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Methodology and Methods: Combining

Qualitative and Quantitative Methods –

“Urban lone-mother households in Russia: The influe nce of risks and vulnerabilities on conducting a life“

(An Example of Mixed Methods Research)

Dr. Denis Gruber

DAAD-Lecturer

Saint Petersburg State University

Faculty of Sociology

E-Mail: dgspb@gmx.de

Strelna, St. Petersburg,

29.06.2012

Introduction

three distinct approaches to research: quantitative; qualitative; and mixed methods research

different definitions of mixed methods research used by different researchers: multi-methods research (Brannen 1992), multistrategy research (Bryman 2004), mixed methods (Creswell, 2003; Tashakkori & Teddlie 2003), or mixed methodology research (Tashakkori & Teddlie 1998)

“mixed methods [is] research which collects both q ualitative and quantitative data in one study and integrates these data at some stage of the research process” (Halcomb et al., 2009)

Distinction between mixed methods (quant and qual) and multi method research (uses more than one method from same tradition) (Bazeley, 2007)

Quantitative vs. Qualitative

Explanation through numbers

Objective

Deductive reasoning

Predefined variables and measurement

Data collection before analysis

Cause and effect relationships

Explanation through words

Subjective

Inductive reasoning

Creativity, extraneous variables

Data collection and analysis intertwined

Description, meaning

Qualitative Research Methods

Interviews

narrative

ethnographic

contextual interviews (topic-centred; phenomenological; Grounded Theory)

Participatory design

Case studies

Ethnographic observation

Qualitative Research Goals

Meaning: how people see the world

Context: the world in which people act

Process: what actions and activities people do

Reasoning: why people act and behave the way they do

Coding

Maxwell, 2005

What qualitative design will you use?

 

 

 

Grounded

 

 

Dimension

Narrative

Phenomenology

Theory

Ethnography

Case Study

 

 

 

 

 

 

Focus

•Exploring the

• Understanding

• Developing a

• Describing and

• Developing an

 

life of an

the essence of

theory grounded

interpreting a

in-depth

 

individual

experiences

from data in the

cultural or

analysis of a

 

 

about a

field

social group

single case or

 

 

phenomenon

 

 

multiple cases

 

 

 

 

 

 

Data

• Primary

• Long interviews

• Interviews with

• Primarily

• Multiple

Collection

interviews and

with up to 10

20-50

observations

sources

 

documents

people

individuals to

and interviews

including

 

 

 

“saturate”

with additional

documents,

 

 

 

categories and

artifacts during

archival records,

 

 

 

detail a theory

extended time in

interviews,

 

 

 

 

the field

observations,

 

 

 

 

 

• Physical

 

 

 

 

 

artifacts

 

 

 

 

 

 

Data

• Stories

• Statements

• Open coding

• Description

• Description

Analysis

• Epiphanies

• Meanings

• Axial Coding

• Analysis

• Themes

 

• Historical

• Meaning themes

• Selective

• Interpretation

• Assertions

 

content

• General

Coding

 

 

 

 

description of the

• Conditional

 

 

 

 

experience

Matrix

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Product of

• Detailed picture

• Description of the

• Theory or

• Description of

• In-depth study

the study

of an individual’s

“essence” of the

theoretical

the cultural

of a “case” or

 

life

experience

model

behavior of a

“cases”

 

 

 

 

group or an

 

 

 

 

 

individual

 

What to look for when coding

Coding is the process of combing the data for themes, ideas and categories and then

marking similar passages of text with a code label so that they can easily be retrieved at a later stage for further comparison and analysis

Coding the data makes it easier to search the data, to make comparisons and to identify any patterns that require further investigation.

Codes can be based on:…

Themes, Topics

Ideas, Concepts

Terms, Phrases

Keywords

…found in the data

Taylor, C and Gibbs, G R (2010) "How and what to code", Online QDA Web Site,

 

onlineqda.hud.ac.uk/Intro_QDA/how_what_to_code.php, 20.02.2012

7

Approaches to starting coding

start coding with themes identified from a priori ideas such as pre-existing theories

Or new codes emerge from your data set (grounded theory).

A priori codes (can be identified from a range of sources):

Previous research or theory

Research or evaluation questions you are addressing

Questions and topics from your interview schedule

Grounded codes

emerge from the data because put aside prejudices, presuppositions and previous knowledge of the subject area and concentrate instead on finding new themes in the data

Taylor, C and Gibbs, G R (2010) "How and what to code", Online QDA Web Site,

 

onlineqda.hud.ac.uk/Intro_QDA/how_what_to_code.php, 20.02.2012

8

Developing Codes 1

typically, when coding, researchers have some codes already in mind and

are also looking for other ideas that seem to arise out of the data

When coding in this second, open minded manner, Charmaz (2003:94-95, writing in the grounded theory tradition) suggests to ask the following questions about the data one is coding:

What is going on?

What are people doing?

What is the person saying?

What do these actions and statements take for granted?

How do structure and context serve to support, maintain, impede or change these actions and statements?“

Taylor, C and Gibbs, G R (2010) "How and what to code", Online QDA Web Site, onlineqda.hud.ac.uk/Intro_QDA/how_what_to_code.php, 20.02.2012

9

Developing Codes 2

NO.

WHAT CAN BE CODED

EXAMPLES

1

Behaviours, specific acts

Seeking reassurance,

 

 

Bragging

2

Events – short once in a lifetime events or things

Wedding day, day

 

people have done that are often told as a story.

moved out of home

 

 

for university, starting

 

 

first job

3

Activities – these are of a longer duration, involv e other

Going clubbing,

 

people within a particular setting

attending a night

 

 

course, conservation

 

 

work

4

Strategies, practice or tactics

Being nasty to get

 

 

dumped,

 

 

Staying late at work to

 

 

get promotion

5States – general conditions experienced by people o r found in organisations

Table: Types of phenomena that can be coded (Adapted from Bogdan and Biklen, 1992; Strauss, 1987; Mason, 1996; and Gibbs, 2006), in: Taylor, C and Gibbs, G R (2010) "How and what to code", Online QDA Web Site, www.onlineqda.hud.ac.uk/Intro_QDA/how_what_to_code.php, 20.02.2012

Hopelessness “I’ll never meet anyone better at my age” settling for someone who is not really suitable 10

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