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Introduction
Much of the material in this presentation can be found in:
M. B. & Huberman, A. M. (1984). Qualitative Data Analysis: A Sourcebook of New Methods. California; SAGE publications Inc. This seminar will take the format of a Workshop. If you have brought your own data and research questions, you can examine them in the light of considerations mentioned in these slides and in the handout.
2 Miles,
Introduction
In this seminar, we will investigate:
Qualitative research: The problem Focusing the Collection of Data Analysis During Data Collection Drawing and Verifying Conclusions Data Analysis Workshop Qualitative Data Analysis Software
2. 3. 4. 5.
2. 3. 4. 5.
close to the data; discovery-oriented, exploratory, descriptive; 6. inductive; 7. process oriented 8. valid: real , rich , deep data; 9. ungeneralizable case studies; 10. dynamic reality.
removed from the data; verification-oriented, reductionist, inferential, hypothetical; 6. deductive; 7. outcome oriented 8. reliable: hard , replicable data; 9. generalizable multiple case studies; 10. stable reality.
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Questionnaires Self- and peer-assessment forms Checklists/inventories Interviews Teacher-diary Learner-diary Observation
Qualitative data are attractive. They are a source of well-grounded, rich descriptions and explanations of processes occurring in local contexts. With qualitative data one can preserve the chronological flow, assess local causality, and derive fruitful explanations. They help researchers go beyond initial preconceptions and frameworks. The findings from qualitative studies have a quality of undeniability, (Smith, 1978.
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the process of selecting, focusing, simplifying, abstracting, and transforming the raw data that appear in written-up field notes. Data reduction occurs continuously throughout the life of any qualitatively oriented project. This is part of analysis.
The second major flow of analysis activity is data display. A display is an organized assembly of information that permits conclusion drawing and action taking.
The
most frequent form of display for qualitative data has been narrative text.
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The third stream of analysis activity is conclusion drawing and verification. From the beginning of data collection, the qualitative analyst beginning to decide what things mean, is noting regularities, patterns, explanations, possible configurations, causal flows, and propositions.
Final
Anticipatory
= Analysis
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Data Reduction
Conclusions: drawing/verifying
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Conceptual framework
p. 28 Building a Conceptual Framework (Handout)
Theory-building relies on a few general constructs that subsume a mountain of particulars. We have to decide which dimensions are more important, which relationships are likely to be most meaningful, and what information should be collected and analyzed.
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Conceptual Framework
CURRICULUM DESIGN (VAN LIER 1996:189) (Handout).
PRINCIPLES Awareness Autonomy Authenticity Achievement Assessment Accountability
STRATEGIES
ACTION
Tasks Field work Portfolios Conversation Negotiation Stories Genre variation Team work
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Research Questions
p. 35 Formulating Research Questions (Handout)
The formulation of research questions can precede or follow the development of a conceptual framework. Research questions can be general or particular, descriptive or explanatory.
They
can be formulated at the outset or later on, and can be refined or reformulated in the course of fieldwork.
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Data Collection
p. 36 Sampling: Bounding the Collection of Data (Handout)
Choices
must be made. Unless you are willing to devote most of your professional life to a single study, you have to settle for less. have subsettings (schools have classrooms, groups have cliques, cultures have subcultures, families have coalitions), so that fixing the boundaries of the setting in a non-arbitrary way is tricky.
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Settings
Sampling (Handout)
p. 37 Qualitative research is essentially an investigative process, not unlike detective work. One makes gradual sense of a social phenomenon, and does it in large part by:
contrasting, comparing, replicating, cataloguing, and classifying the object of ones study.
Sampling (Handout)
Sampling involves not only decisions about which people to observe or interview, but also about
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Reflective Remarks Marginal Remarks Storing and Retrieving Text Pattern Coding Memoing
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Counting Noting patterns, themes Seeing plausibility Clustering (Classifying) Making metaphors Splitting variables Subsuming particulars into the general Factoring Noting relationships between variables Finding intervening variables Building a logical chain of evidence Making conceptual/theoretical coherence
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Checking for representativeness Checking for researcher effects Triangulating Weighting the evidence Making contrasts/comparisons Checking the meaning of outliers Using extreme cases Ruling our spurious relations Replicating a finding Checking out rival explanations Looking for negative evidence Getting feedback from informants
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What do you want to find out? Make some research questions. What data will you collect? How will you collect it (research instruments)? When will you collect it? How will you analyse the data?
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Make some analysis codes. Go through the data and write in the codes in appropriate places. Make some reflective comments. Make some marginal comments Find patterns. Draw some conclusions. How would you verify them?
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Make notes as you listen. Ask questions. What things do you think are significant?
Look at the questions on the next slide. What events do you think were significant in your LLH?
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How did you learn English before you started in Higher Education? What positive and negative experiences did you have and what did you learn from them? In terms of learning English, what were you expecting before you started in Higher Education? When you started in Higher Education, what were you surprised about in your classes or in the surrounding environment? Have you changed your ways of language learning since starting in Higher Education? What are the things that you found especially helpful, either in classes or outside them? What are the areas that you still want to improve in? How do you think this year will be (has been)? What are your language learning plans and goals after graduation? What advice would you give to future students? 27
NVivo
Tutorial
http://download.qsrinternational.com/Document/NVivo8/NVivo8Introducing-NVivo.htm
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References
Action Research paper: http://www.finchpark.com/arts Questionnaires: http://www.finchpark.com/books/lj Contact: aefinch@gmail.com Miles, M. B. & Huberman, A. M. (1984). Qualitative Data Analysis: A Sourcebook of New Methods. California; SAGE publications Inc.
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