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NIRSA External Review

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Title: NIRSA External Review Author: rkitchin Last modified by: rclarke Created Date: 5/6/2003 1:24:59 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: NIRSA External Review


1
Data Generation, Complexity and Synthesis
Prof. Rob Kitchin, NIRSA, NUI Maynooth
2
Introduction
  • Generating data is about creating empirical
    evidence
  • It is not a neutral, passive exercise
  • It is generation, not collection creation not
    harvesting
  • It is theoretically informed
  • It involves assumptions about the world
    (ontology)
  • It involves assumptions about how the world can
    be validly measured (epistemology)
  • It involves assumptions about what academic
    research is for (ideology)
  • It necessitates a series of informed choices
    about mechanisms to elicit useful data
    (methodology)
  • It is a complicated process
  • It involves synthesis the drawing together of
    lots of data to create an overview a
    theoretically informed, empirically grounded
    story
  • It involves carefully thinking and planning, and
    sound execution it should not be an ad hoc
    process

3
Starting with questions
  • Research is about answering questions
  • There are lots of different types of questions
  • What is A like? What is interacting in the urban
    environment like for disabled people?
  • What does A mean? What do we mean by access for
    all' and barrier free environments'?
  • Is A like B? Are the planning needs of disabled
    people the same as the able-bodied community?
  • Is A different from B? Do planners and disabled
    people agree on how the urban environment should
    be designed?
  • Is A better than B? Is the urban planning for
    disabled people better in Labour council areas
    than Conservative run areas?
  • Are A and B related? Is there a relationship
    between the size of a town and the quality of
    urban planning for disabled people?

4
Starting with questions
  • Does A affect B? Does poor design and low
    accessibility of an environment decrease usage by
    disabled people?
  • Does A cause B? Do disabled people use this area
    more as a direct result of its re-development to
    make it more accessible?
  • Is A located where B is min/max? Are special day
    care centres located in the areas of primary
    need?
  • How are A and B minimised simultaneously? Can we
    maximise the accessibility of the environment
    whilst minimising the expense?
  • Why does A support B? Is a disabled access
    project receiving funding from the state for
    political reasons rather than genuine commitment
    to the access needs of disabled people?

5
Framing questions
  • How we set about answering our questions is not
    as simple as it at first might seem
  • Answering questions is embedded in theoretical
    assumptions and choices
  • Philosophical theory ideology, ontology,
    epistemology
  • The specifics and mechanics of knowledge
    production
  • Positivism, Phenomenology, Marxism, etc.
  • Conceptual theory substantive focus (e.g.,
    governance - coalitions, regimes, regulation,
    actor-networks, etc.)
  • Philosophical and conceptual theory are highly
    inter-related
  • The rejection of theory e.g., collect data and
    let it speak for itself - is in itself a
    theoretical position empiricism

6
Framing questions
  • Positivism
  • Positivists argue that by carefully and
  • objectively collecting data regarding social
  • phenomena, we can determine laws
  • to predict and explain human behaviour in
  • terms of cause and effect.
  •  
  • Positivists reject normative and metaphysical
    questions that cannot be measured scientifically.
  •  
  •          Positivism differs from empiricism
    because it requires propositions to be verified
    (logical positivism) or hypotheses falsified
    (critical rationalism) rather than just simply
    presenting findings.
  •  
  •          Sources of primary data are
    closed-question questionnaires and surveys
  •  

Empiricism   Empiricism refers to the school of
thought where facts are believed to speak for
themselves and require little theoretical
explanation.   Empiricists hold that science
should only be concerned with objects in the
world and seek factual content about them.
  Normative questions concerning the values and
intentions of people are excluded from study as
it is claimed we cannot scientifically measure
them.   A source of primary data is
closed-question questionnaires  
7
Framing questions
  • Phenomenology
  • Phenomenology rejects the scientific,
    quantitative approach of positivism.
  • Instead phenomenology suggests that we
  • concentrate upon understanding rather than
  • explaining the world.
  • The goal of phenomenology is to reconstruct the
  • worlds of individuals, their actions, and the
  • meaning of the phenomena in those worlds to
  • understand individual behaviour, without drawing
  • upon supposed theories.
  •  
  • A source of primary data are in-depth interviews
    with people who have experienced the phenomena in
    question  

Marxism Marxists suggest that society is
structured so as to perpetuate the production of
capital. Marxists are concerned with
investigation of the political and economic
structures that underlie and reproduce capitalist
modes of production and consumption.
           To do this Marxists suggest that we
need to consider how conditions might be under
different social conditions to highlight how
society operates.            A source of primary
data is observation but also re-examines
secondary data sources with analysis consisting
of determining the dialectical (how one affects
the other) relationship between societal
structures and individuals
8
Framing questions
  • Thinking through philosophy
  • Naturalist/Anti-naturalist?
  • Value-free/Action-orientated?
  • Objective/Situated?
  • Truth or truths?
  • Realist/Anti-realist?
  • Structure/agency?

9
Answering questions
  • Questions are answered through a four-stage
    process
  • data generation (e.g. interviews, questionnaires,
    surveys)
  • data analysis (e.g., statistical test, discourse
    analysis, etc)
  • data synthesis (pulling and weaving together
    different analyses)
  • data interpretation (what does the analysis tell
    you)
  • These constitute methodology a set of ordered
    techniques
  • Methodology must match ontological and
    epistemological assumptions
  • It might be necessary to employ more than one
    methodology to provide a sufficient answer to a
    question

10
Example study of poverty
  • Empiricism Facts about poverty would be
    collected and presented for interpretation by the
    reader. (e.g. Indices of poverty - social welfare
    recipient, housing tenure, etc.).
  • Positivism Poverty is explained through testing
    a hypothesis by collecting and scientifically
    testing data related to poverty (e.g.
    statistically testing whether poverty is a
    function of educational attainment).
  • Phenomenology To understand poverty it is
    suggested that we need to reconstruct the world
    of people who are poor (e.g. we need to try and
    see the world through the eyes of a poor people).
    This might be attempted by talking to them about
    their life experiences.
  • Marxism Poverty is explained through the
    examination of how poor people are exploited for
    capital gain (e.g. Examining whether poor people
    are poor because it is in the interests of
    capital to retain unskilled, low wage jobs rather
    than distribute fully corporate profit).

11
Answering questions validly
  • All good studies aim to be valid and reliable
  • Validity concerns the soundness, legitimacy and
    relevance of a research theory and its
    investigation
  • Validity relating to theory concerns the
    integrity of the theoretical constructs and ideas
    that support and provide the foundations for
    empirical research
  • Validity relating to practice concern the
    soundness of the research strategies used and the
    integrity of the conclusions that can be drawn
    from a study

12
Practical validity
  • Construct and analytical validity both relate to
    the methodological integrity of a study
  • Construct validity concerns whether data
    generation techniques are sound, measuring the
    phenomenon they are supposed to without
    introducing error or bias they are telling you
    about what you want to know
  • Analytical validity concerns whether the correct
    method of data analysis has been chosen, leading
    to results that represent the data truly.
    Clearly if you have chosen the wrong method of
    data analysis then you might end up drawing
    inappropriate conclusions
  • Ecological and internal validity both relate to
    the integrity of the conclusions drawn from a
    study
  • Ecological validity is concerned with the
    inferences that can be made from the results of a
    study
  • Internal validity concerns whether the results
    from a study can be interpreted in different
    ways can different conclusions be drawn from the
    same results?

13
Answering questions reliably
  • Reliability refers to repeatability or
    consistency of a finding
  • Golledge and Stimson (1997) describe three kinds
    of reliability
  • (1) quixotic reliability, where a single method
    of observation continually yields an unvarying
    measurement
  • (2) diachronic reliability, which refers to the
    stability of an observation through time and
  • (3) synchronic reliability, which refers to the
    similarity of observations within the same time
    period.

14
Answering questions ethically
  • Research ethics are concerned with the extent to
    which the researcher is ethically and morally
    responsible to her/his participants, the research
    sponsors, the general public, and her/his own
    beliefs
  • professional approach to research and focuses
    upon issues such as privacy, confidentiality, and
    anonymity
  • Researcher should weigh carefully the potential
    benefits of a project against the negative costs
    to individual participants

15
Data synthesis
  • Pulling and weaving together different analyses
  • Different methods open up different aspects of a
    phenomenon methods are oligoptical in nature
    (partial views from selective locations) rather
    than panoptical (providing a full view from a
    gods-eye position)
  • Different methods can offer results that are
    often paradoxical, contradictory, puzzling
  • Is this because the phenomena are paradoxical,
    complex and messy or because of methodological
    issues?
  • In synthesising analyses we need to think
    carefully about how data were generated and the
    validity in processing in different ways
  • We need to think through any puzzling results and
    what paradoxes and contradictions might mean

16
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18
Data interpretation
  • What does the synthesis tell you?
  • What insights have you gained?
  • What is the answer to your question?
  • relationships
  • themes
  • Effected by external and internal validity
  • What are the potential effects of your
    interpretation?
  • on theory
  • on practice and policy
  • What lessons can be learnt from your research
    praxis?
  • how might methodology be tweaked, etc?
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