1. Qualitative Method
Jamal Anwar Taha
PhD student in Linguistics
Sulaimani University
School of Basic Education
Department of English
January 18th 2016
2. Outline of the Seminar
O Definition
O Types of Qualitative Method
O Techniques of Data Analysis
O Methods of Reasoning in Qualitative
Method
O Strengths and Challenges
O Conclusions
O References
3. Qualitative Research
“A form of social inquiry that
focuses on the way people
interpret and make sense of
their experiences and the
world in which they live.”
(Myers, 2002)
4. Case Study
Attempts to shed light on a phenomena by studying in depth a single
case example of the phenomena. The case can be an individual
person, an event, a group, or an institution.
Grounded
Theory
Theory is developed inductively from a corpus of data acquired by a
participant-observer.
Phenomenology
Describes the structures of experience as they present themselves to
consciousness, without recourse to theory, deduction, or assumptions
from other disciplines
Ethnography
Focuses on the sociology of meaning through close field observation of
sociocultural phenomena. Typically, the ethnographer focuses on a
community.
Historical
Systematic collection and objective evaluation of data related to past
occurrences in order to test hypotheses concerning causes, effects, or
trends of these events that may help to explain present events and
anticipate future events.
Main Types of Qualitative Research
5. Main Types of Qualitative Data
Collection & Analysis
O "Those who are not familiar with
qualitative methodology may be surprised
by the sheer volume of data and the
detailed level of analysis that results even
when research is confined to a small
number of subjects" (Myers, 2002).
6. There are three main methods of
data collection:
1. Interactive
interviewing
People asked to verbally described their experiences of
phenomenon.
2. Written descriptions
by participants
People asked to write descriptions of their experiences
of phenomenon.
3. Observation Descriptive observations of verbal and non-verbal behavior.
Analysis begins when the data is first collected and is used to guide decisions related to
further data collection.
"In communicating--or generating--the data, the researcher must make the process of
the study accessible and write descriptively so tacit knowledge may best be
communicated through the use of rich, thick descriptions" (Myers, 2002).
9. Qualitative Research Methods:
Triangulation
OMethod to enhance the validity & reliability
of qualitative research
OEnhances accuracy of interpretation
OConfirms that the data collected is not due
to chance or circumstances
11. Qualitative Research Design:
Triangulation
Collect data from
multiple sources
Collect data in
multiple ways from
subjects
Collect different
kinds of data in
multiple ways from
multiple subjects
For example:
May interview teachers,
principals & parents
May interview & observe
students
May review student records,
interview teachers, observe
students
12. Strengths
O aims to understand meaning
O interpretation in particular settings,
situations and conditions
O rigorous and systematic data collection
and analysis often concurrently
O data rich in descriptions
O concepts derived from the data itself
13. Strengths
O aims to explore and communicate
O hypothesis generation
O need for a reflexive account ‘tell how
the study was done’
O need for triangulation, multiple points
of observation
14. Challenges
O small scale
O non-representative samples
O bias
O access to samples
O time consuming
O record keeping
O data reduction
15. Challenges
O relationships between the researcher
and the researched
O subjectivity
O reliability
O verification
O difficulty in studying large populations
16. Conclusions
O Researcher may only know roughly in
advance what he/she is looking for.
O The design emerges as the study
unfolds.
O Researcher is the data gathering
instrument.
O Data is in the form of words, pictures
or objects.
O Subjective - individuals’ interpretation
of events is important
O Qualitative data is more 'rich', time
consuming, and not generalizable.
O Researcher tends to become
subjectively immersed in the subject
matter.
17. References
Brown, J. D., & Rodgers, T. S. (2002). Doing second language research.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Creswell, J. W. (2007). Qualitative inquiry and research design: Choosing
among five trad- itions (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications.
Creswell, J. W. (2009). Research design: Qualitative, quantitative, and
mixed methods approaches (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications.
Mackey, A., & Gass, S. M. (2005). Second language research:
Methodology and design. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates.
Nunan, D. (1992). Research methods in language learning. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Richards, L., & Morse, J. M. (2007). Readme first for a user’s guide to
qualitative methods (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications.
Schwandt, T. A. (2007). The Sage dictionary of qualitative inquiry (3rd
ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.