1 / 44

Qualitative Research Designs

10. Qualitative Research Designs. Learning Objectives. Discuss Six Common Types Of Qualitative Research Designs Describe The Most Important Features Of The Six Types of Qualitative Research Designs Recall The Disciplines Associated With Some Of The Various Qualitative Research Designs.

drichardson
Télécharger la présentation

Qualitative Research Designs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 10 Qualitative Research Designs

  2. Learning Objectives • Discuss Six Common Types Of Qualitative Research Designs • Describe The Most Important Features Of The Six Types of Qualitative Research Designs • Recall The Disciplines Associated With Some Of The Various Qualitative Research Designs

  3. Learning Objectives Identify The Most Common Qualitative Designs Reported In The Nursing Research Literature Recall Some Of The Reasons That Nurse Researchers Are Using Qualitative Designs In Their Studies Critique The Design Section Of Qualitative Research Studies

  4. Learning Objective OneDiscuss Six Common Types Of Qualitative Research Designs

  5. Qualitative Research Designs • Phenomenological • Ethnographic • Grounded theory • Historical • Case study • Action research

  6. Learning Objective TwoDescribe The Most Important Features Of The Six Types of Qualitative Research Designs

  7. Phenomenological Studies • Examines human experiences • Goal: describe meaning experience holds for subject • Study areas: areas with little known knowledge

  8. Phenomenological Studies (cont’d) • Understand experience from subject’s vantage point • No literature review • Bracketing: researcher identifies personal bias.

  9. Phenomenological Process • Data collection (interviews) • Data analysis • Process simultaneously • Search for themes and patterns

  10. Ethnographic studies • Systematic collection and analysis of data about cultural groups • Goal: grasp patterns of people in their familiar environment • Subjects: entire culture or subgroup of the culture

  11. Ethnographic Goals • Provide insightful descriptions • Test established social or cultural theories • Develop new theories

  12. Ethnographic Process • Live with subjects • Become part of their culture • Simultaneous data collection and analysis • Participant observations • Key informant interviews

  13. Grounded Theory • Glaser and Strauss (1967) • Inductive and deductive approaches

  14. Grounded Theory Process • Simultaneous data collection and analysis • Field setting • Constant comparison • Theory developed • Theory “grounded” in data from which it was derived

  15. Sampling in GroundedTheory Studies • Purposeful sampling • Diversity rather than similarity • Shed new light on phenomenon

  16. Literature Review in Grounded Theory Studies • Not performed prior to study • Avoid preconceived notions • After concepts identified and relationships specified • Determine similar associations discovered in past

  17. Aim of Grounded Theory Studies • Discovery of basic social processes • Hypothesis generation, not testing

  18. Historical Studies • Identification, location, evaluation, and synthesis of data from the past • Goal: relate past events to present and future

  19. Process of Historical Research • Identification of problem or area of interest • Careful and thorough review of literature • Formulation of research questions • Data collection • Primary and secondary sources • Documents, relics, artifacts • Data analysis

  20. Evaluating Data inHistorical Studies • External criticism—authenticity of data • Internal criticism—accuracy of data

  21. Need for Historical Studies • Preference for action-oriented experimental research • Increasing historical studies of nursing leaders • Need for studies of nursing practice

  22. Case Study Research • In-depth examinations of people, groups of people, or an institution • Hypothesis generation, not testing • Goals • Formalize experimental knowledge • Promote quality nursing care

  23. Case Study Research • Qualitative—interest in meaning of experiences to subjects themselves • Quantitative—generalize results

  24. Case Study Process • Data collection • Questionnaires • Interviews • Observations • Written accounts by participants • Content analysis • Search for patterns and themes

  25. Disadvantages ofCase Study Research • Subject selection process • Time consuming • Costly • Participant dropout

  26. Action Research • Goals • Improve practice • Study effect of action taken • One particular hospital or health care setting • No goal to generalize findings • Solution implementation immediate, part of research process

  27. Participatory Action Research (PAR) • Special kind of community-based action research • Participants and researcher or co-researchers collaborate throughout study.

  28. Learning Objective ThreeRecall The Disciplines Associated With Some Of The Various Qualitative Research Designs

  29. Phenomenological Design • Derived from phenomenological philosophy

  30. Ethnographic Research • Philosophical orientation • Discipline of anthropology

  31. Grounded Theory Research • Based on symbolic interaction theory

  32. Historical Research • Philosophical orientation • Discipline of history

  33. Case Study Research • Philosophical orientation • Discipline of sociology

  34. Learning Objective FourIdentify The Most Common Qualitative Designs Reported In TheNursing Research Literature

  35. Qualitative Research Designs in Published Nursing Research • Phenomenological • Ethnographic • Grounded theory • Historical • Case study • Action research

  36. Learning Objective FiveRecall Some Of The Reasons That Nurse Researchers Are Using Qualitative Designs In Their Studies

  37. Quantitative VersusQualitative Research • Quantitative approach not always appropriate • Uncover new phenomena • Not for generalizations

  38. Focus of Quantitative Research • Gain insight • Individual’s perception of events and circumstances

  39. Learning Objective SixCritique The Design Section Of Qualitative Research Studies

  40. Critiquing theQualitative Research Design • Criteria different from quantitative critiques • No standard set of criteria • Each qualitative method unique

  41. Critiquing the QualitativeResearch Design (cont’d) • General guidelines • Would a quantitative approach have been more appropriate? • Is the focus on the subjective nature of human experience? • Is the specific qualitative approach named and described? • Will the findings have significance for nursing?

  42. Critiquing the QualitativeResearch Design (cont’d) General guidelines Is the participant selection process clearly described? How was the sample size determined? Is the data collection and recording process fully presented? Is it clear how researcher bias was avoided? Is the data analysis method consistent with the study’s purpose and approach?

  43. Critiquing the QualitativeResearch Design (cont’d) General guidelines Are the findings clearly presented and limitations acknowledged? Are suggestions made for further research?

  44. Determine Trustworthiness • Credibility • Dependability • Confirmability • Transferability • Authenticity

More Related