Qualitative Research - CIRCLE International
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Transcript Qualitative Research - CIRCLE International
Research Methods
Qualitative research
Session outline
Introduction
Definition
Purpose
Questions
Design/Plan
Issues
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Qualitative methods
In-depth interviews
Group interviews and
focus groups
Un/Participant
observation
Delphi technique
Ethnography
Definition qualitative methods
‘an array of interpretative techniques
which seek to describe, decode,
translate and otherwise come to terms
with the meaning, not the frequency, of
certain more or less naturally occurring
phenomena in the social world ‘
(Van
Maanen in Easterby-Smith, 1993:71)
Preferences of qualitative
researchers (Hammersley, 1992)
•
•
qualitative data - words, images, rather than
numbers
naturally occurring data – e.g. observation
(rather than experiment)
meanings rather than behaviour - ‘attempting to
document the world from the point of view of the
people studied’
a rejection of natural science as a model
a preference for induction
‘grounded theory’, rather than theory testing
Qualitative Research
No one definition, however main features
include:
A preference for qualitative data
words, observations, images, rather than numbers
Documenting the world from the point of view of the
people studied
Collection of ‘rich’, in-depth data, therefore
qualitative research often small scale – eg. Case
study
Differs from quantitative research in epistemology,
methodology, and the methods used
Qualitative Research Design
Researcher is the instrument of data
collection
Social Skills such as building rapport,
listening, essential
Selection of research respondents
Access, role and ethical issues
Analysis of data
Qualitative research questions
Not hypothesis testing, therefore more open
and not pre-judging outcome
Home and holiday behaviour differences: Northern
lads in Ibiza
Hotel managers attitudes towards environmental
management
Social meaning of holidays for young families
Impacts of tourists on the local population
Sustainable development priorities in tourism
development strategies: an analysis of three UK
National Parks
Planning Qualitative Research 1
flexible research design
research questions rather than
hypotheses
importance of research process and
your position within that:
access to the group
gatekeepers and informers
ethical issues - informed consent;
anonymity, confidentiality, use/abuse of
Planning qualitative research 2
analysis of qualitative data
ongoing through data collection
narrative rather than statistical
description and theorising
Issues to consider
Doesn’t the researcher’s presence affect the
behaviour of the people being researched?
Don’t people simply lie when answering
researcher’s questions?
How do you know if what is true in one case
study will be true in another?
How do you know that the researcher isn’t
biased, and just finding what they want to find?
How can you be sure that qualitative research
findings are true?
1. In-depth interview: what it is
Usually conducted with a relatively small
number of subjects
Interview guided by a checklist of topics
rather than a formal questionnaire
Interviews often tape-recorded and
verbatim transcript prepared
Can take ½ hour and may extend over
several hours; repeat interviews possible
In-depth interviews
Idea behind them & distinction from
questionnaires
Organising the interview (structure)
Relationship with respondents
Recording the interview
Using the data
Characteristics of good interviews
Recognising Limitations
Can be
time consuming and expensive
inefficient, biased, unpredictable…
hard to pre-test
difficult to standardise and replicate
and then difficult to analyse
So...
We must devise strategies to minimise
these problems and maximise the gain
from their ability to offer a greater
understanding of the complexities of
social reality.
The Underpinnings
The challenge of interviewing is to unlock
the perspective of every interviewee
in a search for mutual understanding
typically in the form of a friendly
conversation.
Questionnaire
Surveys vs
A little about a lot /
many
All respond to
exactly the same
questions
Descriptive patterns
Directive interviewer
In-Depth
Interviews
A lot about a little /
few
Asked to respond to
same topics in
different ways
Explore links
between feelings,
attitudes, behaviour
Interviewer as guide
Warning
Interviewing is not as easy as it looks. It
requires thought and careful planning.
As two commentators recently noted,
interviewing is ‘as easy as writing a book
- most of us have basic literacy skills but
few attain literary art’ (Powney and Watts
in Robson, 1995: 228).
Process to plan an interview
Identify the objectives
Decide whether to
undertake individual
or group interviews
Determine the most
appropriate structure
- fully structured,
semi-structured or
unstructured
(informal). Think
about the implications
of your choice
prepare an interview
schedule (if appropriate)
pilot and refine the
research instrument (if
appropriate)
keep a full record of the
interview
note the relevance to
interviewees - sell the idea
the ethical implications of
your study
How structured?
Highly structured vs free form
Clarity of purpose
Standard wording abandoned in favour
of flowing conversation
Language of respondent
Learn script, but be flexible
Comparing types of interviews
(adapted from Finn et al, 2001:75)
Type of
intervie
w
Advantages
Disadvantages
Structured
Answers to same
questions increase
comparability
Data easily analysed
Little flexibility. Pre-determined
questions might not be relevant.
Standardised wording might
inhibit
Semistr.
Combines flexibility
with comparability
Bias may increase as
interviewer selects questions to
probe and might inhibit
comparability
Unstr.
Interviewer can adapt,
interviewee is allowed
to express in own
words. Interviewer’s
Comparability reduced, data
analysis more difficult. Data
quality depends on listening and
communicating skills of
Relationship with respondent
Escape authoritarianism of
questionnaires - more equal relationship
Home ground?
Rapport & Empathy
Listen, guide & probe
When recording, think of
analysis…
Do it, but think… and make sure you’re
competent
Recording should allow transcription.
Transcription should allow for coding
Coding should lead to synthesis
Synthesis should allow for analysis
Important Characteristics
1. Know your
schedule
2. Establish rapport
3. Listen to
respondent
4. Read between the
lines
5. Accept the value
of respondent’s
views
6. Pick up on issues
raised by respondent
7. Probe, explore,
follow-up
8. Recall & relate to
what has been said
9. Allow space to answer
- don’t fear silence
10. Avoid irrelevant
rambling
Interview skills
think about the motivations of interviewees and their
implications
listen more than you speak
build trust - know about the company/organisation,
telephone and then send a letter, use appropriate
language (student/researcher, interview/discussion),
show interest and enthusiasm
ask straightforward questions
consider the location of the interview
begin with the general (things people know - build
confidence)
keep to time
Probes to focus the discussion
basic probe - repeat the question if the interviewee is
going off the point.
explanatory probes e.g. ‘What did you mean by that?’
‘What makes you say that?’
focused probes for specific information e.g. ‘What
sort of...?’
silent probe - pause and let them break the silence
drawing out e.g. ‘Tell me more about that...’ or ‘What
happened then...?’
mirroring or reflecting - express what the interviewee
has said for clarification or to prompt them to review
NOTE: be careful with prompts - use the same ones
with everyone (perhaps have a list prepared).
2. Group interviews/ focus
groups
Similar to in-depth interviews but conducted
with a group
Interaction between subjects takes place was
well as interaction between interviewer and
subject
Researcher is facilitator or just observer
Use when particular group is important in a
study but small group, or cannot be easily
identified as group
Possible strong characters dominating group
5/12 participants, justify choices. Tape/video
record it, then transcribe and group answers.
3. Un/participant observation
“A participant observer gathers data by
participating in the daily life of the group
or organisation he [sic] studies. He
watches the people he is studying to see
what situations they ordinarily meet and
how they behave in them. He enters into
conversation with some or all of the
participants in these situations and
discovers their interpretations of the
event he has observed.” (Becker)
What does this mean in research
terms?
Researcher gathers information by being
an actual participant or an observer or
behaviour
Researcher may be known by the
subjects as a researcher or may be
incognito
Difficulty in keeping accurate records:
what to record, and how to record it?
Researcher involvement
Some thoughts on PO
“Participant observation is the only method I
know that enables the researchers to get close
to the realities of social life. Its deficiencies in
producing quantitative data are more than
made up for by its ability to minimise the
distance between researchers and their
subjects of study.” (Gans)
“A central paradox of the participant
observation method is to seek information by
not asking questions.” (Frankenburg)
When to Use
Originally used to learn from the
unfamiliar ‘primitive’ societies, e.g.
anthropological studies of tourism
impacts on undeveloped societies
More recently applied to the familiar, e.g.
consumer behaviour in travel agencies
or researchers in their own leisure
environs
Clear limitations for undergraduate
research
Issues to Consider
Disclosure - Do you tell
them?
Stance - Observe or
participate?
Role - What can you ‘do’ to
fit in?
Getting ‘in’ - How do you
make contact?
Rapport - How close
should you get?
Questioning - Should
you?
Sampling - Are they
representative?
Proof - Can you
demonstrate causal
links? Can you draw
inferences?
Ethics - spying?
confidentiality?
intervention?
Observing What?
Actors and their relationships
Doing what with what consequences
Use of space
Time - what happens when for how long
Impact of key events
Feelings - theirs and yours
........etc.
PO assessed
Pros
Less bias because of
internal checks
More responsive /
flexible
Deals with realities
of life
Explores in greater
depth
Cons
Lacks reliability &
validity
Not generalisable
Observer bias
“Going native”
Hearsay
Lack of
evidence/proof
4. Delphi technique
Named after classical Greek Delphi oracle.
Gathering and analysing information from a
panel of experts about future trends.
Experts complete questionnaire indicating
views of likelihood of certain developments
taking place.
Views collated and circulated to panel
members for further comment, process can
be repeated a number of times before final
results collected
Need to consider questionnaire design and
analysis, and qualitative data analysis at the
5. Ethnography
Utilises a number of techniques, not a
single technique. Borrowed from
anthropology.
BUT: How feasible is it to use more than
one research method in an
undergraduate dissertation??
Summary: What can Qualitative
Research do? (Creswell, 1994)
Qual res. is useful in situations where:
there is a lack of research and theory,
so that little is known about the concepts
involved
nature of the phenomenon may not be
suitable for quantitative measures
need to explore and describe the
phenomenon, and to develop theory
Suggested reading
Besides the key books already suggested, you
should consider reading this debate about theory
and interpretation of data :
Denzin, N.K. and Lincoln, Y.S. (Eds) (1998)
Strategies of qualitative inquiry. London:Sage
Mason, J (1998) Qualitative researching.
London: Sage.
Yin, R.K (1994) Case study research: design
and methods. 2nd edition. London: Sage.
The following four short papers provide a good example of
conflicting perspectives relating to the same research
issue. They are also fun to read because the debate gets
a bit personal!
Slattery, P (1996) International development of hotel
chains. In Kotas R et al (eds) The international hospitality
business. London:Cassell.
Hughes, H (1994) The structural theory of demand: a
comment.
International Journal of Hospitality
Management. 12(4) : 309-311.
Slattery, P (1994) The structural theory of business
demand:a reply to Hughes. International Journal of
Hospitality Management. 13 (2): 173-176.
Hughes, H (1995) The structural theory of business
demand:a rejoinder to Slattery. International Journal of
Hospitality Management. 14 (2):117-118.