Qualitative Research Practice: A Guide for Social Science Students and ResearchersJane Ritchie, Jane Lewis, Professor of Social Policy Jane Lewis, Carol McNaughton Nicholls, Rachel Ormston Why use qualitative methods? What kinds of questions can qualitative methods help you answer? How do you actually do rigorous and reflective qualitative research in the real world? Written by a team of leading researchers associated with NatCen Social Research (the National Centre for Social Research) this textbook leads students and researchers through the entire process of qualitative research from beginning to end - moving through design, sampling, data collection, analysis and reporting. In this fully revised second edition you will find: A practical account of how to carry out qualitative research which recognises a range of current approaches and applications A brand new chapter on ethics A brand new chapter on observational research Updated advice on using software when analysing your qualitative data New case studies which illustrate issues you may encounter and how problems have been tackled by other researchers. This book is an ideal guide for students, practitioners and researchers faced with the challenges of doing qualitative research in both applied and academic settings in messy real-life contexts. |
From inside the book
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Page xii
... Visual data Generalising from Qualitative Research Jane Lewis, Jane Ritchie, Rachel Ormston and Gareth Morrell Approaches to generalisation Representational generalisation Inferential generalisation Theoretical generalisation 277 ...
... Visual data Generalising from Qualitative Research Jane Lewis, Jane Ritchie, Rachel Ormston and Gareth Morrell Approaches to generalisation Representational generalisation Inferential generalisation Theoretical generalisation 277 ...
Page xiii
Reliability and validity 354 Reliability 355 Validity 356 Validation 358 Generalising from qualitative data 359 Questions relating to the interpretive process 359 Questions relating to validation 362 Questions relating to the design and ...
Reliability and validity 354 Reliability 355 Validity 356 Validation 358 Generalising from qualitative data 359 Questions relating to the interpretive process 359 Questions relating to validation 362 Questions relating to the design and ...
Page 9
He argues that 'most quantitative researchers would claim that they do not aim to produce a science of laws (like physics) but simply to produce a set of cumulative generalisations based on the critical sifting of data' (2011: 11).
He argues that 'most quantitative researchers would claim that they do not aim to produce a science of laws (like physics) but simply to produce a set of cumulative generalisations based on the critical sifting of data' (2011: 11).
Page 10
... conjunctions' are identified •• Inductive reasoning is used after data have been collected to generalise from empirical instances to general laws •• Reality is unaffected by the research process, facts and values are separate, ...
... conjunctions' are identified •• Inductive reasoning is used after data have been collected to generalise from empirical instances to general laws •• Reality is unaffected by the research process, facts and values are separate, ...
Page 73
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CHAPTER 7
Contents
1 | |
27 | |
47 | |
4 ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS IN QUALITATIVE RESEARCH | 77 |
5 DESIGNING AND SELECTING SAMPLES | 111 |
6 DESIGNING FIELDWORK | 147 |
7INDEPTH INTERVIEWS | 177 |
8 FOCUS GROUPS | 211 |
9 OBSERVATION | 243 |
PRINCIPLES AND PROCESSES | 269 |
11 ANALYSIS IN PRACTICE | 295 |
12 GENERALISING FROM QUALITATIVE RESEARCH | 347 |
13 WRITING UP QUALITATIVE RESEARCH | 367 |
REFERENCES | 401 |
INDEX | 421 |
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Common terms and phrases
accounts activity analysis analytic approach appropriate argue asking behaviour CAQDAS challenge Chapter concepts conduct consent consider context conversation analysis criteria data collection data management described detail developed diversity ensure ethical ethnography evidence example experiences explanations explore factors feel fieldnotes fieldwork findings focus groups framework further gambling gatekeepers generalisation grounded theory group discussions identified impact important in-depth interviews individual informed consent interaction interpretation Interpretivism involved issues Kvale linkage means NatCen Social Research nature observation organisation participant’s Participatory action research particular people’s perspectives phenomena potential practice probing problem gambling qualitative data qualitative data analysis qualitative methods qualitative research quantitative relevant research questions research study researcher’s response role sample frame selection Silverman social world specific stage strategies study population summary thematic themes theoretical theoretical sampling theory thinking tion topic guide types typology understanding views