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This session, led by Graham R. Gibbs and Colm Crowley, explores a range of online resources for teaching qualitative analysis methodologies. It covers key websites, hands-on use of REQUALLO materials, and discusses the utility of various resources, including videos, audio recordings, and toolkits available for researchers. Emphasizing the importance of accessibility in qualitative research education, attendees will learn how to navigate platforms such as Jisc-funded repositories and the National Centre for Research Methods to enhance their learning and teaching experience.
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Using open online resources for learning and teaching qualitative analysis Graham R Gibbs, University of Huddersfield Colm Crowley, University of Greenwich
Outline of Session • Part 1. What’s available • Key websites with teaching resources for qualitative methods. • Part 2. Hands on use of REQUALLO materials • Part 3. Discussion
National Centre for Research Methods • Supported by ESRC • Reports, PowerPoints, audio and video of conference presentations. • E.g. Video from RMFestivals
Realities • ESRC/NCRM project • E.g. video resources • Toolkits
Methods@Manchester • Lots of Camtasia recordings (slides and audio) of presentations. • Aimed at Postgraduates • Some video too. • E.g. video on Qual Res • Camtasia recordings of presentations
You Tube and Vimeo • Video from around the world. • Variable quality and relevance. • Some famous faces (e.g. David Silverman, Barney Glaser, Alan Bryman) • Not the same amount of material as, say statistics • But good for CAQDAS (NVivo, Atlas.ti, MAXQDA).
iTunes University YouTube University • iTunes • Hard to find content. No good metadata • Often shovelware • Open U has some material • YouTube University • Easier to find • E.g. The Phenomenological Perspective • Language and Discourse
V-Resort • At University of Nottingham • Focus on education, but research methods of more general interest • Requires IE and Flash player.
TQRMUL • TQRMUL Dataset Teaching Resources. • Audio and video of five interviews with undergraduate students on the subject of friendship. • Designed to enable both immediate play and download options. • Free to download and use. • Transcripts using Jeffersonian and Playscript conventions for each interview are also provided.
RLOs and Jorum • RLO-CETL • What we did before Open Source • Not a lot in Qual Res. • Big issue is how to find them • Jorum– Jisc funded repository • Search is bad. No idea what resource is, need to look at each one. E.g. MANTRA
CAQDAS Networking Project http://caqdas.soc.surrey.ac.uk/ • Practical support and training with software (NVivo, MAXQDA, ATLAS.ti etc.) • Advanced applications: ‘QUIC’
Methodspace.com • A networking site for users of research methods • Create a profile (optional) • Be part of groups • Q&A section • Links to extensive resources • Methods-related events • Videos on methods
Exploring Online Research Methods • Part of RESTORE • Resources • Self-study • Resources for learners • Resources for tutors • Mainly text based • Mainly O/L questionnaires, but some material on O/L interviewing.
Methods.hud.ac.uk • Way of finding resources for research methods • Result of focus groups and online surveys • Reviews of resources • Search engine tailored to RM.
http://onlineqda.hud.ac.uk/ • Learning materials • Tutorials • Video • External sources REQUALLO • Research project case studies
Online QDA Two key resources • Text pages on how to undertake thematic based analysis • But there is some material on other approaches e.g. DA • Tutorials based on case studies • Video, audio/text and narratives
Development of OnlineQDA • Action Research • Survey of potential users and interviews • Led to design of website • REQUALLO Case studies interviews • Identified issues of doing QDA • Writing narratives and producing video developed ideas of what could be produced.
Hands on • 5 groups of 4-5 people • As per handout. • Use headphones when listening to audio or video • Questions are not taxing, just to get you focussed. There are no prizes!
Discussion • What are your (resource) needs? • E.g. software choice, heterogeneous data types, getting started with software, moving analysis on, writing up. • How do you find resources? • Training courses, books, online, colleagues? • Form of resources • E.g. manuals, detailed but focussed instructions, video?
Discussion of Online QDA resources • Usefulness for postgrad/researchers? • Usability - User interface, easy to find? Too long/short, needs more context? • Who could use - undergrads, postgrads, teachers? • Other resources needed