Lecture 6 Qualitative Data Analysis
Lecture 6 Qualitative Data Analysis
Analysis
Finding or creating and then
analyzing texts
Qualitative Inquiry
Purpose
- to produce findings. The Data Collection process is not an end in
itself. The culminating activities of qualitative inquiry are analysis,
interpretation, and presentation of findings.
Challenge
To make sense of massive amounts of data, reduce the volume of
information, identify significant patterns and construct a framework
for communicating the essence of what the data reveal
Problem
have few agreed-on canons for qualitative data analysis, in the
sense of shared ground rules for drawing conclusions and verifying
sturdiness Miles and Huberman, 1984)
Critical Thinking
calls for a persistent effort to examine any belief or supposed form of
knowledge in the light of the evidence that supports it and the further
conclusions to which it tends (Glaser, 1941)
- means weighing up the arguments and evidence for and against.
Key points when thinking critically are (Glaser, 1941):
Persistence: Considering an issue carefully and more than once
Evidence: Evaluating the evidence put forward in support of the
belief or viewpoint
Implications: Considering where the belief or viewpoint leads; what
conclusions would follow; are these suitable and rational; and if not,
should the belief or viewpoint be reconsidered
Analytical Thinking
involves additional processes:
1. Analysis Considerations
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2
3
4
5
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7
Words
Context (tone and inflection)
Internal consistency (opinion shifts during groups)
Frequency and intensity of comments (counting, content
analysis)
Specificity
Trends/themes
Iteration (data collection and analysis is an iterative process
moving back and forth)
Analysis begins:
Finally:
2. Separability of Data
a) abstraction of ideas/concepts from 'raw data'
during analysis
b) interaction between different datasets, e.g.,
'melting pot' of all data vs. each tranche
analysed separately
c) combination - when and how datasets may (or
must) be combined or separated
3. Admissibility of Data
a) relative value or worth of different kinds
of data and how it is assessed
b) validation required (and how) or not, e.g.,
by members, research participants, other
researchers, etc.
Analytic Principles
Coding data:
Computer Assistance
Computer Software
Atlas-ti: large datasets, unstructured coding, mimic paper
code & sort.
NUDIST: large datasets, structured coding, mimic quant
analysis.
NVivo: less data, unstructured coding, find
patterns/relationships in codes.
Folio Views: huge datasets, focused coding, search & sort.
6 types
Word processors
Word retrievers
Textbase managers
Code-&-retrieve programs
Code-based theory builders
Conceptual-network builders
Practical Advice
Components
Data Reductions
Data Display
Conclusions &
Verification
Procedures
Coding
Categorisation
Abstraction
Comparison
Dimensionalisation
Integration
Interpretation
Outcomes
Description
Explanation/
Interpretation