Points to Ponder
 Provide a ‘working’ definition for qualitative field research
 Give an example of a research topic appropriate for field research
 How might those being studied modify their behavior if they knew they
were being studied?
 Address the strengths and weaknesses of qualitative field research.
 Identify the ethical issues that emerge in qualitative field research.
Qualitative Research
The distinction between qualitative
and quantitative research is not
precise. Most qualitative work has
some form of quantitative analysis
involved, and visa-versa.
Goals of Social Research that are primarily
answered using qualitative strategies
 Giving voice
 Interpreting cultural and historical phenomena
– Due to the fact that there are often many aspects
involved in historical research, and because many of the
materials are not specifically quantitative in nature
 Advancing new theories
– “Inductive logic”; it goes from a specific case to a general
case
– qualitative cases are often more in-depth, and give a
fuller picture of phenomena than quantitative cases
Qualitative Field Research
 Produces observations not easily reduced to
numbers
 Includes a range of data collection methods
including field notes, one-to-one and focus group
interviews, as well as some forms of content
analysis and historical analysis
 Well suited for studying social process; How does
this come about?
Categories
Naturalistic Observation (Ethnography)
Ethnomethodology
Surveys
Case Study
Focus Groups
Field Experiments
Participatory Action Research
Challenge of Low-Constraint Research
 Usually involves careful observation of participants in
their natural surroundings
– Can be very difficult to observe behavior in natural
surroundings
– Often we are not sure what behaviors are important until
after we have observed for a while
– Without the controls of the laboratory, participants are free
to do what they want to do, and not what we are hoping to
observe
Qualitative Research Paradigms
Naturalists Studies or Ethnography
Ethnomethodology
Grounded Theory
Ethnography
 A research method whereby the researcher
emerges her/himself in a setting of interest for the
purpose of gathering detailed data about the group
(culture, symbols, processes, membership
boundaries, etc.)
 Studying social life in its natural setting
Ethnography
 Primary data gathering tools: field notes and depth interviews
 Membership Roles:
– Complete Membership (Complete Participant) – assume functional
roles and are not necessarily known as researcher; most closely
aligned emotionally with others in group; aligned ideologically with
group; closest to “going native”
– Active Membership – assume functional roles but maintain escapes
for maintaining perspective on setting (debrief with colleagues)
– Peripheral Membership – does not assume functional roles but known
to group members
 Complete Observer (non-membership role)
Ethnography
Distance from ideology of group
(perhaps) allows you to better frame and
explain ideas
Known and Unknown observers
– Ethics
– Data collection considerations
Ethnomethodology
 Relies on techniques for breaking ‘taken for granted
rules’ to better understand the invisible set of norms
and values that surround and guide our daily
interactions
 Babbie’s public trash example
 Research subjects themselves are not so much the
focal point of investigation as are the practices and
processes that enable and constrain their daily lives
Focus Groups
Establishing the Group
– Small group
– Coordination Issues
– Paying your subjects
– Finding a place
– Need at least two research team members;
facilitation and note-taking
– Purpose: RICH DATA not generalizability
Focus Groups
Advantages
– Real-life data in a social setting
– Flexibility
– Speedy results
– Low in cost
– Group Format generates discussion
Focus Group
 Disadvantages
– Groupthink
– Less control than one-to-one interview
– Data more difficult to analyze
– Moderators need to be skilled
– Differences between groups can be troublesome
– Difficult to coordinate
– Reliability issues
– Recording process
– Probing and Follow-Up Questions
– INTERVIEWER TRAINING IS CRITICAL
Participation Action Research (PAR)
 Explicitly and implicitly, PAR has a goal of meeting community
needs and/or giving back to the communities of research
 With PAR, the communities of research are included as “experts”
in deciding the focal point of research (problem conceptualization);
and investigation strategy (research design) to help the community.
 Research is conceived as a tool of community empowerment.
– You as researcher are guide.
– This is a substantial departure from traditional models where research
expert objectifies subjects of research, extracts data, and leaves
without further contact.
Qualitative Interviewing
Good technique for researchers less
interested in “variables” and more interested
in how individuals subjectively see the
world and make sense of their lives
Who are you going to talk to?
Theoretical Sampling
– Barney Glaser and Anselm Strauss; 1967; The
Discovery of Grounded Theory
 The data collection, coding and analysis processes
occur ongoing providing us direction for who
needs to be talked to next… and perhaps new
types of questions that need to be asked
When do you quit interviewing?
 Theoretical Saturation
 You quit interviewing when you have reached “theoretical saturation”
– exhausted the variation in data patterns emerging; no new themes
are being offered by added interviews
 Example: Midwifery Research; Rationale for choosing homebirth
– Natural life event, Control and Empowerment, Safety, Care
availability, Quality of Care
– You are presenting the set of of ideas, patterns, practices which
were communicated in interviews (# that talked about each does
not matter). However, if only 1 person out of 30 mentions
something, it would not e included in the set of “themes” in the
analysis.
Doing the Interview
 Introduction and Building Rapport
– explain purpose again
– verbal confidentiality assurance (and go over form)
– no right or wrong answers…
– o.k. to ask questions and clarify
– ask permission to record
 Your Questions
– If flexible format… list of things to be sure to talk about
– To get rich data: PROBE AND FOLLOW
 You and the Interview: attending, listening, thinking, taking
notes, taping
– note taking – clarify something; to keep you focused
– silence and patience – balanced with keeping the interview going
– redirect long-winded tangents back to your line of focus
After the Interview: Writing up the
Interview and…
 Summary and notes of main points
 Verbatim transcripts (don’t let them pile up)
 Ideas – tentative pieces of analysis
 Methodological difficulties
 Personal emotional experience
– Responding to interviewee requests; emotional issues?
Ethical Issues
 Use of unobtrusive measures (including archival records) raises
ethical issues
– Participants are not given the right to consent
– Some of the archival records contain sensitive data
 Researchers need to show the necessity for unobtrusive measures
and safeguards to protect the rights of the participants
– Must have IRB approval
Evaluating the Data
 The data from low-constraint research is a rich set of
information
– Data usually needs to be coded to provide simplification
and organization
– The analyses will depend on the questions and the level
of data produced after coding
 Must be cautious in interpreting data from low-constraint
research
Limitations
 Poor representativeness
 Poor replicability
 Limitations of the observer
 Going Beyond the Data

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Chapter 10 data collection strategies in Pr1

  • 1. Points to Ponder  Provide a ‘working’ definition for qualitative field research  Give an example of a research topic appropriate for field research  How might those being studied modify their behavior if they knew they were being studied?  Address the strengths and weaknesses of qualitative field research.  Identify the ethical issues that emerge in qualitative field research.
  • 3. The distinction between qualitative and quantitative research is not precise. Most qualitative work has some form of quantitative analysis involved, and visa-versa.
  • 4. Goals of Social Research that are primarily answered using qualitative strategies  Giving voice  Interpreting cultural and historical phenomena – Due to the fact that there are often many aspects involved in historical research, and because many of the materials are not specifically quantitative in nature  Advancing new theories – “Inductive logic”; it goes from a specific case to a general case – qualitative cases are often more in-depth, and give a fuller picture of phenomena than quantitative cases
  • 5. Qualitative Field Research  Produces observations not easily reduced to numbers  Includes a range of data collection methods including field notes, one-to-one and focus group interviews, as well as some forms of content analysis and historical analysis  Well suited for studying social process; How does this come about?
  • 6. Categories Naturalistic Observation (Ethnography) Ethnomethodology Surveys Case Study Focus Groups Field Experiments Participatory Action Research
  • 7. Challenge of Low-Constraint Research  Usually involves careful observation of participants in their natural surroundings – Can be very difficult to observe behavior in natural surroundings – Often we are not sure what behaviors are important until after we have observed for a while – Without the controls of the laboratory, participants are free to do what they want to do, and not what we are hoping to observe
  • 8. Qualitative Research Paradigms Naturalists Studies or Ethnography Ethnomethodology Grounded Theory
  • 9. Ethnography  A research method whereby the researcher emerges her/himself in a setting of interest for the purpose of gathering detailed data about the group (culture, symbols, processes, membership boundaries, etc.)  Studying social life in its natural setting
  • 10. Ethnography  Primary data gathering tools: field notes and depth interviews  Membership Roles: – Complete Membership (Complete Participant) – assume functional roles and are not necessarily known as researcher; most closely aligned emotionally with others in group; aligned ideologically with group; closest to “going native” – Active Membership – assume functional roles but maintain escapes for maintaining perspective on setting (debrief with colleagues) – Peripheral Membership – does not assume functional roles but known to group members  Complete Observer (non-membership role)
  • 11. Ethnography Distance from ideology of group (perhaps) allows you to better frame and explain ideas Known and Unknown observers – Ethics – Data collection considerations
  • 12. Ethnomethodology  Relies on techniques for breaking ‘taken for granted rules’ to better understand the invisible set of norms and values that surround and guide our daily interactions  Babbie’s public trash example  Research subjects themselves are not so much the focal point of investigation as are the practices and processes that enable and constrain their daily lives
  • 13. Focus Groups Establishing the Group – Small group – Coordination Issues – Paying your subjects – Finding a place – Need at least two research team members; facilitation and note-taking – Purpose: RICH DATA not generalizability
  • 14. Focus Groups Advantages – Real-life data in a social setting – Flexibility – Speedy results – Low in cost – Group Format generates discussion
  • 15. Focus Group  Disadvantages – Groupthink – Less control than one-to-one interview – Data more difficult to analyze – Moderators need to be skilled – Differences between groups can be troublesome – Difficult to coordinate – Reliability issues – Recording process – Probing and Follow-Up Questions – INTERVIEWER TRAINING IS CRITICAL
  • 16. Participation Action Research (PAR)  Explicitly and implicitly, PAR has a goal of meeting community needs and/or giving back to the communities of research  With PAR, the communities of research are included as “experts” in deciding the focal point of research (problem conceptualization); and investigation strategy (research design) to help the community.  Research is conceived as a tool of community empowerment. – You as researcher are guide. – This is a substantial departure from traditional models where research expert objectifies subjects of research, extracts data, and leaves without further contact.
  • 17. Qualitative Interviewing Good technique for researchers less interested in “variables” and more interested in how individuals subjectively see the world and make sense of their lives
  • 18. Who are you going to talk to? Theoretical Sampling – Barney Glaser and Anselm Strauss; 1967; The Discovery of Grounded Theory  The data collection, coding and analysis processes occur ongoing providing us direction for who needs to be talked to next… and perhaps new types of questions that need to be asked
  • 19. When do you quit interviewing?  Theoretical Saturation  You quit interviewing when you have reached “theoretical saturation” – exhausted the variation in data patterns emerging; no new themes are being offered by added interviews  Example: Midwifery Research; Rationale for choosing homebirth – Natural life event, Control and Empowerment, Safety, Care availability, Quality of Care – You are presenting the set of of ideas, patterns, practices which were communicated in interviews (# that talked about each does not matter). However, if only 1 person out of 30 mentions something, it would not e included in the set of “themes” in the analysis.
  • 20. Doing the Interview  Introduction and Building Rapport – explain purpose again – verbal confidentiality assurance (and go over form) – no right or wrong answers… – o.k. to ask questions and clarify – ask permission to record  Your Questions – If flexible format… list of things to be sure to talk about – To get rich data: PROBE AND FOLLOW  You and the Interview: attending, listening, thinking, taking notes, taping – note taking – clarify something; to keep you focused – silence and patience – balanced with keeping the interview going – redirect long-winded tangents back to your line of focus
  • 21. After the Interview: Writing up the Interview and…  Summary and notes of main points  Verbatim transcripts (don’t let them pile up)  Ideas – tentative pieces of analysis  Methodological difficulties  Personal emotional experience – Responding to interviewee requests; emotional issues?
  • 22. Ethical Issues  Use of unobtrusive measures (including archival records) raises ethical issues – Participants are not given the right to consent – Some of the archival records contain sensitive data  Researchers need to show the necessity for unobtrusive measures and safeguards to protect the rights of the participants – Must have IRB approval
  • 23. Evaluating the Data  The data from low-constraint research is a rich set of information – Data usually needs to be coded to provide simplification and organization – The analyses will depend on the questions and the level of data produced after coding  Must be cautious in interpreting data from low-constraint research
  • 24. Limitations  Poor representativeness  Poor replicability  Limitations of the observer  Going Beyond the Data