Qualitative Analysis : Focus is Thematic Analysis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Qualitative Analysis : Focus is Thematic Analysis

Description:

How many interviews do we already have? Group Reflexive Debrief / Share Practice ... Individuals are socially and psychologically primed. Grounded Theory ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:4052
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: Sal69
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Qualitative Analysis : Focus is Thematic Analysis


1
Qualitative Analysis Focus is Thematic Analysis
  • Dr Sal Watt

2
Interviewing So how was it for you
  • Last week interviewing
  • How many interviews do we already have?
  • Group Reflexive Debrief / Share Practice
  • What worked / didnt?
  • His/Los
  • Problems
  • Any Anxieties
  • Did you enjoy the process?
  • What did you learn?
  • What are we going to do with the data?

3
Objectives
  • To gain a wider understanding of the reflexive
    process and its impact on qualitative analysis
  • To gain a general understanding of various
    research analysis techniques
  • To understand the theory and how to conduct
    practically a thematic analysis

4
Backtracking on last week ..
  • Qualitative data rich / thick data
  • Explicit knowledge (spoken)
  • Tacit knowledge (unspoken cultural norm e.g.
    nonverbal behaviour)
  • Verstehen ? Worldview ? empathetic understanding
    (Weber, 1949)
  • Acktueller ? objective observation
  • Erklander ? reflexive / engaging with
    subject/topic stepping inside the participants
    frame of reference

5
Writing Stories .
  • Behar (2003) says
  • we write commentaries that our informants share
    with us about their lives.. the stories of
    those whose voices often go unheard
  • Stories ? narratives subjective account
  • Think back to your childhood memories / antics
  • We always give a version of the truth
  • Memories play tricks
  • We sanitise our versions
  • Qualitative analysis largely relies on a
    researchers interpretation (although some
    quantitative analysis of qualitative data can
    also be undertaken e.g. NUDIST package)

6
Reflexivity
  • Participants story subjective account (1) ?
  • Researchers interpretation subjective account
    (2) ?
  • Reader has to accept the account on trust OR
    reject it ? relies heavily on reflexive account
    to make that decision
  • Behar (2003) ? really real ? how the researcher
    represents participants
  • Huge responsibility (or it should be!)
  • Highly reflexive we deconstruct our subjective
    role in the research process
  • What biases could a researcher bring to an
    interview situation?
  • What assumptions have you already made around our
    research question i.e. 3rd year HE students /
    stress ?
  • Good strategy is to keep a research diary
    throughout the whole process ? honestly record
    your thoughts and feelings

7
So how should we analyse qualitative data?
  • Discourse Analysis
  • Grounded Theory
  • Thematic Analysis
  • IPA
  • Interpretivist Analysis tends to embrace multi
    approach ? amalgam
  • Much overlap around data analysis techniques

8
Consider the following quote
  • I have worked on .. (Text withheld). 

9
Reading between the lines
  • How do you interpret this extract
  • First of all what sex is the speaker do you
    think?
  • What explicit knowledge is being conveyed?
  • What implicit knowledge is indicated?
  • What would your next question be to this
    participant?
  • How do your colleagues respond to these changes
  • 3rd person - allows the emphasis to be taken away
    from the participant

10
What about .
  • I love my ..(text withheld)
  • What do you interpret from this quote
  • Safety in numbers
  • Justification and Verification through group
    identity?

11
Discourse Analysis
  • Contemporarily 2 leading approaches exist both
    share concern around how we use language
  • Discursive Psychology
  • Foucauldian Discourse Analysis
  • Discourse Analysis traditionally looked to
    language as representative of an individuals
    attitudes and beliefs
  • Criticised as too cognitivist in approach relying
    on the unfounded assumption of language and
    representation
  • Traditional Cognitive focus
  • Talk ? Perception ? Reality ? Objects of thought
    ?
  • Enduring Cognitive structures rigidity
  • Discursive Psychology moves away from enduring
    cognitive structures ? flexibility of language
    e.g. the way it is used in naturally occurring
    situations
  • Discursive practices performative qualites of
    discourse
  • Think about the different ways you talk to your
    peers, parents, grandparents,tutors do you
    converse differently?

12
Foucauldian Discourse Analysis
  • Locates the individual in a subjective / material
    reality discursive practices
  • Cultural discourses socially locate individuals ?
    expectation around how we should think, feel and
    behave e.g. gender is socially constructed ?
    discourse of gender specific behaviour
  • Foucault talks about the circularity of knowledge
    that produces / enculturates knowledge -
    socialised norms / self-fulfilling
  • Tell me what do you think of when I say the word
    obesity
  • What about motherhood ?
  • Individuals are socially and psychologically
    primed

13
Grounded Theory
  • Deductive theorising testing existing
    theories/hypothesis e.g. replication/
    generalisation ? Top Down
  • Inductive theorising is Bottom Up
  • Seeing whats out there and grounding or
    building theory based on what is observed or
    found
  • If you think about this, its what we do all the
    time
  • Imagine you were about to book a summer holiday
  • Research destination / tour operators/ internet
    options
  • Come up with a destination/operator ? your would
    theorise this was the best deal ?
    accommodation/flights/cheapest rate or whatever
  • Qualitative data ? process of developing theory
    is ongoing
  • Theory builds on theory depending on the data
    that evolves
  • Flexible approach / data unfold
  • Research question could change direction
    depending on what unfolds

14
Thematic Analysis
  • Process of extracting key themes
  • Read, read and read again the transcript
  • Highly familiar with the text and the way things
    are said
  • Generate as many themes as possible / text holds
  • Identify a new theme alongside a code e.g. number
    or letter
  • Produce a large number which are then collapsed
    down
  • Collapsing down process will identify which
    themes are connected or overlap
  • Collapsing down allows the data to become more
    manageable
  • Practical example will show you how we do this

15
IPA
  • Investigate how individuals attribute meaning
  • Through the individuals perception / experiences
  • Empathetic understanding of an individuals
    worldview
  • 2 stage interpretation process - double
    hermeneutics (dh)
  • Process involves participants making sense /
    negotiating their world
  • Researcher similarly makes sense of the way in
    which a participant makes sense/negotiates their
    world dh
  • IPA committed to the individual as a cognitive,
    linguistic, affective and physical being
  • Holistic approach considers thought, speech and
    emotion
  • Highly ecological

16
Amalgam Interpretivism
  • Methodology researchers philosophy of how
    research should be conducted
  • Methods techniques we use to collect data
  • Methodologies can converge ? pick n mix
    approach depending on the context and the
    researchers preference
  • Key is to be reflexive and acknowledge our
    methodology and be able to justify it
  • E.g. My take would be ? Interpretivism
  • Informed by ethnography conversations,
    interviews, observations documents etc and hands
    on experience of a culture
  • This would involve analysis that necessarily
    includes
  • Context Analysis (culture),
  • Discursive /Foucauldian Analysis (quotes/
    repetition of spoken words/themes, the ways in
    which language informs social norms
  • Content Analysis (wording/ phraseolgy of
    documents),
  • Grounded Theory findings would necessarily
    ground my thoughts / theory
  • IPA how individuals social construct meaning
  • Amalgam of various approaches

17
Its not just the words what about the culture
.?
  • We will, by the way . Text withheld

18
Thematic Analysis
  • Two approaches
  • First is to read several times and extract the
    key themes that are immediately apparent
  • Danger here is that we might simply extract what
    we expect to find
  • Research then becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy
    around our hypothesis
  • This route would not necessarily pick up on the
    silences in the data or its richness
  • You need to consider your data holistically so
    the second approach is ..

19
Thematic Analysis A labour of love
  • Re-Reading allows a deep understanding / analysis
  • However small or seemingly insignificant generate
    as many themes as possible (50/100)
  • Multiple themes more likely to ensure that all
    data represented
  • Process of collapsing the themes into each other
  • Consider ..

20
Weighty issues
  • We will, . (text withheld)

21
Lets have a go .
  • We will, . (text withheld)
  • 1. Time
  • 2. Intention
  • 3. Our section (x 2)
  • 4. Dieting
  • 5. Foods (Junk)
  • 6. Force (forceably)
  • 7. Power
  • 8. Staff member
  • 9. Free Will (shove)
  • 10. Insistence
  • 11. Coming months
  • 12. Miscellaneous
  • 13. Metaphor (window)
  • 14. Identity (our section)
  • 15. Collectivity

22
Collapsing themes down
  • 1. Time
  • 2. Intention
  • 3. Our section (x 2)
  • 4. Dieting
  • 5. Foods (Junk)
  • 6. Force (forceably)
  • 7. Power
  • 8. Staff member
  • 9. Free Will (shove)
  • 10. Insistence
  • 11. Coming months
  • 12. Miscellaneous
  • 13. Metaphor (window)
  • 14. Identity (our section)
  • 15. Collectivity
  • Timespan
  • 1, 2, 11
  • Food
  • 4, 5, 6, 7
  • Section
  • 3, 8, 14, 15
  • Collective Identity
  • 3, 6, 8, 11, 14, 15
  • Power
  • 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,
  • Loss of power
  • 2, 4, 9, 10, 12, 13
  • 15 ? 6 Themes

23
And again ..
  • 1 Timespan
  • 1, 2, 11
  • 2 Food
  • 4, 5, 6, 7
  • 3 Section
  • 3, 8, 14, 15
  • 4 Collective Identity
  • 3, 6, 8, 11, 14, 15
  • 5 Power
  • 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,
  • 6 Loss of power
  • 2, 4, 9, 10, 12, 13
  • 1. Timespan 1,2,11
  • while you are with us
  • 2. Collective Identity
  • 3,6,8,11,14,15
  • We are a team..
  • 3. Strength in numbers
  • 3,6,7,8,9,10,11,14,15
  • 4. Loss of Identity
  • 2,4,5,6,7,10,12,13
  • 6 to 4 themes

24
We could conclude that,
  • To ensure cultural immersion into a work
    environment it is essential to be respectful of
    the norms of that existing culture. In this
    instance power was exerted by the researched
    group through ritualistic practices around eating
    habits (food consumption)

25
IPA ( see Chapter 4 Smith and Osborn)
  • Repetitive reading of transcript
  • Left hand margin anything of interest/
    significance data, use of language, nonverbals
    / quotes etc.
  • Right hand margin emergent themes
  • Higher level of abstraction ? Psychological
    terminology ? theoretical connections
  • Ensure balance between the richness of what has
    been said when making theoretical connections
  • Remember we need to keep it really real (Behar,
    2003)

Annotate Initial things That Are
Interesting Or significant
Emergent Themes
Joe !
. ? (laughs)
!
Aggression Not who I am ? Identity
Anger pain struggle to accept self

26
So you have a go ..
  • I have not got a problem with .(text withheld)

27
Thought for the week when analysing
  • Behar (200316) suggests,
  • we go to find the stories we didnt know we were
    looking for in the first place.
  • Huge responsibility to represent the people
    behind our rich data with respect and sensitivity
    and as accurately as we can
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com