Introduction
In life, there are universal laws that govern everything we do. These laws are so perfect that if you were to align yourself with them, you could have so much prosperity that it would be coming out of your ears. This is because God created the universe in the image and likeness of him. It is failure to follow the universal laws that causes one to fail. The laws that were created consisted of the following: ·
Law of Gratitude: The Law of Gratitude states that you must show gratitude for what you have. By having gratitude, you speed your growth and success faster than you normally would. This is because if you appreciate the things you have, even if they are small things, you are open to receiving more.
Law of Attraction: The Law of Attraction states that if you focus your attention on something long enough you will get it. It all starts in the mind. You think of something and when you think of it, you manifest that in your life. This could be a mental picture of a check or actual cash, but you think about it with an image.
Law of Karma: the Law of Karma states that if you go out and do something bad, it will come back to you with something bad. If you do well for others, good things happen to you. The principle here is to know you can create good or bad through your actions. There will always be an effect no matter what.
Law of Love: the Law of Love states that love is more than emotion or feeling; it is energy. It has substance and can be felt. Love is also considered acceptance of oneself or others. This means that no matter what you do in life if you do not approach or leave the situation out of love, it won't work.
Law of Allowing: The Law of Allowing states that for us to get what we want, we must be receptive to it. We can't merely say to the Universe that we want something if we don't allow ourselves to receive it. This will defeat our purpose for wanting it in the first place.
Law of Vibration: the Law of Vibration states that if you wish on something and use your thoughts to visualize it, you are halfway there to get it. To complete the cycle you must use the Law of Vibration to feel part of what you want. Do this and you'll have anything you want in life.
For everything to function properly there has to be structure. Without structure, our world, or universe, would be in utter chaos. Successful people understand universal laws and apply them daily. They may not acknowledge that to you, but they do follow the laws. There is a higher power and this higher power controls the universe and what we get out of it. People who know this, but wish to direct their own lives, follow the reasons. Successful people don't sit around and say "I'll try," they say yes and act on it.
Chapter - 1
The Law of Attraction
The law of attraction is the most powerful force in the universe. If you work against it, it can only bring you pain and misery. Successful people know this but have kept it hidden from the lower class for centuries because th
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chapter session 2.6 data analysis28,11.ppt
1. Advanced Research Methods- Quantitative and
qualitative (DVMT 523)
1
SGDS
John W. Creswell (2012). Educational Research: Planning, Conducting, and
Evaluating Quantitative and Qualitative Research, 4th ed: Pearson Education Inc.
2. CHAPTER II
THE PROCESS OF CONDUCTING RESEARCH
Analyzing & Interpreting Qualitative Data
John W. Creswell (2012). Educational Research: Planning, Conducting, and
Evaluating Quantitative and Qualitative Research, 4th ed: Pearson Education Inc.
The NIHR RDS for the East Midlands / Yorkshire & the Humber (2009)
QUALITATIVE DATAANALYSIS
3. Analyzing & Interpreting Qualitative Data
By the end of this session, you should be able to:
Understand qualitative data analysis
Identify the six steps in the process of analyzing and interpreting
qualitative data
Describe how to prepare and organize the data for analysis
Describe how to explore and code the data
Use codes to build description and themes
Construct a representation and reporting of qualitative findings
Make an interpretation of the qualitative findings
Advance validation for the accuracy of your findings
4. DATA ANALYSIS?
During or immediately after data collection, you need to make sense of the
information supplied by individuals in the study.
Analysis consists of “taking the data apart” to determine individual responses
and then “putting it together” to summarize it.
Analyzing and interpreting the data involves drawing conclusions about it;
representing it in tables, figures, and pictures to summarize it; and
explaining the conclusions in words to provide answers to your research
questions..
5. DATA ANALYSIS IN QUALI AND QUANTI
Qualitative research– generate a mass of words generated by interviews or
observational data needs to be described and summarised.
researchers need to seek relationships between various themes that have been identified, or
to relate behaviour or ideas to biographical characteristics of respondents such as age or
gender.
theory could be developed and tested using advanced analytical techniques.
Quantitative research- generate a mass of numbers that need to be summarised,
described and analysed.
characteristics of the data may be described and explored by drawing graphs and charts,
doing cross tabulations and calculating means and standard deviations.
seeking patterns and relationships in the data by performing multiple regression, or an
analysis of variance perhaps.
6. QUALITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS?
Qualitative data analysis is the classification and interpretation of
linguistic (or visual) material to make statements about implicit and
explicit dimensions and structures of meaning-making in the material
and what is represented in it.
Meaning-making can refer to subjective or social meanings.
Qualitative data analysis also is applied to discover and describe
issues in the field or structures and processes in routines and
practices.
Explain relationship
Develop a theory- arrive at generalizable statements by comparing
various materials or various texts or several cases- develop theory
7. Six Steps in Analyzing and Interpreting
Qualitative Data
Preparing and organizing the data for analysis
Exploring the data through coding
Using codes to develop description and themes
Representing the findings through narratives and visuals
Making an interpretation of the meaning of the findings
Conducting a validation of the accuracy of the findings
8. THE QUALITATIVE PROCESS OF DATA ANALYSIS
Codes the text for
description to be used
in the research report
Codes the text for
themes to be used
in the research report
The researcher codes the data (locates text
segments and assigns a code to label them)
The researcher prepares data for analysis
(transcribes fieldnotes)
The researcher collects data (a text file, such as
fieldnotes, transcriptions, optically scanned material)
The researcher reads through data
(obtains general sense of material)
9. PREPARING AND ORGANIZING THE DATA
Develop a matrix or table of sources that can be used to
organize the material
Organize material by type
Keep duplicate copies of materials
Transcribe data
Prepare data for hand or computer analysis (and select
computer program)
10. EXPLORING THE DATA
Obtain a general sense of the data by performing a preliminary
exploratory analysis
Read through fieldnotes and interviews several times to get a sense of
the interview and the observation
Write memos in the margins of interviews or fieldnotes of your initial
reflections on the data
Consider whether more data are needed
11. CODING THE DATA
Read through all transcripts
Start with one transcript
Identify text segments. Ask, “What is this person saying?”
Bracket text segment
Assign code word
One, two, or three words that describe what is being said
Terms from the literature can be used
When possible use a participant’s actual words
Practice lean coding (30–40 codes)
12. CODING THE DATA (CONT’D)
Include codes that describe the participants and site
Reduce redundancy
Take out codes that are duplicate ideas
Reduce to a manageable list (usually 25–30)
Collapse codes into themes, which are:
The major ideas that emerge from the data
The ideas the participants most frequently discuss, are unique or surprising,
have the most evidence to support them, or those you might expect to find
when studying the phenomenon
Usually number 5–7
13. A VISUAL MODEL OF THE CODING PROCESS IN QUALITATIVE
RESEARCH
Reduce codes to
5–7 themes
Initially read
through data
Divide text
into segments
of information
Label
segments of
information
with codes
Reduce
overlap and
redundancy
of codes
Collapse
codes into
themes
Many
pages
of text
Many
segments
of text
30–40
codes
Codes
reduced
to 20
14. USING CODES TO BUILD DESCRIPTION
Describe
People
Events
Activities
Processes
Describe in detail
__Educational_Research__Planning__Conducting__and_Evaluating_Quantitative_
and_Qualitative_Research__4th_Edition_.pdf (p244-245)
15. USING CODES TO IDENTIFY THEMES
Ordinary themes- what a researcher might expect
Unexpected themes- that are surprises or unexpected
Hard-to-classify themes- do not easily fit into one them or overlap
Major and minor themes- representing major and minor ideas
16. REPRESENT AND REPORT FINDINGS
Comparison table: A table used to compare groups on one theme
Demographic table: A table of demographics on individual participants and/or
research site
Hierarchical tree: A diagram that visually represents themes and their interconnections
Figures/diagrams: A visual depiction that shows the interconnections between themes
Drawings: Maps of the physical layout of the site
17. REPORTING THE FINDINGS
Narrative discussion- summarize in detail the finding from the data analysis
Multiple perspectives for each theme
Include dialogue that support for theme
Metaphors- metaphor is a way of describing something by equating it with something
else. It is a comparison between two different things that have an important
characteristic in common. (Necessity is the mother of invention)
Analogies- An analogy is a comparison in which an idea or a thing is compared to
another thing that is quite different from it (Just as a sword is the weapon of a warrior, a
pen is the weapon of a writer).
Use quotes
Detail
Specify tensions and contradictions in individual experiences
18. INTERPRETING THE FINDINGS
Interpretation in qualitative research means that the researcher steps back and forms
some larger meaning about the phenomenon based on personal views, comparisons with
past studies, or both.
• Qualitative research is interpretive research, and you will need to make sense of the
findings.
• You will find this interpretation in a final section of a study under headings such as
“Discussion,” “Conclusions, ”Interpretations,” or “Implications.”
Making the sense of the data or the “lesson learned” Interpretation is not neutral
Reflect about the personal meaning of the data
Compare and contrast personal viewpoints with the literature
Address limitations of the study
Make suggestions for future research
19. VALIDATING THE ACCURACY OF THE
FINDINGS
Member checking: Asking participants in the study to check the
accuracy of the account
Triangulation: Using corroborate evidence from different
individuals, types of data (observational field notes, and interviews),
or methods of data collection (documents or interviews)
External audit: Hiring the services of an individual outside the study
to review the study