what is qualitative research?
an inquiry process of
understanding based on distinct methodological
traditions that explore a social or
human problem.
The researcher builds a
complex, holistic picture, analyzes words, reports
detailed views of informants, and conducts the
study in a natural setting”
what is the generic definition of qualitative research?
is a situated activity that locates the observer in the world
what are the different epistemologies that are taken in qualitative research? (6)
what is the purpose of qualitative research?
to find out about what people think and how they feel –the subjective information that can hardly be analyzed by numbers
in terms of dichotomy of determinism and indeterminism, which one does qualitative fall under?
qualitative studies are more deterministic
how are qualitative studies done?
studying people and their thoughts in a natural setting, and interpreting the social phenomena in terms of the meanings people bring to them
what are the commonly used qualitative methods? (5)
what are non probability sampling methods used in qualitative studies? (6)
what are good qualities of a qualitative researchers ? (6)
what are the tools of data collection in qualitative research? (7)
what are the challenges of data analysis in qualitative research?
what are the contemporary positivist standards for evaluating qualitative studies?
All these are based on the criteria of falsification.
The above measures are based on assumption that if there is a truth and different people can have the same observation if they are in the same conditions for observations
what are the social constructivist standards for evaluating qualitative studies?
what are the challenges of doing qualitative research?
what are the limitations of qualitative research?
2. less generalizable as it focuses on individuals rather than populations
what is a biographical study?
biographical researchers study the experiences of individuals in which individuals describe their life in great detail. an individual can reflect cultural themes of society and the social context:
how is biographical information collected?
through conversations, from documents and archival materials, or published/unpublished documents
what information does the researcher collect in biographical studies?
how does the researcher conduct biographical research?
what is phenomenology ?
a philosophy or method of inquiry based on the idea that reality consists of objects and events perceived or understood in human consciousness, and not of anything independent of human consciousness
What was Edmund Husserl’s intention?
to make possible descriptive accounts of the essential structures of the directly given
what does phenomenology do? (3)
what was necessary in phenomenology according to Husserl?
to eliminate all presuppositions and prejudices, whether philosophical, scientific, or naive concerning the world and our knowledge of it
what kind of questions are raised in phenomenology?
questions are raised to how people think, believe, and choose, and why people engage in certain activities