Title: Methodologies
1Methodologies
2Review
- Problem Statement
- Problem
- Originality
- Direction
- Significance
- Literature Review Theoretical Framework
- Logical Structure
- Research Questions
- Population Sampling
3Methodologies
- Specific systems/ tools/ approaches to gathering
and analyzing data. - Structure of the research
- Builds on and draws from previous sections
problem statement, research questions, literature
review, theoretical framework - Influences analysis
- How to choose an appropriate method?
4Methodologies Options
- Quantitative
- Numbers, statistics
- Qualitative
- Words, narrative
- Mixed Methods
- Both Quantitative and Qualitative
- Triangulation
- More than one method, may be two of the same type
5Methods Options
Quantitative Qualitative Mixed
Predetermined Instrument-based questions Performance data, attitude data, observational data, and census data Statistical analysis Emerging Open-ended questions Interview data, observation data, document data, and audiovisual data Text and image analysis Predetermined and emerging Open- and close-ended questions Multiple forms of data Statistical and textual analysis
-Creswell, J.W.
6Methodologies Options
- Quantitative
- Surveys
- Structured Interviews
- Questionnaires
- Bibliometrics
- Transaction Log Analysis
- Qualitative
- Case Studies
- No Contact
- Examining Documents
- Citation Analysis
- Diaries
- One-to-one
- Unstructured Interviews
- Think-Aloud
- Ethnographic methods
- Observations
- Group Interaction
- Focus Groups
- Delphi Method
- Concept Mapping
7Quantitative Bibliometrics
- Quantitative study of literature
- Patterns of publishing within a field or body of
literature - Quantitative study of information associated with
published works authorship, publishers,
citations
8Quantitative Transaction Log Analysis
- Quantitative study of user behavior as exhibited
through computer logs - Domains (.gov, .edu, .com)
- Hits
- Paths followed
- Time spent (searching, viewing, downloading)
- Errors
- Applications used
9Qualitative Case Study
- In-depth review of a single situation program,
process, phenomenon
10Qualitative Examining Documents
- Systematic review of text/ images content
analysis - Classifies textual or visual material
- Uses analytical constructs or rules to draw
inferences about recurring aspects of text.
11Types of Documents?
- Policy Manuals
- Digital reference transcripts
- Comment/ complaint cards
- Job ads
- Published Literature
- Blogs, listserv postings, etc.
- Open-ended responses
12Evaluation Research
- Published
- Books
- Journal articles
- Conference proceedings
- Theses/dissertations
- Web
- ALA. ACRL. CIP Notes
- CLIR. www.clir.org/pubs/pubs.html
- ARL
- Other
- Peer Review
- Unpublished
- Internal reports
- Local use only reports
13Qualitative Analysis Examining Documents
- Focus on
- Word choice
- Word frequency
- Word sequence
- Intensity of feeling/ expression (how to
measure?) - Key word in context
- Typology of concepts/ categories?
14Example
- Regional Accreditation Organizations Treatment
of Information Literacy
15Qualitative Study Citation Analysis
- Systematic review of bibliographies/ references
within published literature. - Focus on
- Authorship
- Form of publication (periodical, monograph, etc.)
- Class of material (primary, secondary, etc.)
- Language
- Subject
- Currency
16Citation Analysis
- What can citations tell us?
- How scholarly is the cited literature?
- How current are the citations?
- How research-oriented is it?
- How interdisciplinary is it?
- How writes the literature? How collaborative?
- Where does the literature appear?
17Citation Analysis
- Growth of literature on a subject
- Dispersion of writings on a subject across form
and journals - Obsolescence of literature
- Scholarly networks who cites whom?
- Publishing productivity
18Citation Analysis
- Advantages
- Shows what is cited
- Does not involve interaction with subjects
- Profiles a literature
- Shows changes in a field over time?
- Disadvantages
- How complete is the work from which citations are
drawn? - How accurate are citations?
- Are all materials cited?
- Choosing easy to find/ retrieve items over better
quality? - How easily retrievable are works?
19Citation Analysis Issues
- From where are citations drawn? How far can you
generalize findings? - Does citation reflect use?
- Self-citations and/ or gratuitous citations
- Half-life
- Impact factor (to what extent are recent articles
in journals cited?) - Calculated annually divide the number of current
citations a journal receives to articles
published in the previous two years by the number
of articles published in those same years
20Web Citations
- How prestigious are different online sources-
ejournals, open access, etc. - References to and from a Web site
- Retrievability
21Qualitative Study Diaries
- Participants record activities, thoughts,
reactions, etc. daily (weekly, etc.) over a set
period of time. - Blogs- equivalent?
- When to use?
- Issues
- How faithful are participants? How can you help
ensure full participation? - How much guidance to give?
- Too much/ too little detail.
- Advantages and disadvantages?
22Students World
- Nicole Henning/ Photo Diary Study (MIT)
- 16 students tracked their information seeking
behavior for one week. - Used diaries and screen shots to record their
thoughts and actions
23Qualitative Study Interviews
- Attempt to gain in-depth knowledge on a topic
- In a less structured format, interviewer may act
more as facilitator, asking open ended questions
and drawing the participant out. - Structured, semi-structured, or unstructured?
- Format- in person, telephone, email?
24Interviews
- Types of questions
- Experience/ behavior
- Feeling
- Opinion/ value
- Knowledge
- Sensory
- Demographic
25Interviews
- Issues
- Logistics
- Building trust
- Delicate questions/ situations- ensuring honesty
- Accuracy of transcripts
- Advantages and disadvantages?
- Appropriate uses?
26Qualitative Study Think-Aloud
- Asks respondent to verbalize their thoughts while
performing an assigned activity or task - Attempt to gain more insight into thought
processes - Correct for mistakes/ assumptions of observer
27Think Aloud
- Requires participants that are highly verbal in
nature - Adding this layer of feedback may affect their
cognitive processes and behaviors- more
self-concious. - How to transcribe while observing? Accuracy?
- Appropriate use of clarifying questions?
- Appropriate uses?
28Qualitative Study Ethnographic
- Tools developed in the field of cultural
anthropology - Attempt to better understand people/ behavior by
observing it within natural setting - Can study observable material items, individual
behaviors and performances, or ideas - Requires careful attention to detail within
cultural context
29Ethnographic
- Possible Tools
- Observation in context
- Key informant interviewing
- Drawing pictures
- Taking photos
- Using maps to track activities
- Videotaping
30Ethnographic Examples
- Susan Gibbons and Nancy Fried Foster of
University of Rochester Understanding Users to
Develop Better Library Services (ACRL/NEC 2006) - User-centered studies of library use
- Mapping Diaries
- Photo Elicitation Interviews
31Photo Elicitation
32Mapping Diaries
33Sweeping Studies
- A type of spatial data analysis
- Useful for mapping out the physical spaces of a
library and investigating how people use those
spaces
34Qualitative Study Observation
- Attempt to understand activities/ behaviors
- Obtrusive or Unobtrusive
- Role of the observer
- Complete observer
- Observer and participant
- Participant with individual being observed
35Qualitative Study Focus Groups
- Attempt to learn about the attitudes/ beliefs/
feelings of groups and how those influence
behavior - Why groups? One individuals comments can
trigger important responses from others. - Can explore large ranges of topics
36Focus Groups
- Issues
- How structured?
- Importance of facilitators role- how well
trained? - Building trust
- Finding reliable representative volunteers
- Ensuring accuracy of transcription- audio/ video
tape? Outside observation? - Facilities
37Qualitative Study Delphi Method
- A systematic interactive forecasting method.
- Involves interviewing/ surveying of experts
within a field- generally 9 to 99 - Experts are provided with hypotheses, trigger
statements, scenarios, etc. and asked to respond. - First round responses are shared with the group
anonymously, so participants can revise earlier
statements, react to responses.
38Delphi Method
- After several rounds, hypotheses may be refined,
group may reach consensus - Facilitator reviews responses to each round- can
filter out irrelevant content, choose
presentation of information, ask questions. - Advantages and disadvantages?
39Qualitative Study Concept Mapping
- Any process that represents ideas in pictures of
maps. - A method of organizing the ideas and thoughts of
a group to form a common framework - Can be used to integrate ideas from less
structured activities such as brainstorming
40Concept Mapping
- Typical steps
- Focus determine desired outcomes/ questions to
be addressed - Generating ideas Brainstorm, use trigger
statements, ask questions - Analysis Sort ideas into large sets
- Unstructured idea sorting ask individuals to
sort ideas into groups and label - Sorting by stakeholders organize ideas by group
that generated those ideas - Ratings assign values to ideas (importance,
feasibility, etc.)
41Concept Mapping
- Map analysis generate map based on idea sorting
(could use statistical software, or do by hand) - Interpret map Share with other groups to obtain
understanding
42Example IR and IL