1 / 15

Social Research Methods

Alan Bryman. Social Research Methods. Chapter 26: Breaking down the quantitative/qualitative divide. Slides authored by Tom Owens. Distinction between quantitative and qualitative research remains useful

sswayne
Télécharger la présentation

Social Research Methods

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. Alan Bryman Social Research Methods Chapter 26: Breaking down the quantitative/qualitative divide Slides authored by Tom Owens

  2. Distinction between quantitative and qualitative research remains useful But the connections between epistemological / ontological commitments and research methods are not deterministic Research methods are more ‘free-floating’ than has been presumed Practicality of a method needs consideration Introduction Pages 614,615

  3. Characterization of the natural sciences as inherently positivistic Problems with this: no agreed epistemological basis of natural sciences: realism as an alternative (Bhaskar, 1975) disparity between scientists’ written accounts and actual work practices (Gilbert & Mulkay, 1984) negative connotations of ‘positivism’ (Platt, 1981) The natural science model and qualitative research Page 615

  4. Quantitative researchers also study the social meanings people give to the world surveys and questionnaires attempt to measure attitudes or elicit accounts of action / events Reports of qualitative research rarely demonstrate that interpretative understanding has been achieved Quantitative content analysis can reveal patterns of representation in mass media texts Quantitative research, interpretivism and constructionism Pages 617,618

  5. Quantitative and qualitative research strategies tend to reflect different epistemological and ontological beliefs Some say these commitments are inevitable choice of method reflects assumptions about the nature of knowledge and of social phenomena (Morgan & Smircich, 1980) But the dominance of mixed methods case study research blurs the ideology Epistemological and ontological considerations Pages 618,619

  6. Four dimensions of the contrast: Behaviour versus meaning; Theory tested in research versus emergent from data; Numbers versus words; Artificial versus natural. Problems with the quantitative/qualitative contrast Pages 620-622

  7. The distinction is sometimes drawn between a focus on behaviour and a focus on meanings. However, quantitative research frequently involves the study of meanings in the form of attitude scales etc. Qualitative researchers often want to interpret people’s behaviour in terms of the norms, values, and culture of the group or community in question. Quantitative and qualitative researchers are typically interested both in what people do and what they think, but go about the investigation of these areas in different ways. Behaviour versus meaning Page 620

  8. The suggestion that theory and concepts are developed prior to undertaking a study in quantitative research is true only up to a point. Quantitative research is far less driven by a hypothesis-testing strategy than is frequently supposed, e.g. exploratory survey research. The suggestion that quantitative research is concerned solely with the testing of ideas that have previously been formulated (such as hypotheses) fails to recognize the creative work that goes into the analysis of quantitative data and into the interpretation of findings. Theory tested in research versus emergent from data Page 621

  9. Qualitative researchers sometimes undertake limited quantification of their data: to help uncover the generality of the phenomena being described (Silverman, 1984, 1985). So that greater precision into estimates of frequency can be given, using terms like ‘many’, ‘often’, and ‘some’. Numbers versus words Page 621

  10. Whereas quantitative research may be seen to give an artificial account of how the social world operates, qualitative research is often viewed as more naturalistic. However, when qualitative research is based on interviews, the depiction ‘natural’ is possibly less applicable, because interviews and focus groups still have to be arranged and interviewees have to be taken away from their normal activities. Artificial versus natural Pages 621,622

  11. Developments in quantitative and qualitative research allow each to be used to analyse the other: Qualitative analysis of quantitative data Quantitative analysis of qualitative data Reciprocal analysis Pages 622,623

  12. The writings of quantitative researchers can be treated as ethnographic accounts in themselves. Ethnostatistics (Gephart, 1988) treats statistics as rhetoric, becoming sensitive to the ways in which statistical arguments are deployed to bestow credibility on research for target audiences. Qualitative analysis of quantitative data Pages 622,623

  13. ‘The fundamental contribution of the systematic analysis of documentary accounts is that it creates an analytic link between the in-depth accounts of professional observers and the statistical methods of quantitative researchers’ (Hodson 1999: 68). In other words, the application of quantitative methods to qualitative research may provide a meeting ground for the two research strategies Quantitative analysis of qualitative data Page 623

  14. Thematic analysis (undertaking a search for themes in transcripts or field notes): The criteria employed in the identification of themes are often unclear (Bryman and Burgess, 1994) One possible factor is the frequency of occurrence of certain incidents, words, phrases, that denote a theme So a theme is more likely to be identified the more times the phenomenon it denotes occurs in the course of coding Thus a kind of implicit quantification may be in operation that influences the identification of themes and the elevation of some themes over others Quantification in qualitative research Page 624

  15. The publications of qualitative research are often seen as anecdotal Numbers can be used to give a fairly straightforward indication of the scale of the research project or to interpret the significance of qualitative data CAQDAS may make qualitative research more respectable within the scientific community (Ragin and Becker, 1994) Combating anecdotalism through limited quantification Pages 624,625

More Related