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QUALITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS

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QUALITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS CASE STUDIES & ETHNOMETHODOLOGY I. CASE STUDIES A. DEFINING CASE STUDIES 1. Use multiple sources of evidence (or cases) to investigate ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: QUALITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS


1
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS
  • CASE STUDIES ETHNOMETHODOLOGY

2
I. CASE STUDIES
  • A. DEFINING CASE STUDIES
  • 1. Use multiple sources of evidence (or cases)
    to investigate real-life phenomena in its
    real-life context (Yin 1994).
  • 2. Includes both single multiple cases (which
    may be used comparatively).
  • 3. Multiple procedures used--no single
    methodology, although borrows from many
    techniques (esp. history criticism).
  • 4. Often used in medical or legal research, as
    well as historical analyses PR.

3
Case Studies, cont.
  • B. Characteristics (Merriam 1988)
  • 1. Particularistic--focus on a particular
    situation, event, program, or phenomenon.
  • 2. Descriptive--a detailed description of topic.
  • 3. Heuristic--helps to understand the
    phenomenon, to provide fresh insights, to give
    new perspectives, etc.
  • 4. Inductive--reasoning from a particular case
    to more general conclusions.
  • 5. Most attempt to discover new relationships
    rather than verify existing hypotheses

4
Case Studies, cont
  • C. Advantages of case studies
  • 1. Provide great detail, or thick descriptions
  • 2. Serve as spurs to further research
  • 3. Can suggest both how why something has
    occurred
  • 4. Can deal with a wide spectrum of evidence,
    including documents, historical artifacts,
    interviews, observations even surveys

5
Case Studies, cont
  • D. Disadvantages of case studies
  • 1. Takes time effort to produce a rigorous
    case study
  • 2. Massive amount of data often hard to
    summarize (esp. if generated over a long period
    of time)
  • 3. May have problems with external validity

6
II. ETHNOMETHODOLOGY
  • A. Husserlsocial science should be eidetic,
    concerned with essential objects relationships
  • B. Defining ethnomethodology
  • 1. Coulin (1995)---the empirical study of
    methods that individuals use to give sense to and
    at the same time to accomplish their daily
    actions communicating, making decisions,
    reasoning (p. 15).
  • 2. Garfinkle (1967)--the study of practical
    actions, according to the policies (or rules)
    used by individuals to make sense of those
    actions, combined with the phenomena, issues,
    findings, and methods that accompany their use
    (Frey et. al., p. 32).

7
Ethnomethodology, cont.
  • C. Seeks to understand how the rational,
    taken-for-granted character of everyday life is
    accomplished.
  • 1. Looks at the methodologies (or situated
    procedures) people use to figure out orderly ways
    of doing things
  • a. How people perform (or enact) culture (not
    just on what people say, but what they do, such
    as various ritual behaviors, etc.
  • b. The main question is not focused on the
    activity, but participants emergent sense of
    its objectivity, factuality, orderliness (L
    T, p. 40) or how they understand those rituals

8
Ethnomethodology, cont.
  • 2. The practice of creating a consistent
    appearance is social realitycontent not of
    concern, but the sequence of activities social
    actors use to create coherence.
  • D. Two key concepts
  • 1. Social life is enacted in contexts
  • a. People use resources available to them
  • b. Expressions based on context are termed
    indexical
  • 2. Evidence for the social order is found in
    actors verbal written accounts of activities,
    seen as a central means of constructing their
    social realities (L T, p. 41)

9
Ethnomethodology, cont.
  • 3. By interpreting actors background
    expectancies can depict methods used to create
    sustain intersubjectivity
  • 4. Includes qualitative conversational analysis
  • a. Conversational analysis focuses on ordinary
    talk people use
  • b. Increasing examines significance of rules
    (e.g. Cushman, 1977, Pearce Cronen 1987)
  • 5. Also includes case studies ethnomethodology
    (e.g. workplace studies)
  • 6. Some would include performance ethnography

10
Ethnomethodology, cont.
  • D. Procedures for collecting data
  • 1. Must decide what to study
  • 2. Define a problem develop a preliminary
    research question (or questions).
  • a. Will you be studying a particular group of
    people, a particular setting?
  • b. Or will you study a particular behavior (or
    communication act)?

11
Ethnomethodology, cont.
  • 3. Gain access to the data (the library can
    provide archival evidence, but you must observe
    and interview people on-site)
  • 4. Make decision whether or not you will do
    observations, conduct interviews, or both
  • 5. Observations can be overt or covert, with
    different roles for the researcher
  • a. Observations move from general to specific
  • 1) First, is descriptive or impressionistic
    observations
  • 2) Then move to more focused observations
  • 3) Then more specific, selected observations

12
Ethnomethodology, cont.
  • b. Often work in teams to enhance validity
  • c. Observations permit researchers to study real
    people in action, also taboo subjects, but only
    applicable to a few settings, influenced by a
    number of factors
  • 6. Depends on a bracketing process, a posture of
    ethnomethodological indifference (the researcher
    does not judge people actions)
  • 7. Also involves experimental breaching, the
    deliberate upsetting of established
    patterns/routines to reveal the rules
    participants use to organize experiences

13
Ethnomethodology, cont.
  • 6. Intensive interviews can also be used.
  • a. Purposive sampling often is used to find
    interview subjects, although can also call for
    volunteers, or use a network sampling technique.
  • b. Two basic settings-
  • 1) On site at the respondents normal job or home
    (preferred)
  • 2) A neutral spot away from the field of
    action--sometimes need to ensure honesty
    confidentiality.

14
Ethnomethodology, cont.
  • c. Unlike ethnographic interviews, do more formal
    in-depth, intensive interviews
  • d. Several types
  • 1. Life-story interview
  • 2. Critical incident interview
  • 3. Episode analysis
  • a) reconstruct a scene or dialogue, etc.
    representing a recurring pattern in a
    relationship
  • b) Can combine with account analysis, asking
    people to explain what occurred

15
Ethnomethodology, cont.
  • 4. Protocol analysis asks people to verbalize
    intentions, thoughts, feeling as they engage in
    a particular activity (e.g. watching TV)
  • 5. stimulated recall
  • a. Interviewees respond to a stimulus, like a
    recorded conversation
  • b. Then describe what were thinking feeling at
    the time
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