1 / 13

What is Qualitative Content Analysis?

What is Qualitative Content Analysis?. And How Do You Do It?. General Definition. Broad, general set of methods For analyzing the content Of some qualitative material To build or support an argument. What Is the Goal? . Identify important aspects of the content

faylinn
Télécharger la présentation

What is Qualitative Content Analysis?

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. What is Qualitative Content Analysis? And How Do You Do It?

  2. General Definition • Broad, general set of methods • For analyzing the content • Of some qualitative material • To build or support an argument

  3. What Is the Goal? • Identify important aspects of the content • Present them clearly and effectively • In support of some argument • That will persuade the reader • And contribute to the field Goal embodied in product (research paper)

  4. The Goal Provides Focus • You don’t necessarily begin with it • You can change it as the work develops • But you need some idea to start • Call it a RESEARCH QUESTION • It needs to connect to some broader concern • It justifies looking at a body of material • It guides the sampling and coding choices • And guides the analysis to the argument

  5. Choosing Qualitative Material • The material exists in some form already • As a cultural production with meaning • That is accessible for analysis • Text materials of any scale • Visual materials, still or moving • Audio materials that convert to text • Field notes from observation • Open-ended interview responses

  6. What Does Analysis Mean? • Extracting something systematically • From qualitative material • To create evidence about the content • That builds or support an argument • That will persuade an intelligent reader

  7. Qualitative Analysis • The materials start out qualitative • The analysis starts out qualitative • It can remain primarily qualitative • identifying themes • identifying patterns • describing situations

  8. Or Become Quantitative • Creating Codes to define categories • Counting instances to see frequency • Coding and Recoding to see the range • Making comparisons between groups • Presenting findings in tables and graphs • Deepening analysis with statistics

  9. Content Analysis Methods • Procedures keep you honest • Treat materials consistently • Ensure that data logic matches argument • Provide some reliability and validity checks • Help reader evaluate your results • Make your argument persuasive

  10. Content Analysis and Computers • Methods predate use of computers • Many things are easier to do by hand • Computer can help with some aspects • Storage of raw and coded data, memos • Coding and recoding, preserving codes • Simple tallying and comparisons • Complex statistics • Data presentation

  11. Computer Does Not Do the Work! • Computer cannot do analysis for you • You have to code the data yourself • You have to make sense of the results • You have to relate data to argument • You have to write the paper

  12. Computer Can HELP You • Data source itself may be on computer • Computer can help transform raw data • Computer can store transformed data • Computer can manage data, store, sort • Computer can help analyze complex data • Larger scale projects become possible • Small scale projects can go deeper

  13. QCA and CAQDAS Programs • Computer Aided Qualitative Data Analysis Systems • expensive, single purpose programs • designed for computerized text • limited to western languages • work directly on text by applying codes • Not necessary for qualitative content analysis • use existing general computer tools • develop skills applicable to many areas • focus on basic principles of coding and analysis

More Related