1 / 26

Quantitative and Qualitative Methodologies: A Comparison

Quantitative and Qualitative Methodologies: A Comparison. Used with permission from: John R. Slate The University of Texas at El Paso. BOTH PARADIGMS HAVE ROOTS IN 20TH-CENTURY PHILOSOPHICAL THINKING. THE QUANTITATIVE PARADIGM IS REGARDED AS The TRADITIONAL, The POSITIVIST,

kandrea
Télécharger la présentation

Quantitative and Qualitative Methodologies: A Comparison

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. Quantitative and Qualitative Methodologies: A Comparison Used with permission from: John R. Slate The University of Texas at El Paso

  2. BOTH PARADIGMS HAVE ROOTS IN 20TH-CENTURY PHILOSOPHICAL THINKING.

  3. THE QUANTITATIVE PARADIGM IS REGARDED AS • The TRADITIONAL, • The POSITIVIST, • The EXPERIMENTAL, • Or the EMPIRICIST PARADIGM.

  4. THE QUALITATIVE PARADIGM IS REGARDED AS • THE CONSTRUCTIVIST OR NATURALISTIC APPROACH (Lincoln & Guba, 1981), • THE INTERPRETATIVE APPROACH (Smith, 1983), • THE POSTPOSITIVIST OR POSTMODERN PERSPECTIVE (Quantz, 1992).

  5. ONTOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES (REALNESS OF DATA COLLECTED):

  6. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCHERS VIEW REALITY AS "OBJECTIVE" AND INDEPENDENT OF THE RESEARCHER. • THESE "OBJECTIVE" PHENOMENA ARE MEASURED VIA QUESTIONNAIRES, INSTRUMENTS, ETC.

  7. FOR QUALITATIVE RESEARCH, • THE ONLY REALITY IS THAT WHICH IS CONSTRUCTED BY THE INDIVIDUALS INVOLVED IN THE RESEARCH PROCESS. • THUS, MULTIPLE REALITIES EXIST IN ANY GIVEN SITUATION.

  8. EPISTEMOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES • RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN RESEARCHER AND OBJECT OF RESEARCH

  9. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCHERS ARE SUPPOSED TO BE DISTANT AND INDEPENDENT OF WHAT IS BEING RESEARCHED. • THUS CONTROL FOR BIAS IS MADE.

  10. QUALITATIVE RESEARCHERS INTERACT WITH THOSE THEY STUDY, • OFTEN SEEKING TO MINIMIZE THE DISTANCE BETWEEN HER/HIM SELF AND THE OBJECT OF RESEARCH.

  11. AXIOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES • ROLE OF VALUES IN THE STUDY

  12. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCHERS ATTEMPT TO KEEP THEIR VALUES OUT OF THE STUDY, • BY USING IMPERSONAL LANGUAGE AND REPORTING THE FACTS, ARGUING CLOSELY FROM THE EVIDENCE GATHERED IN THE STUDY.

  13. QUALITATIVE RESEARCHERS ADMIT THE VALUE-LADEN NATURE OF THE STUDY • ACTIVELY REPORT THEIR VALUES AND BIASES, • AS WELL AS THE VALUE NATURE OF THE INFORMATION GATHERED FROM THE RESEARCH. • THE LANGUAGE OF THE STUDY IS OFTEN FIRST PERSON AND PERSONAL.

  14. RHETORIC DIFFERENCES (LANGUAGE OF THE RESEARCH):

  15. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCHERS USE IMPERSONAL AND FORMAL LANGUAGE • USING ACCEPTED TERMINOLOGY SUCH AS RELATIONSHIP, COMPARISON, AND VARIANCE. CONCEPTS • DEFINITIONS ARE WELL-DEFINED FROM ACCEPTED DEFINITIONS.

  16. QUALITATIVE RESEARCHERS OFTEN USE DIFFERENT TERMINOLOGY, • ALTHOUGH WORDS SUCH AS UNDERSTANDING, DISCOVER, THEMES, AND MEANING ARE EMERGING AS QUALITATIVE TERMS.

  17. NATURE OF THE PROBLEM

  18. IN QUANTITATIVE STUDIES, • THE PROBLEM EVOLVES FROM THE LITERATURE, SO A BODY OF LITERATURE EXISTS ON WHICH THE RESEARCHER CAN BUILD. • VARIABLES OFTEN ARE KNOWN, • THEORIES MAY EXIST WHICH NEED TO BE TESTED AND VERIFIED.

  19. IN QUALITATIVE STUDIES, • THE RESEARCH PROBLEM NEEDS TO BE EXPLORED BECAUSE LITTLE EXISTS ON THE TOPIC. • VARIABLES ARE LARGELY UNKNOWN, AND • THE RESEARCHER WANTS TO FOCUS ON THE CONTEXT WHICH MAY SHAPE THE UNDERSTANDING OF THE PHENOMENON BEING STUDIED.

  20. IN MANY QUALITATIVE STUDIES, • A THEORY BASE DOES NOT NECESSARILY GUIDE THE STUDY BECAUSE THOSE AVAILABLE ARE INADEQUATE, INCOMPLETE, OR SIMPLY MISSING.

  21. METHODOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES:

  22. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCHERS • TEND TO USE A MORE DEDUCTIVE FORM OF LOGIC • THROUGH TESTING HYPOTHESES IN A CAUSE-AND-EFFECT ORDER. • STATIC DESIGN • CONCEPTS, VARIABLES, AND HYPOTHESES OFTEN ARE CHOSEN PRIOR TO THE STUDY AND REMAINS FIXED THROUGHOUT THE STUDY.

  23. QUANTITATIVE • ONE DOES NOT VENTURE BEYOND THESE PRE-DETERMINED HYPOTHESES (i.e., RESEARCH IS CONTEXT-FREE).

  24. QUANTITATIVE • RELIABILITY AND VALIDITY USUALLY ARE ESTABLISHED VIA QUANTITATIVE TECHNIQUES.

  25. QUALITATIVE RESEARCHERS • TEND TO USE A MORE INDUCTIVE FORM OF LOGIC. • THIS PROVIDES CONTEXT-BOUND INFORMATION LEADING TO PATTERNS OR THEORIES WHICH HELP EXPLAIN A PHENOMENON.

  26. QUALITATIVE • RELIABILITY AND VALIDITY USUALLY ARE ESTABLISHED VIA TECHNIQUES SUCH AS TRIANGULATION, • IN WHICH DIFFERENT SOURCES OF INFORMATION ARE POOLED TOGETHER.

More Related