Qualitative Research Methods
Qualitative Research Methods
Qualitative Research Methods
January, 2012
Qualitative Research
3
Types of Qualitative Research Designs
• I. Case Study
The Case Study
– “… a case study is an exploration of a ‘bounded system’ …
over time through detailed, in-depth data collection involving
multiple sources of information rich in context. This bounded
system is bounded by time and place, and it is the case being
studied – a program, an event, an activity, or individuals”
• Case study methods involve systematically gathering
enough information about a particular person, social
setting, event, or group to permit the researcher to
effectively understand how it operates or functions.
• The case study is not actually a data-gathering
technique, but a methodological approach that
incorporates a number of data-gathering measures
Case Study
• Case studies may focus on an individual, a group, or an entire
community and may utilize a number of data technologies
such as life histories, documents, oral histories, in-depth
interviews, and participant observation
• Extremely rich, detailed, and in-depth information
characterize the type of information gathered in a case study
• In contrast, the often extensive large-scale survey research
data may seem somewhat superficial in nature
• Focus on what can be learned from the individual case
• A ‘case’ may be simple or complex; eg.
– Single child
– Class of children
Case Study
• A case study is an empirical inquiry that
– Investigates a contemporary phenomenon within its real-life
context, especially when
– the boundaries between phenomenon and context are not cleraly
evident
• When to use a Case Study?
– Many more variables of interest than data points
– Relies of multiple sources of evidence
– Benefits from prior theoretic propositions, guiding data collection
and analysis.
– In answering ”how” and ”why” questions
Unit of Analysis
• What is the ”case”?
– An individual?
– A decision?
– A program?
• Relates to research questions and proposition
– Without clear propositions, one might be tempted to cover
“everything”.
– Non-favoring research questions – too vague or too numerous
• Different units of analysis requires different research
design and data collection strategy.
Types of case study
• Researchers have different purposes for studying cases.
Case studies can be classified into three different types:
intrinsic, instrumental, and collective
• Intrinsic
– Undertaken when a researcher wants to better understand a
particular case
– The case itself is of interest because of its uniqueness or
ordinariness
– The role of the researcher is not to understand or test abstract
theory or to develop new theoretical explanations; instead, the
intention is to better understand intrinsic aspects of the particular
child, patient, criminal, organization, or whatever the case may be
Types of Case Study
• Instrumental case study
– A particular case is studied to provide insight into an issue or
to refine a theory
– Instrumental case studies often are investigated in depth, and
all aspects and activities are detailed, but not simply to
elaborate the case
• Collective case study
– A number of cases are studied jointly in order to investigate a
phenomenon (instrumental case study extended to several
cases)
– allow better understanding or perhaps enhanced the ability
to theorize about a broader context
Case Study Designs
• Single vs. Multiple case
– Single case appropriate in certain conditions
– Multiple case design better in general
• Embedded vs. Holistic
– Holistic = one unit of analysis
– Emdedded = several units of analysis
Single-case Design
• Five rationales
1. Critical case: clear set of propositions
2. Extreme/unique case
3. Representative/typical case
4. Revelatory case
Previously inaccessible phenomena
5. Longitudinal case
Same things at different points in time
Assumes that conditions changes over time
6. As a pilot case for multiple case studies
Not considered as a case study of its own
Case Study
• CASE STUDY DESIGN TYPES
• There are several appropriate designs for case
studies
• These include exploratory, explanatory, and
descriptive cases studies
• THE SCIENTIFIC BENEFIT OF CASE STUDIES
– The scientific benefit of the case study method lies in its
ability to open the way for discoveries
– It can easily serve as the breeding ground for insights
and even hypotheses that may be pursued in
subsequent studies.
Case Study
• CASE STUDIES OF ORGANIZATIONS
– Case studies of organizations may be defined as the systematic
gathering of enough information about a particular organization
to allow the investigator insight into the life of that organization
– This type of study might be fairly general in its scope, offering
approximately equal weight to every aspect of the organization.
• CASE STUDIES OF COMMUNITIES
– A community can be defined as some geographically delineated
unit within a larger society.
– Such a community is small enough to permit considerable
cultural (or sub-cultural) homogeneity, diffuse interactions and
relationships between members, and to produce a social
identification by its members
Qualitative Research Strategies
22
Grounded Theory & Literature Review
• As a general rule, grounded theory researchers
should make sure that they have no preconceived
theoretical ideas before starting the research
• Many people think that this means ignoring the
literature
• But this is not so - the intention is to make sure that
researchers are not constrained by literature when
coding
• Researchers should make sure that they do not
impose concepts on the data – those concepts
should emerge from the data
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Critique of Grounded Theory
• Advantages:
– It has intuitive appeal for novice researchers, since it allows them
to become immersed in the data at a detailed level
– It gets researchers analyzing the data early
– It encourages systematic, detailed analysis of the data and
provides a method for doing so
– It gives researchers ample evidence to back up their claims
– It encourages a constant interplay between data collection and
analysis
– It is especially useful for describing repeated processes e.g. the
communications processes between doctors and patients, or the
communications processes between information systems analysts
and users 24
Critique of Grounded Theory (2)
• Disadvantages:
– First time users can get overwhelmed at the coding level
– Open coding takes a long time
– It can be difficult to ‘scale up’ to larger concepts or
themes
– Because it is a detailed method, it can be difficult to see
the bigger picture
– Tends to produce lower level theories only
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Qualitative Research Strategies
• III. Phenomenology
Phenomenology
The phenomenological (cf Husserl, Heidegger) approach
aims to develop a complete, accurate, clear and articulate
description and understanding of a particular human
experience or experiential moment
It achieves its goal through the use of a special investigator
stance and approach and through specialized methods of
participant selection, solicitation of information, systematic
data treatment, and assembling of interview components
into a final report
• A process of learning and constructing the meaning of human
experience through intensive dialogue with persons who are
living the experience.
• Goal is to understand ‘the lived experience’ of the participant
Phenomenology
• Asks “What is the lived experience” of “What is the
meaning…”
• Researcher’s perspective is bracketed
• Philosophical Orientation
– not a single reality-each individual has his/her own reality
– reality is subjective; the experience is unique to the
individual
• Thus researcher attempts to understand people’s
perceptions , perspectives and understandings of a
particular situation
• What is it like to experience
Phenomenology
• Sampling: purposive
• Data Collection: varies; observation, interactive
interviews, narratives, video-tapes and written
description by participants
• Analysis: Themes related to the phenomenon are
identified
– begins when the first data are collected
– goodness (rigor) of the data can be demonstrated
by examples of the data; often direct quotations
Phenomenology
• RESULTS:
– Theoretical statements responding to the research
question
– Identification of themes which describe the
phenomenon
• Strengths:
– The phenomenological approach provides a rich and
complete description of human experiences and
meanings
Phenomenology
Findings are allowed to emerge, rather than being imposed by an
investigator
Careful techniques are used to keep descriptions as faithful as
possible to the experiential raw data; this is accomplished by
extreme care in moving step by step and in being ever mindful not to
delete from, add to, change, or distort anything originally present in
the initial “meaning units” of the participant transcripts
The investigator attempts to “bracket” presuppositions and biases to
hold them in consciousness through all phases of the research and
minimize their influence on the findings
• Can make some generalizations of what something is like
PREPARATION
• Requires Considerable Preparation & Time
• Researcher must be TRAINED in:
– Observation Techniques
– Interview Techniques
– Use and Choice of Data Collection Methods
• Not the Approach if looking for Quick Results
& Easy answers
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Phenomenology
• Weaknesses:
– The method depends on the articulate skills of the participants who
provide the information; logistical and generalization issues are connected
with this
– The language and terms employed in existential-phenomenological
philosophy and phenomenological inquiry are usually obtuse or difficult
– Conclusions depend on the particular participants chosen for the study. In
its orientation toward a particular time frame or moment, the method may
miss information about broader periods or about the development (time
course) of an experience
– In focusing on a rich description of an experience, the method may miss
information about what led up to that experience, what its outcomes or
consequences might be, and what the concomitants and other factors
associated with the experience are
– There is little interest in conceptualizing the experience or in “explaining” it
Qualitative Research Strategy
• IV. Ethnography
Ethnography
• Rooted in anthropology, i.e. from social and cultural
anthropology: ethnographers spend a significant amount
of time in the field
• Also called participant observation/ naturalistic enquiry
• Ethno = people
• -Graphy = describing something
• Characterized by immersion
• An ethnography is a description and interpretation of a
cultural or social group or system. The research examines
the group’s observable and learned patterns of behavior,
customs, and ways of life
Role of the Participant Observer
• Complete observer
– Behind one-way mirror, invisible role
• Observer as participant
– Known, overt observer
• Participant as observer
– Pseudo-member, research role known
• Complete participant
– Full membership, research role not known
Ethnography
• Data analysis:
– coding,
– transform data into recognizable patterns, themes and link
ideas
– identify patterns and rules of the informant’s culture
– “Emic perspective” - informant’s perspective of reality
– “Etic perspective” - researcher’s perspective of the studied
setting/actions
– Compare “emic”& “etic” perspectives and explore differences
• Disadvantages
– time consuming (at least six months to two years)
– risky in terms of access to the group of people or
organizations
Qualitative Research Strategy
• V. Historiography
Historiography (1)
• What is historical research?
– Historical research or historiography is an examination of elements from
history
– The term history is used synonymously with the word past and, in turn,
refers conceptually to past events of long ago
• From a social science perspective, history is an account of some
past event or a series of events.
• Historiography, then, is a method for discovering, from records
and accounts, what happened during some past period
• Historiography involves far more than the mere retelling of facts
from the past
• It is more than linking together tired old pieces of information
found in diaries, letters, or other documents, important
• Historical research is at once descriptive, factual, and fluid
Historiography (2)
• Historical research, then, involves a process that examines
events or combinations of events in order to uncover
accounts of what happened in the past
• Historical research allows the contemporary researcher to
"slip the bonds of their own time” and descend into the
past
• It is the study of the relationships among issues that have
influenced the past, continue to influence the present, and
will certainly affect the future
• This provides access to a broader understanding of human
behavior and thoughts than would be possible if we were
trapped in the static isolation of our own time
Historiography (3)
• The major impetus in historical research, as with
other data-collection strategies, is the collection of
information and the interpretation or analysis of the
data
• Specifically, historical research is conducted for one
or more reasons: to uncover the unknown; to answer
questions; to seek implications or relationships of
events from the past and their connections with the
present; to assess past activities & accomplishments
of individuals, agencies, or institutions; and to aid
generally in our understanding of human culture
HISTORICAL RESEARCH
• Sources of Data:
– confidential reports, public records, government documents,
newspaper editorials and stories, essays, songs, poetry, folklore,
films, photos, artifacts, and even interviews or questionnaires.
• The historiographer classifies these various data as either
primary sources or secondary sources
• Primary Sources:
– These sources involve the oral or written testimony of
eyewitnesses. They are original artifacts, documents, and items
related to the direct outcome of an event or an experience. They
may include documents, photographs, recordings, diaries,
journals, life histories, drawings, mementos, or other relics.
Historical…
• Secondary Sources:
– Secondary sources involve the oral or written testimony
of people not immediately present at the time of a given
event
• They are documents written or objects created by
others that relate to a specific research question or
area of research interest
• The main purpose of historical research is to better
understand the process of change
Historical…
Sampling:
Documents,
journals,
personal papers, and
person(s) who can provide oral histories
Data Collection:
helpful to review materials from one at a time
interview individuals who will provide oral histories
often an excess of information; establish data collection and
analysis plan(s)
Data Analysis
systematically screen for relevant material
seek to gain insights from individuals providing oral histories
Historical…
• RESULTS:
– may compare the past with the present
– apply insights gained from the past to present situations
– to better understand the process of change
Qualitative Research Strategy
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Action Research
TWO FOLD PURPOSE
Solve Practical Problems for People in Specific Context
Contributes to Science
Cyclical Approach
Observe ( Gather Info, Define & Describe )
Think (Analyze What is happening, Theorize Why )
Act – Plan ( report )
Implement changes
Evaluate
Go back & observe - M&E
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The Action Culture of Inquiry
Power Shared
• Interviews
• Participant observation (field notes)
• Focus Groups
Data collection techniques
• Interview
Interview
• Interview
– Usually, interviewing is defined simply as a conversation with
a purpose
– Specifically, the purpose is to gather information
• The extensive literature on interviewing contains
numerous descriptions of the interviewing process
• In some cases, being a good interviewer is described
as an innate ability or quality possessed by only some
people (and not by others)
• Interviewing, from this perspective, has been described
as an art rather than a skill or a science.
Interviewing
• Purpose of interviews
– Elicit feelings
– Thoughts
– Opinions
– Previous experiences
– The meaning people give to certain events
Interview..
• In other instances, interviewing has been
described as a technical skill you can learn in the
same way you might learn to change a flat tire
• In this case, the interviewer is like a laborer or a
hired hand
• In many sources, interviewing is described as some
sort of face-to-face interaction, although exactly
what distinguishes this type of interaction from
others is often left to the imagination
Interview…
• Research, particularly field research, is sometimes
divided into two separate phases—namely, getting in
and analysis
• Getting in is typically defined as various techniques and
procedures intended to secure access to a setting, its
participants, and knowledge about phenomena and
activities being observed
• getting in means learning the ropes of various skills and
techniques necessary for effective interviewing
• Analysis makes sense of the information accessed during
the getting-in phase.
Interviewing…
• Interviewing, as an "encounter“ or as a "face-to-face
interaction“
• Creative interviewing involves using a set of techniques
to move past the mere words and sentences
exchanged during the interview process. It includes
creating an appropriate climate for informational
exchanges and for mutual disclosures.
• Active interviewing: this interview is not arbitrary or
one-sided. Instead, the interview is viewed as a
dynamic, meaning-making occasion where the actual
circumstance of the meaning construction is important
Types of Interviews
• “The family of qualitative interviews"
– Some sources mention only two—namely, formal and
informal
– Other sources refer to this research process as either
structured or unstructured
• However, at least three major categories may be
identified:
– The standardized (formal or structured) interview,
– the unstandardized (informal or non-directive) interview, and
– the semistandardized (guided-semistructured or focused)
interview.
Probing…
• Probing Questions. Probing questions, or simply
probes, provide interviewers with a way to draw out
more complete stories from subjects. Probes
frequently ask subjects to elaborate on what they
have already answered in response to a given
question
• Several problems arise when constructing interview
questions. Among the more serious ones are
affectively worded questions, double-barreled
questions, and overly complex questions
Questions…
• Affectively Worded Questions:
– arouse in most people some emotional response, usually negative
• The Double-Barreled Question:
– This type of question asks a subject to respond simultaneously to
two issues in a single question
• Complex Questions:
– When researchers ask a long, involved question, the subjects may
not really hear the question in its entirety. Their response, then,
may be only to some small portion of a greater concern woven
into the complex question
– Thus, keeping questions brief and concise allows clear responses
and more effective analysis of the answers
Questions…
• Question Sequencing
– The arrangement or ordering of questions in an
interview may significantly affect the results
– Interviews typically begin with mild, nonthreatening
questions concerning demographic matters
• Interviewer Roles and Rapport
– One dominant theme in the literature on interviewing
centers on the interviewer‘s ability to develop rapport
with an interview subject
The Ten Commandments of Interviewing
• Observation
Participant Observation
• Participant observation
– Gains insight into understanding cultural patterns
to determine what’s necessary and needed in tool
development (complementary to interviews)
Observation
• Purpose of observation
– Describe the setting
– First-hand experience – assists with analysis
– See what is normally taken for granted or not easily
spoken about
– Confirm perceptions of respondents
• Requires training, preparation and discipline
• Develop an observation checklist
Types of observation
• Observer as outsider - unobtrusive
• Participant observation
• Mystery client technique
Sources of observational data
• The setting
• The human and social environment
• Historical information
• Planned activities
• Informal interactions and unplanned activities
• ‘Native’ language
• Nonverbal communication
• Unobtrusive observations
• Documents
• What does not happen
• Oneself
Data collection techniques