Title: Qualitative Data Analysis
1Qualitative Data Analysis
2Quantitative research
- Involves information or data in the form of
numbers - Allows us to measure or to quantify things
- Respondents dont necessarily give numbers as
answers - answers are analysed as numbers - Good example of quantitative research is the
survey
3Quantitative research
- Helps us flesh out the story and develop a deeper
understanding of a topic - Often contrasted to quantitative research
- Together they give us the bigger picture
- Good examples of qualitative research are
face-to-face interviews, focus groups and site
visits
4Surveys Questionnaires
- Think clearly about questions (need to constrain
answers as much as possible) - Make sure results will answer your research
question - Can use Internet for conducting surveys if need
to cover wide geographic reach
5Face-to-face interviews
- Must prepare questions
- Good idea to record your interviews
- Interviews take up time, so plan for an hour or
less (roughly 10 questions) - Stick to your questions, but be flexible if
relevant or interesting issues arise during the
interview
6Focus groups
- Take time to arrange, so prepare in advance (use
an intermediary to help you if you can) - Who will be in your focus group? (e.g. age,
gender) - Size of focus group (8-10 is typical)
- Consider whether or not to have separate focus
groups for different ages or genders (e.g.
discussing sex and sexuality)
7Site visits and observation
- Site visits involve visiting an organization,
community project etc - Consider using a guide
- Observation is when you visit a location and
observe what is going on, drawing your own
conclusions - Both facilitate making your research more
relevant and concrete
8Case studies
- Method of capturing and presenting concrete
details of real or fictional situations in a
structured way - Good for comparative analysis
9Participatory research
- Allows participation of community being
researched in research process (e.g. developing
research question choosing methodology
analysing results) - Good way to ensure research does not simply
reinforce prejudices and presumptions of
researcher - Good for raising awareness in community and
developing appropriate action plans
10Interviews
11Interviews
- Unstructured
- Semi-structured
- Structured
12Interviews
- Establish a rapport
- Treat interviewees with respect
- Think about your appearance
- Think about body language
- Maintain firm eye contact
- Dont Invade their space
13Interviews
- How are you going to record
- Tape recorder
- Pen and paper
- Video recorder
14Questionnaires
15Questionnaires
- Open-ended
- Close-ended
- Combination of both
16Questionnaires
- Open-ended
- Slower to administer
- Harder to record responses
- Does not stifle response
- Answerer can raise new issues
- Answerer feels they can speak their mind
- What does a blank answer mean ????
17Questionnaires
- Close-ended
- Faster to administer
- Easier to record responses
- Answerer can only give predefined answers
- Answerer cannot raise new issues
- Answerer feels constrained
- More likely to answer all questions (box tick)
18Questionnaires
- Self-administered
- Interviewer administered
19Questionnaires
- Keep questions short and simple
- Avoid questions with not
- Avoid questions with bias
- Avoid sensitive questions (ask indirectly)
20Types of Input
- Analysing data from
- Interviews
- Open-ended questions
- Also (approaches you have seen previously)
- Laddering
- Card sorting
- Repertory grids
21Action Research Participatory Action Research
22Action Research versus Participatory Action
Research
- "If you want to know how things really are, just
try to change them"
23Action Research versus Participatory Action
Research
- Difference Or Extension?
- Context Developing world issues Vs Developed
world issues? - What do you need?
24Mind Map
25Conversational Analysis
26Introduction
- Conversation analysis (commonly abbreviated as
CA) is the study of talk in interaction. CA
generally attempts to describe the orderliness,
structure and sequential patterns of interaction,
whether this is institutional (in the school,
doctor's surgery, courts or elsewhere) or casual
conversation.
27MindMap
People Harvey Sacks Emanuel Schegloff
Conversational Analysis
Practical Examples Conversations between
friends Relationship counselling sessions Legal
hearings
Fields Ethnomethodology Discursive
Psychology Qualitative Research
28Ethnography
29Ethnography
- Do you mind if I just hang around here and take
note of what youre doing?
30Ethnography - background
- What is Anthropology?
- It is the comparative study of the physical and
social characteristics of humanity through the
examination of historical and present
geographical distribution, cultural history,
acculturation, and cultural relationships.
31Ethnography - background
- What is Cultural Anthropology?
- It is one of four fields of anthropology which
has developed and promoted "culture" as a
meaningful scientific concept it is also the
branch of anthropology that studies cultural
variation among humans.
32Ethnography
- It is two things
- The fundamental research method of cultural
anthropology. - It is the genre of writing that presents
descriptions of human social phenomena, based on
fieldwork or, the written text produced to
report ethnographic research results.
33Ethnography
- Whilst living among the people, ethnographers
engage in participant observation. - This means that they participate, as much as
possible, in local daily life (everything from
important ceremonies and rituals to ordinary
things like meal preparation and consumption)
while also carefully observing everything they
can about it.
34Ethnography
- Through this, ethnographers seek to gain what is
called an emic perspective, or the native's
point(s) of view without imposing their own
conceptual frameworks. - The emic perspective is quite different from the
etic perspective which is the outsider's view on
local life.
35Ethnography
- Through the participant observation method,
ethnographers record detailed fieldnotes, conduct
interviews based on open-ended questions, and
gather whatever site documents might be available
in the setting as data. - This data is then recorded in the database.
36Ethnomethodology
37Ethnomethodology
- The study of how people use commonsense
understandings to get through everyday life - These understandings shape our assumptions about
social Interactions - In a conversation between two people there are
many things that are understood than are actually
mentioned.
38Ethnomethodology
- What are social problems?
- Damaging conditions resulting in harm to people
or society. - Things are seen, judged, and defined to be
problems, i.e. What people THINK they are.
39Ethnomethodology
- Tacit interpretation culture, teaching,
understanding, experiences. - Explicit Truth misinterpretations,
misunderstanding.
40Ethnomethodology
- Example Girl called Anna, unplanned pregnancy,
21 years old, still in school. - Good or Bad?
41Ethnomethodology
- What if .?
- Anna is an outstanding student, is the sole
heiress to a multi-billion dollar business, has
the full support of her parents, and will be
finished school early into the pregnancy?
42Ethnomethodology
- Anna Anisimova
- Daughter of Russian metals magnate Vassily
Anisimov - Worth 1.3 billion
43Ethnomethodology
- We make assumptions based on our tacit
interpretation of the world around us. - We can apply methods to research in order to
apply a neutral analysis to the subject. - This has been done in HCI to study descriptions
of how the users interact with systems, rather
than what the system needed to do?
44Ethnomethodology (Varieties)
- 1. The organization of practical actions and
practical reasoning. Including - 2. The organization of conversation analysis.
- 3. Talk-in-interaction within institutional or
organizational settings. Identify interactional
structures that are specific to particular
settings. - 4. The study of social activity. The analytic
interest is in how that work is accomplished
within the setting in which it is performed. - 5. The haecceity of work. Just what makes an
activity what it is? E.g. what makes a test a
test, a competition a competition, or a
definition a definition?
45MindMap
46Grounded Theory
47What is Grounded theory?
- "Grounded theory methods are a set of flexible
analytic guidelines that enable researchers to
focus their data collection and to build
inductive middle-range theories through
successive levels of data analysis and conceptual
development" Charmaz, K. (2005)
48What is Grounded theory?
- The phrase "grounded theory" refers to theory
that is developed inductively from a corpus of
data. If done well, this means that the resulting
theory at least fits one dataset perfectly. This
contrasts with theory derived deductively from
grand theory, without the help of data, and which
could therefore turn out to fit no data at all -
Steve Borgatti
49Grounded Theory
- Emphasis on empirical material as basis for
conceptualization. - Gathering reach empirical material from a variety
of sources. - Open data collection
- Recording data systematically
- the emphasis is on exploring the nuances of the
data by constantly asking, 'of what is this an
example?' - Develop dense and grouded concepts and categories
50Example - Data Analysis
- Identify critical instances -highlight key
passages of transcripts. - Open coding - assign passages to categories
(i.e. abstract conceptual labels). Work through
all transcripts and collect numerous illustrative
quotes to saturate categories. - Axial coding - refine initial list of
categories. Delete and amalgamate some. Make
connections between the categories and define
their properties e.g. context, pre-conditions.
These are sub-categories. - Selective coding - identify a core category and
themes from which theory will derive.
51Research Design
- Five components of research design
- A study's questions
- Its propositions, if any
- Its unit(s) of analysis
- The logic linking the data to the propositions
- The criteria for interpreting the findings
52Strengths and Weaknesses
- Suitable for diagrammatic representation?
- Complex terminology.
- Time-consuming, requires concentration but can
adapt a quick-and-dirty version. - Reductionist - complexity of raw data overcome by
reducing it to the status of variables. - Does not lead to any surprising findings. Theory
is inductively built up from data collected so
cannot contain anything new. Uncovers a
pre-existing reality similar to positivism /
realism. - Idea that there is a core category which
explains all. - Issues of generalisation
53Narrative Inquiry
54 Narrative Inquiry
- A narrative is the description of a sequence of
events a story. It is generally natural for
people to remember things as a sequence of
events, and to provide a cause. - It can be used as a method of investigation as
follows - While interviewing a person with relevant
information, let the interviewee provide their
information as a narrative a story. Then
analyse the story using the components of a story
such as a movie screenplay- identify the
scenario -,setting, complicating action,
resolution
55 Narrative Inquiry
- The resulting analysis moves towards a reduction
of the narration to answer the question "what is
the point of this story?" and how does this fit
into the context of the research. (Richmond,
2002)
56 Narrative Inquiry
- An advantage of narrative is that it provides the
information along with its context it provides
a more detailed answer to a question.
57 Narrative Inquiry
- A narrative may be more effective than
questionnaires. Using a questionnaire means that
the investigator has predetermined the nature of
what they expect to find before starting the
enquiry process. Questionnaires constrain an
interviewee narrative allows them to express
the story as they see it. (Snowden, 2003)
58 Narrative Inquiry
- On the other hand ,there are dangers in relying
on narrative. By assigning causes and connection
events , people make sense of the world . The
cause and connection may not be correct.
59Phenomenography
60JA, ich liebe Logical Investigations 1900
Da Fan Club
Martin Heidegger
Jean-Paul Sartre
Edmund Husserl
Appearance
Description
Phenomenography
Maurice Merleau-Ponty
Graphein
Phainomenon
Das ist Phenomenography 1954
Plato or Bust
Ulrich Sonnemann
61In other words
- Phenomenography, a descriptive recording of
immediate subjective experience as reported, for
example, by a person under psychiatric
examination, without questioning the share in
such a communication of the ego. (Sonnemann, 1954
)
62What's it all About?
- Empirical research Based on observation and
experience - Applied factors Intelligence, Motivation,
Effort, past and present surroundings,
experiences, experiences and individual character
traits
63Nothing taken for granted?
- What does it mean, that some people are better at
learning than others? - Why are some people better at learning than
others?
64Content Analysis
65Content Analysis
- Content analysis is a standard methodology in the
social sciences on the subject of communication
content. Earl Babbie defines it as "the study of
recorded human communications, such as books, web
sites, paintings and laws".
66Content Analysis
- Harold Lasswell formulated the core questions of
content analysis "Who says what, to whom, why,
to what extent and with what effect?". Ole Holsti
(1969) offers a broad definition of content
analysis as "any technique for making inferences
by objectively and systematically identifying
specified characteristics of messages"
67Content Analysis
68Q Methodology
69Q Methodology
- The name "Q" comes from the form of factor
analysis that is used to analyze the data. Normal
factor analysis, called "R method," involves
finding correlations between variables (say,
height and age) across a sample of subjects. Q,
on the other hand, looks for correlations between
subjects across a sample of variables. Q factor
analysis reduces the many individual viewpoints
of the subjects down to a few "factors," which
represent shared ways of thinking.
70Knowledge Elicitation
71Card Sorting
- KA technique in which a collection of concepts
(or other knowledge objects) are written on
separate cards and sorted into piles by an expert
in order to elicit classes based on attributes. - Also enables significant elicitation of
properties and dimensions - Used to capture concept knowledge and tacit
knowledge - Use in conjunction with triadic method
- Can also sort objects or pictures instead of cards
72Repertory Grid technique
- KA technique used for a number of purposes
- to elicit attributes for a set of concepts
- to rate concepts against attributes using a
numerical scale - uses statistical analysis to arrange and group
similar concepts and attributes - A useful way of capturing concept knowledge and
tacit knowledge - Requires special software (PC-PACK)
73Repertory Grid Example
74Laddering
- KA technique that involves the construction,
modification and validation of trees. - A valuable method for acquiring concept knowledge
and, to a lesser extent, process knowledge. - Can make use of various trees
- concept tree
- composition tree
- attribute tree
- process tree
- decision tree
- cause tree
75Triadic Elicitation Method
- KA technique used to capture the way in which an
expert views the concepts in a domain. - Involves presenting three random concepts and
asking in what way two of them are similar but
different from the other one. - Answer will give an attribute.
- A good way of acquiring tacit knowledge.
76Analysing Text
77Analysing Text
- Faced with the lack of organisation of data and
the sheer amount of rambling can be somewhat
overwhelming - With the best will in the world about trying to
avoid bias, when there is multiple
interpretations of data, selecting the one that
best matches your research question becomes very
tempting.
78Simple Tabulation
Subject Money Fame Power Social Fulfilment Other
1 15 6 4 0 1 38
2 5 3 6 5 4 27
3 1 0 3 12 21 46
..
Total
Reasons for Choosing a career
79Choosing categories
- Use ones from the literature
- Blame someone else / comparison
- Use categories connected with your research
question - Derive categories from data
80Deriving Categories
- Verbatim Analysis
- Knowledge management ltgt Knowledge engineering ltgt
Knowledge representation ltgt Knowledge reasoning - Compatible with Windows ltgt Windows-Compatible
- Gist Analysis
- Compatible with Windows Windows-Compatible
- Superordinate Analysis
- Derive superclasses
- Windows-Compatible Linux-Compatible gt category
of Compatibility
81Knowledge Representation
82Knowledge Representation
83Knowledge Representation
84Knowledge Representation
- Script Theory
- Schank states that memory is in the form of
meaningful 'stories' (not merely inert
decontextualized information) and that problem
solving progressed by using 'cases' or examples
stored in memory. - So for example, in the 'classical' view, when we
walk to the store, we accomplish this because we
have access to a stored algorithm that tells us
'step one, open door, step two, step into street'
and so on. - In Schank's view on the other hand, we accomplish
this because we have access to a stored 'schema'
based on previous experience of what it is like
to walk to the store, and we don't need rules to
describe this.
85Knowledge Representation
- Set Theory
- Do we categorise based on similarities or
differences ? - Category Bird
- Robin ? obvious
- Ostriches and penguins ? less features
86Knowledge Representation
- Schema Theory
- Bartlett arrived at the concept from studies of
memory he conducted in which subjects recalled
details of stories that were not actually there.
He suggested that memory takes the form of schema
which provide a mental framework for
understanding and remembering information.