PRIMER FOR THE
HELPING PROFESSIONS METHODS, STATISTICS AND
WRITING, BROOKS/COLE, BELMONT, CA.)
11- But not everyone thinks that this is the way to
do social research. Some think that - - this approach imposes a set of meanings on
social phenomena (fine, if wanting to
generalise from sample, but if primarily
looking at meaning and experience this may
not be appropriate) - - excludes from study ideas which are not part
of original theoretical framework
12 - very much has an outsider's view of social
phenomena (etic) rather than emic (in-group
or insiders meanings) (Kellehear, 1993)
13ETHNOGRAPHIC-INDUCTIVE / QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
REPORT
- 1. LITERATURE REVIEW
- 2. BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY
- 3. ETHNOGRAPHIC DESCRIPTION
- 4. DISCUSSION
14ETHNOGRAPHIC-INDUCTIVE / QUALITATIVE RATIONALE
FOR RESEARCH
- 1. READ FIRST - LITERATURE REVIEW
- 2. EXPERIENCE, PARTICIPATE, OBSERVE, LISTEN,
RECORD - ETHNOGRAPHIC DESCRIPTION
15- 3. DESCRIBE THE THEORETICAL IMPLICATIONS OF
WHAT YOU SAW / HEARD - DISCUSSION - 4. EXPLAIN WHERE YOU WERE AND HOW YOU WENT
ABOUT THE JOB OF UNDERSTANDING - BACKGROUND
TO THE STUDY
16Qualitative Research Approach
- The Ethnographic-Inductive Design (Naturalistic,
interpretive approach) - - attempts to understand the common sense
meanings and experiences of the participants of
a social system - - adopts an -emic viewpoint (insider view)
- - researcher moves from a particular case (the
research study) to the general social theory
which is inductive thought (from the specific
to the general)
17PHASES OF A QUALITATIVE RESEARCH PROJECT (CHERRY,
2000)
- 1) IDENTIFYING YOUR AREA OF INVESTIGATION
- 2) SELECTING A QUALITATIVE SAMPLE
- 3) COLLECTING QUALITATIVE DATA
18- 4) ANALYZING QUALITATIVE DATA
- 5) WRITING ABOUT THEORY THAT EMERGES FROM THE
DATA