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Title: Qualitative methods An example of Grounded theory


1
Qualitative methodsAn example of Grounded theory
  • Dr. Nilay Oza
  • SOFTWARE BUSINESS LABORATORY Helsinki University
    of Technology
  • http//www.sbl.tkk.fi/

Presented from a variety of GT sources including
Oza and Makela (2004) draft paper
2
Types of qualitative research
Attempts to shed light on phenomena by studying
indepth a single case example of the phenomena. 
The case can be an individual person, an event, a
group, or an institution.
Case study
Theory is developed inductively from a corpus of
data acquired by a participant-observer.
Grounded theory
Describes the structures of experience as they
present themselves to consciousness, without
recourse to theory, deduction, or assumptions
from other disciplines
Phenomenology
Focuses on the sociology of meaning through close
field observation of sociocultural phenomena.
Typically, the ethnographer focuses on a
community
Ethnography
Systematic collection and objective evaluation of
data related to past occurrences in order to test
hypotheses concerning causes, effects, or trends
of these events that may help to explain present
events and anticipate future events. (Gay, 1996)
Historical
3
Grounded theory
  • The aim of the grounded theory is to develop
    theory from data rather than to use data to test
    a theory or hypothesis.
  • Part of qualitative research family
  • It may be somewhat misleading to use the term
    qualitative research that can understandably be
    taken to refer to the absence of employing
    quantitative data.
  • a grounded theory study can collect data via
    survey an instrument assigned by many as
    distinctively one of quantitative research

4
Grounded theory - 1
  • The grounded theorist begins with specific
    observations and builds toward general patterns
    from the empirical world under study. The
    analysis can focus on individuals or other units
    of analysis.
  • In the case of individuals,
  • analysis begins with individual experiences
    without restricting what those experiences will
    be in advance of the fieldwork.
  • In the case of units,
  • the researcher compares multiple programs,
    organizations, or communities to look for unique
    characteristics that make each setting a case in
    itself.

5
Grounded theory - 2
  • Grounded theory research allows important
    propositions to emerge from themes identified in
    the cases studied without presupposing in advance
    what the important propositions will be (Patton,
    1990).
  • it advocates developing a sense of the situation
    without imposing pre-existing expectations on the
    phenomenon or setting under study (Glaser and
    Strauss, 1967)

6
Evolution
  • Barney G. Glaser and Anselm L. Strauss
  • Motivation came from inductive reasoning and
    symbolic interaction.
  • While working on the collaborative research
    project on studying dying patients, Glaser and
    Straus inductively discovered the core themes
    dying awareness as well as its dying
    trajectory. Subsequently, they coined their
    research methods as grounded theory methodology
    in their book The Discovery of Grounded Theory
    (1967).
  • Glaser and Strauss (1967) hoped to help bridge
    the gap of empirical research and theory building
    and advocated for qualitative research to move
    more towards a theory-development goal.
  • Later, Glasers book Theoretical Sensitivity
    (1978) made grounded theory techniques more
    explicit, and Strauss book Qualitative Analysis
    for Social Scientists (1987) improved the
    accessibility of grounded theory to readers.

7
Perceptions on theory
  • theory is just a model that has been established
    for a long time (e.g. Sutton and Staw, 1995).
  • alternatively use theorizing or theoretical
    insights for lesser frameworks (Weick, 1995)
  • Strauss and Corbin (1998) refer to theory in
    describing the end-results of following a
    grounded theory approach.
  • A set of well-developed themes that are
    systematically interrelated through statements of
    relationship to form a theoretical framework that
    explains or predicts phenomena.

8
Potential outcomes
  • a substantive theory is envisaged
  • causal theory, wherein relationships of
    mutually interacting constructs are explained
  • process theory, wherein the explanation
    specifically focuses on sequences of temporally
    evolving action such that changes can be traced
    to structural and environmental changes
  • Other possible outcomes amount to essentially
    less mature building blocks of theory (Sutton and
    Staw 1995), such as individual concepts,
    typologies and suggestions for enablers of
    statistical research like measurement items.

9
Position in qualitative research
  • employing Handbook of Qualitative Research
    (Denzin and Lincoln 1994)
  • Paradigms
  • those of positivism, post positivism, critical
    theory and constructivism.
  • Research methodologies
  • ways of thinking about and studying social
    reality
  • Research methods
  • techniques for collecting and analyzing empirical
    materials
  • Interpretation and evaluation
  • interpretation of qualitative research and the
    evaluation of its quality

10
Systematic Reviews
(Pandit, 1996)
(Kitchenhalm, 2004)
11
Theoretical sampling
  • Allows the grounded theorist to build variation
    into theory, thus enhancing its explanatory
    potential (Strauss and Corbin 1998).
  • It is the process of data collection for
    generating theory whereby the analyst jointly
    collects, codes, and analyzes his data and
    decides what data to collect next and where to
    find them, in order to develop his theory as it
    emerges (Glaser and Strauss, 1967).

12
Theoretical sampling - 1
  • Glaser and Straus 1967 note that there are
    three basic questions a researcher must consider
    during theoretical sampling to select data
    sources
  • What groups or sub-groups should be included in
    data collection?
  • For what theoretical purpose groups or sub-groups
    are to be selected?
  • How to select participants?

13
Data collection from comparative groups
  • Glaser and Strauss 1967 give a number of
    reasons to collect data from comparative groups
  • Comparative groups allow the generalisation of
    categories of collected data
  • Different data can be collected under the same
    category or issue
  • Similarities and differences of data under the
    same category can be studied
  • The scope of generated theory is broadened

14
Data analysis Open coding
  • Open coding
  • It refers to the process of applying the
    analytical strength of a researcher to the data
    to identify the thoughts, ideas and meanings
    contained in their properties and dimensions
  • researcher looks for concepts with an open mind
    and every new theme identified inductively is
    taken into account and a category system is
    established

15
Data analysis Axial coding
  • It is the process of developing main categories
    and sub-categories (Pidgeon, 1996).
  • Connections between a particular category
    identified in open coding and their relating
    categories are coded to identify higher-level
    category representing dimensions and properties
    of the linked categories.

16
Data analysis Selective coding
  • It is the process of integrating main and sub
    categories identified in open and axial coding
    respectively.
  • Strauss and Corbin (1998) say that during the
    process of open coding and axial coding core
    category that best hold and central to all other
    categories together should emerge with high
    frequency of mention (explicitly or implicitly).
  • Furthermore, core category should be logical and
    consistent without any retrospective force of the
    data.

17
Analysis Selecting a core category
  • Strauss and Corbin 1998 give guidelines to
    select a core category
  • It must be central that is, all other major
    categories can be related to it.
  • It must appear frequently in the data. This means
    that within all or almost all cases, there are
    indicators pointing to that concept.
  • The explanation that evolves by relating the
    categories is logical and consistent.
  • There is no forcing of data.
  • The name or phrase used to describe the central
    category should be sufficiently abstract that it
    can be used to do research in other substantive
    areas, leading to the development of a more
    general theory.
  • As the concept is refined analytically through
    integration with other concepts, the theory grows
    in depth and explanatory power.
  • The concept is able to explain variation as well
    as the main point made by the data that is, when
    conditions vary, the explanations still holds,
    although the way in which a phenomenon is
    expressed might look somewhat different. One also
    should be able to explain contradictory or
    alternative cases in terms of the core category

18
Propositions and theory building
  • Once the core category is found, major categories
    need to be related to it by propositions
  • This process of integrating propositions develops
    into emerging theory.
  • This theory should be outlined as a theoretical
    framework or scheme.
  • Once the theoretical scheme is outlined
    researchers should refine the theory by removing
    excess and filling in poorly developed
    categories, saturating them via further
    theoretical sampling if necessary

19
Theoretical replication
  • Propositions generated in the process are
    validated by comparing them with raw data.
  • More of iterative coding is needed if the
    propositions do not fit the data. Replication can
    be claimed if there is a theoretical reason to
    believe that different results were reached
    because of an intervening external factor.
  • Such replication has been labeled theoretical
    replication as opposed to literal replication
    (Yin 2003 46).

20
Bringing in the literature
  • Existing literature is to bring in to the
    emerging theory. It is about comparing the
    emerged theory with the existing literature to
    evaluate overlaps, and differences.
  • Contrasting literature can even be helpful in
    producing new insights to factors such as new
    dimensions or constructs (Eisenhardt 1989).
  • Contrasting literature may also just reduce
    confidence in the validity of the results such
    literature may point to the results being
    incorrect or idiosyncratic to one instance in the
    data.

21
Iteration closure
  • When to stop?
  • Too much iteration will consume time, attention
    and other resources, and this could negatively
    impact the quality of research
  • At some point in time, saturation occurs in the
    emerging propositions such that further iteration
    would be unlikely to provide significant
    incremental learning of new aspects of the
    framework (Eisenhardt 1989)

22
Glaser vs. Strauss
  • Strauss and Corbin 1990 developed very detailed
    procedural guidelines for novice GT researchers
    to implement GT in practice.
  • Whereas Glaser 1978 further expanded on the
    original work and claims to be true to the
    original approach of GT Bryant 2002.

23
Glaser vs. Strauss - 1
  • Glaser 1992 criticises Straus and Corbin 1990
    that by setting out concrete procedures for
    grounded theory, their approach is said be
    forcing the theory from data and is therefore not
    a true grounded theory approach.
  • However, in the second edition of Strauss and
    Corbin 1998, Strauss and Corbin react to
    Glasers criticism and warn the reader that these
    procedures should be taken just as heuristics
    rather than rigid implementation guidelines.

24
Grounded theory and Case study
  • Constant comparison method
  • Cross-case analysis
  • All case studies do not create grounded theory
    (Mäkelä, 2004 Stake, 1994) as case studies can
    be written for purely descriptive or
    theory-testing purposes (e.g. Eisenhardt, 1989
    Yin, 2003)
  • Similarly, not all grounded theory studies need
    to employ case studies as data. Other data such
    as large-scale statistical data can be used to
    conduct grounded theory investigations (Mäkelä,
    2004).

25
Ensuring credibility
  • Integrity in analysis
  • Look for rival or competing themes and
    explanations
  • Inductively
  • Inductively means looking for other ways of
    getting the data that might lead to different
    findings.
  • Logically
  • logincally means thinking about other logical
    possibilities and then seeing if those
    possibilities can be supported by the data.
  • Look for negative case
  • Case which doesnt apply to the identified theme.

26
Ensuring credibility
  • Concerns about Objectivity
  • qualitative research is inevitably subjective!?
  • subjective means to be biased, unreliable and
    irrational.
  • Subjective data implies opinion rather than fact,
    intuition rather than logic, impression rather
    than confirmation.
  • possibility of anyone or any method being totally
    objective.
  • issue is more clearly stated by talking about the
    neutrality of the evaluator rather than
    objectivity or subjectivity.

27
Ensuring credibility
  • Generalization
  • the small sample sizes involved in qualitative
    methods make it impossible to generalise results.
  • Cronbach (1975) argues that empirical
    generalisations in social phenomena are too
    variable and context-bound.
  • generalisations decay.

28
Distinction
  • The distinction between qualitative and
    quantitative data has to do with how the
    information is represented, not whether it is
    subjective or objective Seaman (1999)

29
Examples of coding (Seaman, 1999)
  • Alpha, Beta and Gama were the only participants
    in the meeting
  • Coding the above qualitative data
    num_participants 3
  • The fact that information is objective was not
    changed by the coding process. In fact, it
    resulted in some lost information (the names of
    participants).
  • Qualitative information often carries more
    content than is easily quantified.
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