The nature of
qualitative research
Ed 714
Qualitative Research Methods in Education
Spring
2003
Copyright
- Antonia D'Onofrio - 2000/2001/2002/2003
An overview of
qualitative research
-
Prior to the mid
to late 1980's, qualitative research was not mentioned as a discipline
and for the most part did not exist as a course or distinctive academic
offering. This does not however mean that qualitative methods did
not exist, but rather they were practiced in the disciplines that evolved
from their application in the field. For example psycholinguists
wrote grammars, anthropologists conducted ethnographies, and biologists
engaged in naturalistic inquiry. In the case of anthropology, it
was the practice of ethnography, and its systematic approaches to fieldwork,
that contributed to the growth of anthropology as a discipline.
-
Jacob and the
early qualitative traditions in educational research
-
Jacob (1987)
explores this very issue in his review of qualitative research traditions.
Jacob posits that qualitative research is not an alternative to conventional
scientific and quantitative methods. Rather it is an approach and
it includes varied and numerous strategies for the collection of data,
analysis and interpretation. He lists contemporary traditions of research:
ecological psychology, holistic ethnography, cognitive anthropology, ethnography
of communication and symbolic interaction. These are modern traditions
that integrate a wide array of qualitative approaches to research and that
have fairly clear applications to the practice of education. Although
each tradition relies on techniques that are commonly associated with qualitative
research, what makes them alternatives to applied scientific methods is
the way in which they conceptualize research and inquiry.
-
Ecological psychology
understands behavior as situated in social contexts. As such, behaviors
have reciprocal effects. The social setting has control over the
exercise of behavior. For example, institutional (district policies),
program (curriculum) and human (teacher, family) components of context
constrain how individuals will behave, insofar as the range of possible
behavior is itself constrained by social understanding of context.
Behavior is bounded by setting. The methodologies that inquire into
educational problems represent this bounded quality by using narrative,
specimen records and exhaustive descriptions of behavior settings, through
surveys, observations and checklists. Theoretically neutral, this
approach extrapolates principles that explain problematic activity (truancy).
-
Holistic ethnographers
have the goal of completely describing local cultures that are embedded
in larger cultural experiences. For example, classroom cultures within
the larger community of the school. Cultures are studied in terms
of norms, institutions, traditions, language and ethnicity. The aim
of this approach is to describe unique ways of life, and then to show how
unique realities can be understood through their connections with a surrounding
social context. Holistic ethnographers may or may not use formal
theoretical concepts to organize their work. They consider their
approach a journey into the unknown. The combine interview and observation
to disclose patterns and systems of relationship that in turn are understood
to define local cultural realities.
-
Ethnographers
of communication also consider their work a journey into the unknown.
They have as their goal of inquiry the determination of the outcomes of
social interaction. They employ observation and collections
of taped communications to explore the cultural patterns that define a
group and relate it to a larger social entity. They may include film,
artwork, dance or religious practices as part of their method. They
may infer theoretical structures after interpreting the findings of a study,
or they may begin a study by organizing it in terms of formal models.
They may test specific hypotheses, or they may simply attempt a full description
of social interactions that occur within a particular setting. Studies
of classroom discourse are good examples of how the ethnography of communication
is implemented.
-
Cognitive anthropologists
study categories of perception that are believed to describe reality that
is culturally determined. They seek complete and accurate descriptions
of systems of belief. The data they employ is usually linguistic,
or symbolic information, which makes sense, because the focus of cognitive
anthropology is to uncover systems of meaning and the connections that
can be made with empirical experience. Hence they emphasize the semantic
character of thought. For example, a cognitive anthropologist may
investigate school climate in a suburban school district that is densely
populated with newly arrived Asian families but where school employees
are drawn largely from the local population, perhaps a group that tends
to be white and originates with communities that have been settled in the
region surrounding the school district for many generations. Thus,
dramatically different beliefs about the nature, purpose, value and goals
of public education ask to be investigated because of the sharp cultural
contrasts that have developed over time.
-
The ethnographer
Spradley discusses how the data that is collected in this approach should
be analyzed in terms of semantic domains that organize experiential meanings.
-
Symbolic interactionism
explores the ways in which the meaning of experience is mediated by the
interpretation of experience. As the name symbolic interaction implies,
reality is understood in terms of how it is symbolized, both as language
and as patterns of social interaction. In this tradition behavior is believed
caused by reflective and socially influenced processes. Behavior
is not determined so much as it is evoked by self conscious assessments
of how the "Me" is meaningfully interwoven with the "Other". A kind
of economic exchange is set in motion, when individuals grapple with the
reality of their own experience and how it must be interpreted by anOther,
for it to be recognized and to become tangibly real. Interviews of
individuals and groups who are asked to reflect on all the ways in which
they experience Me and Other predominate as a method of data collection
The social world of human relationships creates rules and institutions
to uphold those relationships. Rules and traditions do not independently
provide support for a social organization and its way of life. Reality
is itself constructed through social exchanges.
-
A
summary table of these arguments from Jacob's (1987). Qualitative
research traditions: A review. Review of Educational Research,
37 (1), 1-50.
-
So Jacob has identified
five traditions that are compatible with the needs of educational researchers.
What each approach shares with the others can be listed as follows:
-
1. Behavior needs
to be understood in terms of the context that gives behavior purpose and
direction. Context is physical and behavioral, behavioral and
social.
-
2. The researcher
is a student of relationships, connections, interactions and transactions.
-
3. The methods
are variable but they are techniques that allow one to explore the ways
in which people make sense of their lives.
-
4. An investigation
needs to be complete, detailed, deep and representative of the experience
of individuals.
-
5. The 'insider's'
point of view is key evidence. Understanding by taking the perspective
of another is fundamental to these traditions of research.
-
6. Culture is
an overarching construct that shapes behavior, attitude and belief.
-
-
Fundamental weaknesses
of poorly constructed qualitative studies include: failure to capture
sufficient detail, lack of focus on connections and interactions between
people and between context and individuals, inability to represent varied
points of view and perspectives; failure to account for the influence of
culture and community on the experiences and the attitudes of individuals.
-
Common characteristics
shared by contemporary traditions of qualitative research.
-
Samples that are
small, purposively chosen, and carefully selected according to criteria
that led to individuals who have meaningful stories to tell.
-
Thematic emphasis,
and the use of themes to organize information
-
Methods that closely
match the needs of the research problem, and that are customized to meet
the needs of studies that are situated in contexts that influence both
researcher and researcher's subject.
-
An extrapolation
of concepts, domains, and categories of information that give order to
the details so that they will be intelligible and will tell a coherent
story.
-
A search for the
threads that unify beliefs values personal realities and linguistic idiom.
-
Creation of a
fabric that weaves threads together to form an entire cloth of information
that ca be understood because the researcher has taken care to create coherence.
-
Triangulation
of methods and of sources of data so that studies will be internally valid,
and so that contradictory evidence will be integral to a study and used
to keep our interpretations tentative and provisional.
return
to the course schedule