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24 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
what do interviews inquiry in terms of qualitative research |
to find out peoples perspectives, what they care about |
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what 3 things make a good research question for an interview |
broad, no charged language and neutral |
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inductive research is - |
more exploratory, what quantitative researchers do |
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deductive search is |
scientific, already have a hypothesis or know something the exists |
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the 3 R of inductive research |
read, research and relate |
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what is triangulation mixed methods |
mixing methods, may be used to confirm findings for different dat sets |
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what is triangulation within the same method? |
using the same meth but interviewing different stakeholders. used to compare and contrast views |
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what is ethnographic fieldwork? |
participant observation |
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what is ethnology |
going for a long period of time |
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why is combining interviews with ethnographic research important? |
the interview data one tells you a certain amount of what people do, need to combine what with what they say |
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advantages of triangulation (6) |
increase confidence in results, strength of study, canaddresp the different but complementary questions within a single study, enhances interoperability, divergences can uncover new issues, research is closer to the research situation |
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disadvantages of triangulation (4) |
time consuming, undertaken replication, research may not be competent, create inconsistent sets artificially comparable |
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combing quantitative and qualitative interview is another forms of |
triangulation |
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2 examples of quantitative data |
structured questions and coding with computer software |
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semi structured interviews are |
produce one-word answer for which the interviewer can probe with future questions |
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open ended questions are |
produces long answers that allow interviews to understand the experience of interviewee |
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reflexivity |
where our own positioning might affect your findings |
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name the 5 key concepts that must be considered for analysis |
power, cultural sensitivity, discourse, theory, method |
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explain power as a key concept of analysis |
presence affects findings, put ourself in the analysis e.g. don't impose |
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explain cultural sensitively as a ket concept for analysis |
may make the interviewee uncomfortable by what you wear, don't upset the power imbalances |
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explain how discourse is a key concept for analysis |
this critiques the deductive approach |
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explain hoe theory is a key concept for analysis |
is looking at the way that people are othering others. critiques the way that representations of a social group become dominant and spread |
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the saturation point |
is the point at which you have done enough interviews to see patterns, thus themes emerge |
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3 ways of recruiting interviewees |
multi-stakeholder interviews, interviewing a single social group, snowball sampling |