Week 4 – Assignment: Create an Instructor’s Presentation to Teach Students about Qualitative Research Designs

 

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Instructions

Create an instructor’s presentation to teach students about qualitative research designs. This week, you were presented with three different qualitative research designs. Determine the value of each of the five designs explored over the last two weeks, and then critique the utility of each one relative to your research problem. Create a narrated PowerPoint presentation that includes the following:

  • Cover and references slides (these do not contribute to sliding count)
  • The problem to be investigated (your problem statement from Week 1)
  • A critique of five qualitative research designs
  • Comparison and contrast of the value of these designs
  • Defense of your selection of one of the designs covered this week for your proposed dissertation research study. 
  • Note: This presentation should be usable in a teaching environment

Length: 8- to 10-slide PowerPoint narrated presentation. Speaker notes (minimum 200 words per slide)

Your presentation should demonstrate thoughtful consideration of the ideas and concepts presented in the course and provide new thoughts and insights relating directly to this topic. Your response should reflect scholarly writing and current APA standards. Be sure to adhere to Northcentral University’s Academic Integrity Policy. Upload your document and click the Submit to Dropbox button.

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  • SAGE Research Methods Video
  • An Introduction to Grounded Theory
  • Pub. Date: 2016

    Product: SAGE Research Methods Video

    DOI:

    https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781473991798

    Methods: Grounded theory, Constructivism

    Keywords: practices, strategies, and tools

    Disciplines: Anthropology, Business and Management, Criminology and Criminal Justice, Counseling and

    Psychotherapy, Education, Geography, Health, Nursing, Political Science and International Relations,

    Psychology, Social Work, Sociology

    Access Date: January 13, 2023

    Publishing Company: SAGE Publications Ltd

    City: London

    Online ISBN: 9781473991798

    © 2016 SAGE Publications Ltd All Rights Reserved.

    https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781473991798

    [An Introduction to Grounded Theory]

    KATHY CHARMAZ: Hello. [Kathy Charmaz, PhD, Professor, Department of Sociology, Sonoma State

    University] My name is Kathy Charmaz, and I am a professor of sociology and director of the faculty

    writing program at Sonoma State University. In this tutorial, I will be introducing the grounded theory

    method, outlining its historical emergence and defining constructivist grounded theory, a contempo-

    rary form of the original method.

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: I will be covering the following main points. [Presentation Topics]

    The definition of grounded theory, the emergence of grounded theory, and the constructivist turn in

    grounded theory. [The definition of grounded theory, The emergence of grounded theory, The con-

    structivist turn in grounded theory] I will start with a short interview excerpt and show how to proceed

    with the analysis. It’s important to understand grounded theory, because it has shaped the develop-

    ment

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: of qualitative methods and is the frequently chosen method. [An In-

    terview Excerpt] Now I’m going to talk about an interview excerpt. This quote was said by a woman

    who has a very serious cancer and a prognosis that

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: is not promising. So now she’s facing a much shorter life. “Whereas

    I expected to live a ripe old age, I was going to live to 105, it’s like now, will I live to 60? Probably?

    Probably. But I can’t take it for granted the way I used to.

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: It’s like there’s a compactness and a preciousness, and little things

    have more importance. I don’t take things for granted, and it’s certainly changed how I work as a ther-

    apist.” In grounded theory, we start analyzing our data by coding. So in this example, I’m analyzing

    the excerpt

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: that we just talked about. [Coding the Excerpt] First, I came up

    with facing a shrinking future, relinquishing assumptions of a long life, seeing preciousness and little

    things, and changing ways of working. [Facing a shrinking future, Relinquishing assumptions of a

    long life, Seeing preciousness in little things, Changing ways of working] These are codes that will

    get me started on the analysis. [What is grounded theory?]

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: So starting with an initial definition, grounded theory methods consist

    of a systematic approach to inquiry with several key strategies for conducting inquiry. [Grounded

    Theory methods: Consist of a systematic approach to inquiry with several key strategies for conduct-

    ing inquiry] The purpose of grounded theory is to construct new theory for the collected data that

    accounts for these data.

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    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: Grounded theory favors theory construction over description, con-

    structing fresh concepts over applying received theory, theorizing processes over assuming stable

    structures. [Grounded Theory Favors Theory construction, over description, Constructing fresh con-

    cepts, over applying received theory, Theorizing processes, over assuming stable structures] There

    are defining features of this method. Grounded theory starts as an inductive method.

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: It’s definitely a comparative method. It’s an interactive method, be-

    cause you interact with the data and with your participants and then with the analysis as you’re de-

    veloping it. It’s iterative, in that you go back and forth between data and analysis, data and concepts,

    your data

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: and the categories that you’re developing. Grounded theory is also

    abductive, in that you may come up with some surprising findings and then have to think of all possi-

    ble theoretical explanations for these findings that you subsequently go and check. [Grounded The-

    ory Features, Inductive, Comparative, Interactive, Iterative, Abductive] The major grounded theory

    strategies

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: include, first of all, coding which I just talked about. And then we

    move to memo writing, which is writing about our codes, our analysis, the gaps in our coding. The-

    oretical sampling is one of the most misunderstood ideas about grounded theory and strategies.

    [Grounded Theory Strategies, Coding, Memo writing, Theoretical sampling] Basically, theoretical

    sampling means

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: sampling for your key categories. [Theoretical Sampling: Sampling

    for your key categories] You have to have a tentative theoretical category to engage in theoretical

    sampling. It is not the same as sampling for status requirements like gender, age, religion, ethnicity.

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: Those might be important to start with, but those are not theoretical

    sampling. Theoretical sampling is about categories. And then theoretical sorting and integration

    deals with the sorting of your categories and how you are putting them together to frame your theory.

    [Grounded Theory Strategies, Coding, Memo writing, Theoretical sampling, Theoretical sorting and

    integration] [What is the logic of the grounded theory method?]

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: What is the logic of grounded theory? It’s an iterative and compara-

    tive logic, where you move back and forth between data and an increasingly abstract analysis. [itera-

    tive and comparative logic] And while you’re doing that, you engage in these systematic comparisons

    that I mentioned, of data with data, data with codes, codes with codes, and codes with categories.

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: This is an example of comparing data from the interview excerpt

    that I just talked about. “When I look at the sunset realize it’s really very beautiful I don’t think I don’t

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    Page 3 of 6 An Introduction to Grounded Theory

    take things for granted. I’m much more in the moment.” Here are the codes I derived from comparing

    data. And you notice that I compared data between data

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: from the same person. You can also compare data from other peo-

    ple, from other situations, from other incidents. But in this case I compared treasuring the moment

    and living in the moment as the codes. With emerging grounded theory categories, you consider all

    possible theoretical understandings

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: of the data, and then you construct a tentative category. You gather

    data to fill out the properties of this category. And then you check the category against new data.

    [Emerging Grounded Theory Categories, Consider all possible theoretical understandings of the da-

    ta, Construct a tentative category, Gather data to fill out properties for this category, Check catego-

    ry against new data] [Why is grounded theory useful?] Grounded theory offers a conceptual under-

    standing

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: of the studied data. It provides tools for summarizing, synthesizing,

    and analyzing data. I emphasize analyzing data, because grounded theory is one method that helps

    you break the data apart and really look at it closely, rather than just pulling it together.

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: Grounded theory gives you focus and flexibility. [The Historical Con-

    text of Grounded Theory] Now we turn to the historical context, in which Barney Glaser and Anselm

    Strauss first developed grounded theory. [Barney Glaser and Anselm Strauss] Research methods by

    1965 were dominated

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: by quantitative methods. And qualitative research had waned, al-

    though there had been such a strong tradition of qualitative research throughout the history of soci-

    ology. Quantitative researchers did impose their criteria on qualitative research, and of course quali-

    tative research

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: could not adhere to that of those criteria. In 1967, The Discovery

    of Grounded Theory, Glaser and Strauss’s famous book, first appeared. In this book, what did they

    challenge? Glaser and Strauss disputed a number of dominant assumptions in quantitative research

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: and in research more generally. First of all, they disputed views of

    qualitative research as impressionistic and anecdotal. They also challenged notions of qualitative re-

    search as only a precursor of forming quantitative tools. And they challenged the arbitrary division

    between theory and research.

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: [Assumptions of Quantitative Research Disputed by Glaser and

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    Strauss, Views of qualitative research as impressionistic and anecdotal, Notions of qualitative re-

    search as only a precursor of forming quantitative tools, The arbitrary division between theory and

    research] Glaser and Strauss disputed the elite control theory construction. They challenged apply-

    ing canons of quantitative research to evaluate qualitative research, and they also argued against

    the descriptive level of many qualitative studies. [Disputed Assumptions of Quantitative Research,

    Elite control of theory construction, Applying the canons of quantitative research to evaluate qualita-

    tive research, The descriptive

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: level of qualitative studies] [What is constructivist grounded theory?]

    Constructivist grounded theory preserved strategies of the original method, such as coding, memo

    writing, and theoretical sampling, but adopts a new epistemological foundation and integrates

    methodological developments of the past five decades.

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: [Constructivist Grounded Theory, Adopts a new epistemological

    foundation, Integrates methodological developments of the past five decades] Constructivist ground-

    ed theory adopts the abductive, emergent, comparative, an open-ended approach of the original ver-

    sion. It includes Strauss’s abductive logic. [abductive logic] It emphasizes action and meaning inher-

    ent in pragmatism. Constructivist grounded theory also answers

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: criticisms of the earlier versions of grounded theory it highlights

    its flexibility and resists mechanical applications of the method. [Constructivist Grounded Theory,

    Emphasizes action and meaning inherent in pragmatism, Answers criticisms of earlier versions of

    grounded theory, Highlights flexibility and resists mechanical applications of the method] Construc-

    tivist grounded theory addresses its implications for data collection. [Why has constructivist grounded

    theory developed?]

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: Constructivist grounded theory places the researcher, the research

    process, and product in social, historical, cultural, situational, and interactive context. Constructivist

    grounded theory acknowledges the researcher’s subjectivity in social positions, and it calls for reflex-

    ivity about the process

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: and about one’s own decisions. The following figure shows con-

    structing grounded theory at a glance. The figure shows graphically the steps that you use and go

    through as you’re doing grounded theory. It may give you a firmer idea of what I have been talking

    about, but it summarizes everything I’ve

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: said in the past few minutes. [Conclusion] To conclude, this presen-

    tation gives you a brief overview of grounded theory, the historical context of its emergence, and the

    constructivist version of the method. For further reading, you can pursue

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    Page 5 of 6 An Introduction to Grounded Theory

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: a study of grounded theory in the following three books. My book,

    Kathy Charmaz, Constructing Grounded Theory. The second edition is much more in-depth and has

    many more examples. Juliet Corbin and Anselm Strauss, the 2015 Basics of Qualitative Research.,

    KATHY CHARMAZ [continued]: which is their fourth edition, revised by Julie Corbin. And last, but cer-

    tainly not least, the book that started everything, Barney Glaser and Anselm Strauss, 1967, The Dis-

    covery of Grounded Theory. [Further Reading, Charmaz (2014). Constructing grounded theory (2nd

    ed.)., Corbin & Strauss (2015). Basics of qualitative research (4th ed.)., Glaser & Strauss (1967).

    The discovery of grounded theory.]

    https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781473991798

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    Page 6 of 6 An Introduction to Grounded Theory

    https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781473991798

      SAGE Research Methods Video

      An Introduction to Grounded Theory

  • SAGE Research Methods
  • Doing Development Research
  • Author: Jan Kees van Donge

    Pub. Date: 2011

    Product: SAGE Research Methods

    DOI:

    https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781849208925

    Methods: Case study research, Focus groups, Survey research

    Disciplines: Anthropology, Geography, Political Science and International Relations, Social Policy and Public

    Policy, Social Work, Sociology

    Access Date: January 13, 2023

    Publishing Company: SAGE Publications, Ltd

    City: London

    Online ISBN: 9781849208925

    © 2011 SAGE Publications, Ltd All Rights Reserved.

    https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781849208925

    Ethnography and Participant Observation

    · · What is ethnography? · · Ethnography and development studies · · Ethnography and the devel-

    opment practitioner · ·

    The distinctive contribution of ethnographic methods

    What is ethnography?

    Ethnographic research methods attempt to study social life as it unfolds in the practices of day-to-day life.

    These methods avoid as much as possible artificial research situations. Artificiality is obvious in some in-

    stances, particularly in the highly controlled experimental method, but it is found also in other methods. For

    example, the interview situation in surveys using highly controlled questions is a social construction. In par-

    ticipatory rural appraisal (PRA), meetings are set up specifically to ask questions that people may never ask

    spontaneously. From the ethnographic point of view, the ideal is not to be noticed as an observer and to be

    accepted as a normal member of social life, as this results in minimal disturbance. Such participant observa-

    tion is, however, an ideal that is rarely reached in practice. Artificial research situations, to a certain degree,

    usually enter the social field that is being studied. The word ‘ethnography’ emerged in the period of Euro-

    pean expansion to denote the observation of exotic peoples. It is thus in its origin closely associated with the

    confrontation of different cultures. The latter makes it especially relevant for development studies as a con-

    frontation between cultures is inherent in development work.

    Ethnography and development studies

    There is widespread scepticism about the suitability of ethnographic methods in the field of development. Re-

    search for development management has often to give answers to support urgent decision-making. Ethnog-

    raphy, on the other hand, often requires a large investment in time. First, one must gain the confidence of the

    people to be studied so that one can be near to them and therefore able to carry out the research. Second,

    it often involves the need to at least get acquainted with another language. If one masters the language, one

    must ideally be at home in specific group languages. Third, systematic observation of behaviour takes time.

    An image is gradually built up of what is happening in a particular social setting on the basis of continued

    observation.1 As research proceeds and one gathers more and more data, the question arises as to when

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    data change into insights. The moment of wider understanding usually occurs when one gets repetitive re-

    sults, but it is difficult to say when exactly that happens. Boredom is often a threat to the researcher when

    stories become repetitive, but that is usually the sign of understanding. In ethnographic research it is there-

    fore difficult to see how far one has progressed, and this is obviously difficult to reconcile with the need for

    deadlines. Ethnographic research methods were therefore a major butt of attack in Robert Chambers’s call

    for more relevant development research: he argued that ‘quick and dirty’ research methods were needed if

    findings were to be related to practical action (Chambers, 1974, 1983).

    Nevertheless, development organizations these days increasingly commission ethnographic-style research.

    A major reason for this is dissatisfaction with the PRA methods. Indeed, these can make development or-

    ganizations quickly acquainted with a community, but the answers they give often lack depth. The same an-

    swers emerge in many different situations; for example, wealth ranking will usually result in distinguishing a

    few rich households, a large number in the middle and an underclass of extremely poor. This is compounded

    by an increasing awareness that dominant interests often overshadow others in participatory meetings. The

    relevance of observation, the hallmark of ethnographic methods, to check and deepen these images through

    watching people and situations, taking notice of casual conversation and the divergent opinions of individuals

    therefore becomes apparent.

    A second major reason for development organizations favouring ethnographic-style research is the growing

    awareness of the unexpected effects resulting from development interventions. The open-minded observation

    employed by ethnographic methods, more than other methods, can focus attention outside the field of ex-

    pected outcomes. This can be illustrated with an example (see Box 19.1).

    Box 19.1 Unexpected outcomes and ethnographic methods

    Family Life Training Centres were established in Central Kenya where mothers of malnourished children

    could regain strength and learn about methods of nutrition. An evaluation found that these did not perceptibly

    change knowledge or patterns of nutrition, nor did they have any long-term impact on the growth of children. It

    found, however, that many women attending these nutrition centres were poor and in the process of divorce.

    Land in Central Kenya is in the hands of men and therefore divorce provokes for women a crisis in livelihood

    in this peasant society. A stay in a nutrition centre was a way to reorganize their lives. The centres had thus

    no effect on malnutrition, but their establishment had important effects as shelter for women in a vulnerable

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    situation. (Summarized from Hoorweg and Niemeijer, 1981)

    This finding was actually revealed through a survey, but it illustrates the need to have an open mind in planned

    intervention. If one simply compares intended output with outcomes, then one must come to the conclusion

    that the Family Life Training Centres are a failure. However, such a position overlooks important, unintention-

    al effects of the intervention, which in this case can be valued positively. Free-ranging observation outside the

    bureaucratic, programmed culture of terms of reference, etc., is particularly valuable for this.

    The work of Norman Long (2001) is particularly significant in this respect. He sees development interventions

    as taking place in an interface of cultures where there is a continuous adaptation, struggle and meshing of

    cultural elements and social practices. The language that talks in terms of target populations and that expects

    a linear process from intervention to outcomes is wanting. The intervening actors are not steering society as a

    machine but are only some actors among the many in the ongoing struggles to create social practices. Long’s

    perspective on planned intervention clarifies a wide spectrum of policy interventions. Such interaction at the

    interface can, for example, be seen in election observation. Observers will stress neutrality: adherence to in-

    ternational standards often based on human rights. However, their presence and findings play a significant

    role in the ongoing local political process. Interaction between a local political culture and the political culture

    of outsiders is essential to understand what is going on. There is thus a growing awareness that confrontation

    between cultures is inherent in development practice.

    While development practitioners may thus increasingly appreciate the value of ethnographic assessments,

    they still have need of short-notice information relevant to management. To fulfil this need, researchers, es-

    pecially social anthropologists, increasingly provide ethnographically inspired reports at short notice. This is

    possible because the stress on the long-term commitment in ethnographic methods appears to have been

    too simplistic. First, some societies are much more open than others, and this allows the researcher to enter

    relatively quickly into the culture. Second, if ethnographers have done an elaborate study before, then they

    can often work much faster on subsequent occasions. This is especially the case if the previous study was in

    the society in question or a closely related one. Third, ethnographic methods are difficult to codify, but training

    in anthropology gives people a penetrating attitude towards looking at social practices that is often referred to

    as the ‘anthropological eye’.

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    Ethnography and the development practitioner

    The anthropological eye refers to an ability to observe oneself and the social environment. The usefulness

    of this ability is not necessarily restricted to researchers but can be very beneficial to practitioners as well.

    They can be participant observers in their own situation. Researchers in development are often not sufficiently

    aware that the principal may direct attention to the target population, whereas participant observation in a de-

    velopment project including the principal may be more productive. The probable reason for this obliviousness

    to their own social context is the demythologizing, sometimes even subversive, character of exercising the

    anthropological eye: if it is used in an all-embracing manner, discrepancies between what people (including

    practitioners as well as the target population) say and how they act become apparent. A beautiful example of

    this comes from the work of David Mosse on participatory rural appraisal methods based on his own partici-

    pation in these exercises:

    While from the point of view of the ‘outsider’ development workers an organized PRA is an informal

    event, in social terms the PRA is often highly formal and public: PRAs are group or collective ac-

    tivities; they involve important and influential outsiders (even foreigners); they take place in public

    spaces (schools, temples, etc.); they involve the community representing itself to outsiders; and in-

    formation is discussed publicly, recorded and preserved for use in planning. Such activities are far

    from informal, everyday life. It seems highly probable that this social formality imposes a selectivity

    on the kind of information which is presented and recorded in PRAs. (Mosse, 1994: 508)

    A training in ethnographic methods makes journal-keeping — generally an ordinary part of development work

    — a more productive exercise. Ethnographic research requires extensive journal-keeping to keep track of all

    the observations. These notes usually seem random in the beginning and not leading anywhere. However,

    insights into social practices often suddenly emerge from these notes. For example, I had difficulty collect-

    ing meaningful statements from people while doing research in the Uluguru Mountains in Tanzania. People

    talked a lot but said very little. I interpreted this as a failure on my part to penetrate that society. However,

    another interpretation emerged while I was repeatedly writing about those remarks without social meaning. It

    was an essential trait of that society to avoid commitment in conversation, as they did not trust each other:

    people were gregarious (e.g. they came together in large numbers around Catholic churches on Sunday and

    on market days), but they were extremely private as regards emotions and opinions.

    An anthropological eye — and ear — entails the ability to build insights on interpretations of everyday life and

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    this enriches working with research assistants who are insiders in the societies being studied. While working

    in a ranching area in Namibia, we found ourselves in a situation where doubt arose about the number of cat-

    tle kept on a particular farm. We heard from a neighbour that there were far more animals on the farm than

    stated by the farmer in question. It also transpired then that the informant was a close friend of the research

    assistant’s mother. She was a Tswana whereas the neighbour overstocking the farm was Herero. Implicit in

    the remarks made was a confrontation of cultures showing distrust between the two groups.

    The distinctive contribution of ethnographic methods

    While ethnographic research may essentially entail an attitude rather than a set of codified methods, never-

    theless, there are a number of definite elements to be found in ethnographic work.

    First, ethnographers depend primarily on observation. An ethnographic approach adopts a distrust of society

    as it is presented to us. On entering a community, one is presented with a particular interpretation of the social

    reality. A confrontation of these ideas with observations makes this explicit. For example, in an attempt to

    find the ultra-poor in Dedza district in Malawi, observing housing, clothes, etc. could identify only these. Agri-

    cultural extension workers considered them as failures and thus not interesting. Chiefs wanted to introduce

    relatives in the first place as benefits were expected from contacts with outsiders. On the other hand, obser-

    vation is an important tool to correct preconceived ideas of researchers. For example, small livestock is often

    overlooked in African rural studies, and casual observation may show the importance of goats, sheep, etc.

    Second, ethnographic research implies an open approach. It avoids as much as possible framing a research

    situation beforehand, for example through formulating particular, detailed questions. Ethnographers often use

    checklists to fall back on when asking questions or observing, but these should be continuously adapted in

    the light of information gained. The purpose of interaction with informants is to elicit responses rather than

    get answers to particular questions. The fundamental awareness in ethnographic research is that one has to

    learn gradually the language that allows one to ask sensible questions as one penetrates deeper into that

    society. During my research in the Uluguru Mountains in Tanzania I was regularly confronted with the remark

    ‘he has water’ (ana maji) or the reverse. The meaning of this statement became clear only when I discovered

    how important access to a small perennial stream was for irrigating vegetable plots in the dry season. What-

    ever one hears in open or loosely structured conversation should always be checked against observation. If

    one works with research assistants, it is often fruitful for each to write up independently what each has seen

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    and heard and then confront each other with differences. In this way, interpretation is built up as well.

    Third, ethnographic research uses the case study method. It studies particular situations in depth and makes

    no claims to be statistically representative. It is wrong, however, to conclude that case studies have no wider

    significance. Indeed, if a case study is merely an apt illustration of a particular point made, then its importance

    is marginal. However, a good case study involves systematic analysis in depth.

    This can be done in two ways. First, it is possible to collect a large number of instances that are then classified

    to see particular patterns emerging. For example, in a study of land conflicts, I collected cases from regular

    court sessions. These were then categorized as relating to sale of land, border disputes, inheritance, etc. It

    transpired that an appreciation of inheritance and the social construction of a past was crucial to understand-

    ing the number and virulence of these conflicts. Second, it is possible to study a particular situation intensively

    so that a very detailed analysis emerges. This process has been dubbed by the anthropologist Geertz (1993)

    as ‘thick description’. This methodology is particularly associated with the Manchester School in social an-

    thropology. Gluckmann (1961: 5) gave the following concise definition: ‘The anthropological case study is a

    method that seeks to illuminate principles of social organisation by examining in detail a single social event,

    or case’. It is also referred to as the analysis of social drama or the extended case study method (Van Velsen,

    1967). Intensive analysis of social situations leads to the emergence of a particular social structure and/or

    culture. This then allows us to perceive similar or contrasting patterns in other situations (see Box 19.2 for an

    example).

    Box 19.2 Anthropological case study as a method of ethnographic research

    Porter et al. studied the Australian-sponsored Magharini project in Western Kenya. After a few years it ap-

    peared that this project was based on wrong assumptions. Nevertheless, there were strong pressures to

    continue. The authors provide an elaborate analysis of the use of surveys and cost-benefit analysis in these

    struggles. Cost-benefit analysis is based on the assumption that we know future costs and benefits reason-

    ably well. Its value is limited in situations where that is not the case. Nevertheless, actors in this case clung to

    the arguments in the form of cost-benefits. Porter et al. then analyse it as a ritual to cope with insecurity. Prop-

    er reading of this case leads to the asking of sceptical questions in any situation where cost-benefit analysis

    is used. (Summarized from Porter et al., 1991)

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    Fourth, ethnographic methods try to understand society from the inside. The essential question to be asked

    is: How would I feel if I were in the situation of the people studied? Ethnographic research is often close-

    ly related to symbolic interactionism. It tries to understand through language the lifeworld of people — their

    interpretation of the world — that structures social practices (Berger and Luckman, 1966). For example, in

    Africa urban migrants often continue to cultivate strong links with the rural areas from which they or their rel-

    atives originate. This structures in turn investment behaviour, as shown in the following example from Buhera

    in Zimbabwe:

    Even after a lifetime of urban employment and urban family life, people want to be buried in their

    rural homestead. Thus we can also understand a migrant worker’s effort to establish a rural home-

    stead (musha) at some stage in his urban career. Although he may stay with wife and children in

    town and has no economic need to supplement urban income with agricultural production, a ‘tradi-

    tional’ round cooking hut has to be constructed. It is possible, therefore, to see homesteads that are

    occupied by family members, or absent migrant workers who leave their fields uncultivated or hire

    people to work the land for them. Building a homestead on a plot of some few acres is an expression

    of a migrant worker’s membership of the rural community and, subsequently, of the naturalness of

    being buried there. (Andersson, 2001: 106)

    Such an interpretation of cultures is, of course, most relevant for development interventions. In the case of

    Buhera district, it meant, for example, that the interest in rural links was not synonymous with an interest in

    agriculture. With regard to any intervention in agriculture, it must be borne in mind that urban migration is the

    dominant and most prestigious way to make a living, despite appearances to the contrary, as shown in the

    building of houses.

    Development interventions usually assume a logic of intention or cause and effect. Such a logic may not make

    sense in particular cultural configurations. This is a field where ethnographic assessments can be a partic-

    ularly potent means of analysis. This is also an area where methods can be developed that give relatively

    fast results. For example, one can translate project documents into local languages and read these to key

    informants to hear reactions. Another way in which the logic of development interventions can be confronted

    with local cultures is through developing a set of statements that refer to the logic of the intervention. These

    should be balanced, with an equal number of statements supporting or opposing the intervention. The idea

    that there is a correct answer should be avoided; the statements are primarily meant to elicit responses. For

    example:

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    The targeted input provision (TIP) programme in Malawi distributes free inputs ? fertiliser and seeds

    ? to poor households. Underlying this programme is the belief that people value growing their own

    food rather than buying it and that this is especially the case for poor people. We asked respondents

    to react to fifteen statements relating to this, and their responses showed a clear and consistent cul-

    tural pattern.

    In response to the statement: ‘Not growing one’s own food is a reason for shame’, people typically

    gave responses such as the following:

    ‘It is shameful when you do not have your own food because whenever you go looking around for

    maize to buy, people perceive you as a beggar who is totally desperate and stranded for food. This

    is unlike when you have your own food whenever you have need of it.’

    ‘Not growing one’s own food results in a loss of trust in rural areas because the reliable source of

    livelihood is farming.’

    In response to the statement: ‘People who do not grow their own food are not necessarily poor’, we

    had comments such as:

    ‘This is not true because, in a village set up, most of the people that are poor are also those who do

    not grow their own food.’

    ‘Someone who has food is in control of the money because those who have nice clothes do not have

    then to exchange their clothes into food. In fact, for someone to put on trousers means his belly is

    full. Without food, the trousers will fall down. (Summarized from Van Donge et al., 2001: 20–21)

    Ethnographic methods can thus be an inspiration to develop new ways of obtaining relevant cultural insights,

    clarifying what is happening around development interventions. However, it is difficult to give a toolbox to that

    end. First, it depends upon something that can be cultivated but not learnt: empathy with people who live total-

    ly different lives from ourselves. Second, ethnographic methods often involve a cultivation and development

    of observation, an essential activity in everyday life. The best way to develop an aptitude for ethnographic

    research is therefore to read ethnographic studies that stimulate emulation. Above all, one should beware of

    one’s own cultural dispositions. Often, a particular rationality is imputed to actors where there may be none, or

    where there may be one functioning in quite different values systems. For many people, it is tempting to see

    behaviour as resulting from conscious choice guided by what is perceived as immediate economic self-inter-

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    est. Such a culturally determined assumption in behaviour is common in North America and Western Europe,

    but ethnography is needed precisely to set this culture in its relative place.

    Summary

    Ethnographic methods study the daily flow of social life.

    • Ethnographic methods used to be considered unsuitable for development research as they were

    time-consuming and not immediately policy relevant

    • There is a growing re-appreciation of ethnographic methods in development because of: (a) the real-

    ization of the limitations of PRA methods; (b) an awareness of the unexpected effects of development

    intervention; and (c) the emerging view of development as a cultural encounter

    • Development practitioners can benefit from training in ethnographic methods as it enriches the un-

    derstanding of the situations in which they find themselves

    • Good ethnography is dependent on standard techniques only to a limited degree, but it requires a

    sensibility to culture, an appreciation of the value of observation and intuitive empathy. These ele-

    ments are sometimes referred to as the ‘anthropological eye’, which is difficult to define

    • Nevertheless, there are concrete elements that distinguish ethnography as a method: (a) a reliance

    on observation; (b) an open approach in questioning; (c) a reliance on the case study method; and

    (d) an understanding of behaviour from inside a society instead of imposing a logic of cause and ef-

    fect on social situations

    Note

    1. Ethnographic methods are closely related to the idea of grounded theory: one starts research with as few

    pre-conceived ideas as possible but general concepts are formulated as they emerge from the observations

    (Strauss and Corbin, 1990).

    QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

    1.

    Why would development practitioners call for an ethnographic study instead of other methods when results

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    of an intervention are unexpected?

    2.

    What is the benefit of ethnographic methods in the training of development practitioners (policy analysts or

    managers)?

    3.

    Why is the idea of a cultural interface so important in development interventions and why is this relevant for

    ethnographic methods?

    4.

    Ethnographic study stresses observation above all. Why can this be particularly fruitful in a social situation

    where normative discourses on development dominate?

    Futher Reading

    The best way to understand the special contribution of ethnography to development studies is reading ex-

    emplary work. The following article is an ethnographic account of a development intervention in the field of

    health: Yamba, Bawa(1997)Cosmologies in turmoil: witchfinding and Aids in Chiawa, Zambia,Africa, 67: (2),

    200–223

    The work of David Mosse is especially influential in the promotion of ethnographic methods in development

    studies: Mosse, David(2004)Is good policy unimplementable? Reflections on the ethnography of aid policy

    and practice,Development and Change, 35: (4), 639–673

    The following book does not contain consistent ethnographic work, but it gives a superb insight based on

    close ethnographic observation in the search for certainty in development interventions: Porter, Doug, Allen,

    Bryant and Thompson, Gaye(1991)Development in Practice: Paved with Good Intentions, London: Rout-

    ledge, Chapter VI ‘Institutions for managing uncertainty’.

    The link between ethnographic methods and a general theoretical orientation stressing an actor-oriented ap-

    proach can be found in: Long, Norman(2001)Development Sociology: Actor-Oriented Perspectives, London:

    Routledge.

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    References

    Andersson, Jens A.71(1)(2001)82–112

    Berger, Peter L. and Luckman, Thomas(1966)The Social Construction of Reality: A Treatise in the Sociology

    of Knowledge, Garden City, NY: Doubleday.

    Chambers, Robert(1974)Managing Rural Development: Ideas and Experience from East Africa, Uppsala:

    Scandinavian Institute of African Studies.

    Chambers, Robert(1983)Rural Development: Putting the Last First, London: Longman.

    Geertz, Clifford(1993)The Interpretation of Cultures, London: Fontana.

    Gluckman, Max9(5)(1961)5–17

    Hoorweg, Jan and Niemeijer, Rudo(1981)The Effects of Malnutrition Rehabilitation at Three Family Life Train-

    ing Centres in Central Province, Kenya, Leiden: African Studies Centre.

    Long, Norman(2001)Development Sociology: Actor-Oriented Perspectives,

    London: Routledge.

    Mosse, David23(3)(1994)497–527

    Porter, Doug, Allen, Bryan and Thompson, Gaye(1991)Development in Practice: Paved with Good Intentions,

    London: Routledge.

    Strauss, Abselm and Corbin, Juliet(1990)Basics of Qualitative Research: Grounded Theory Procedures and

    Techniques, Newbury Park, CA: Sage.

    Van Donge, Jan Kees, Chivwaile, Mackenzie, Kasapila, William, Kapondamgaga, Prince, Mgemezulu, Over-

    toun and Sengore, Noel(2001)A Qualitative Study of Markets and Livelihood Security in Rural Malawi, Module

    2.2 of the evaluation of the TIP 2000–2001 Targeted Inputs Programme, Lilongwe: DFID Malawi and Ministry

    of Agriculture and Irrigation Malawi.

    Van Velsen, Jaap(1967)The extended case study method and situational analysis, in A.L. Epstein (ed.), The

    Craft of Social AnthropologyLondon: Tavistock.

    van DongeJan Kees

    https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781849208925

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      Doing Development Research

      Ethnography and Participant Observation

      What is ethnography?

      Ethnography and development studies

      Box 19.1 Unexpected outcomes and ethnographic methods

      Ethnography and the development practitioner

      The distinctive contribution of ethnographic methods

      Box 19.2 Anthropological case study as a method of ethnographic research

      Summary

      Note

      QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

      Futher Reading

      References

  • SAGE Research Methods
  • An Applied Guide to Research Designs: Quantitative,

    Qualitative, and

    Mixed Methods

    Author: W. Alex Edmonds, Thomas D. Kennedy

    Pub. Date: 2019

    Product: SAGE Research Methods

    DOI:

    https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781071802779

    Methods: Research questions, Experimental design, Mixed methods

    Disciplines: Anthropology, Education, Geography, Health, Political Science and International Relations,

    Psychology, Social Policy and Public Policy, Social Work, Sociology

    Access Date: January 13, 2023

    Publishing Company: SAGE Publications, Inc

    City: Thousand Oaks

    Online ISBN: 9781071802779

    © 2019 SAGE Publications, Inc All Rights Reserved.

    https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781071802779

    Quantitative Methods for Experimental and Quasi-

    Experimental Research

    Part I includes four popular approaches to the quantitative method (experimental and quasi-experimental on-

    ly), followed by some of the associated basic designs (accompanied by brief descriptions of published studies

    that used the design). Visit the companion website at study.sagepub.com/edmonds2e to access valuable

    instructor and student resources. These resources include PowerPoint slides, discussion questions, class ac-

    tivities, SAGE journal articles, web resources, and online data sets.

    Figure I.1 Quantitative Method Flowchart

    Note: Quantitative methods for experimental and quasi-experimental research are shown here, followed by

    the approach and then the design.

    Research in quantitative methods essentially refers to the application of the systematic steps of the scientific

    method, while using quantitative properties (i.e., numerical systems) to research the relationships or effects

    of specific variables. Measurement is the critical component of the quantitative method. Measurement reveals

    and illustrates the relationship between quantitatively derived variables. Variables within quantitative methods

    must be, first, conceptually defined (i.e., the scientific definition), then operationalized (i.e., determine the ap-

    propriate measurement tool based on the conceptual definition). Research in quantitative methods is typically

    referred to as a deductive process and iterative in nature. That is, based on the findings, a theory is supported

    (or not), expanded, or refined and further tested.

    Researchers must employ the following steps when determining the appropriate quantitative research design.

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    http://study.sagepub.com/edmonds2e

    1.

    2.

    3.

    First, a measurable or testable research question (or hypothesis) must be formulated. The question must

    maintain the following qualities: (a) precision, (b) viability, and (c) relevance. The question must be precise

    and well formulated. The more precise, the easier it is to appropriately operationalize the variables of interest.

    The question must be viable in that it is logistically feasible or plausible to collect data on the variable(s) of

    interest. The question must also be relevant so that the result of the findings will maintain an appropriate level

    of practical and scientific meaning. The second step includes choosing the appropriate design based on the

    primary research question, the variables of interest, and logistical considerations. The researcher must also

    determine if randomization to conditions is possible or plausible. In addition, decisions must be made about

    how and where the data will be collected. The design will assist in determining when the data will be collected.

    The unit of analysis (i.e., individual, group, or program level), population, sample, and sampling procedures

    should be identified in this step. Third, the variables must be operationalized. And last, the data are collected

    following the format of the framework provided by the research design of choice.

    Experimental Research

    Experimental research (sometimes referred to as randomized experiments) is considered to be the most pow-

    erful type of research in determining causation among variables. Cook and Campbell (1979) presented three

    conditions that must be met in order to establish cause and effect:

    Covariation (the change in the cause must be related to the effect)

    Temporal precedence (the cause must precede the effect)

    No plausible alternative explanations (the cause must be the only explanation for the effect)

    The essential features of experimental research are the sound application of the elements of control: (a) ma-

    nipulation, (b) elimination, (c) inclusion, (d) group or condition assignment, or (e) statistical procedures. Ran-

    dom assignment (not to be confused with random selection) of participants to conditions (or random assign-

    ment of conditions to participants [counterbalancing] as seen in repeated-measures approaches) is a critical

    step, which allows for increased control (improved internal validity) and limits the impact of the confounding

    effects of variables that are not being studied.

    The random assignment to each group (condition) theoretically ensures that the groups are “probabilistically”

    equivalent (controlling for selection bias), and any differences observed in the pretests (if collected) are con-

    sidered due to chance. Therefore, if all threats to internal, external, construct, and statistical conclusion va-

    lidity were secured at “adequate” levels (i.e., all plausible alternative explanations are accounted for), the dif-

    ferences observed in the posttest measures can be attributed fully to the experimental treatment (i.e., cause

    and effect can be established). Conceptually, a causal effect is defined as a comparison of outcomes derived

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    Mixed Methods

    from treatment and control conditions on a common set of units (e.g., school, person).

    The strength of experimental research rests in the reduction of threats to internal validity. Many threats are

    controlled for through the application of random assignment of participants to conditions. Random selection,

    on the other hand, is related to sampling procedures and is a major factor in establishing external validity

    (i.e., generalizability of results). Randomly selecting a sample from a population would be conducted so that

    the sample would better represent the population. However, Lee and Rubin (2015) presented a statistical ap-

    proach that allows researchers to draw data from existing data sets from experimental research and examine

    subgroups (post hoc subgroup analysis). Nonetheless, random assignment is related to design, and random

    selection is related to sampling procedures. Shadish, Cook, and Campbell (2002) introduced the term gener-

    alized causal inference. They posit that if a researcher follows the appropriate tenets of experimental design

    logic (e.g., includes the appropriate number of subjects, uses random selection and random assignment) and

    controls for threats of all types of validity (including test validity), then valid causal inferences can be deter-

    mined along with the ability to generalize the causal link. This is truly realized once multiple replications of the

    experiment are conducted and comparable results can be observed over time (replication being the operative

    word). Though, recently there have been concerns related to the reproducibility of experimental studies pub-

    lished in the field of psychology, for example (see Baker, 2015; Bohannon, 2015).

    Reproducibility could be enhanced if the proper tenets of the scientific method are followed and the relevant

    aspects of validity are addressed (i.e., internal and construct). Researchers tend to gloss over these con-

    structs and rarely report how they ensured the data to be valid, often assuming that a statistical analysis could

    be used to “fix” or overshadow the inherent problems of the data. Bad data is clearly the issue, which lends

    to a great computer science saying “Garbage in, garbage out.” To be more specific, taking the appropriate

    measures to ensure design and test validity, the data will be more “clean,” which results in fewer reporting

    errors in the statistical results. Although probability sampling (e.g., random selection) adds another logistical

    obstacle to experimental research, it should also be an emphasis along with the proper random assignment

    techniques.

    Although this book is more dedicated to the application of research designs in the social and behavioral sci-

    ences, it is important to note the distinction between research designs in the health sciences to that of the

    social sciences. Experimental research in the health or medical sciences shares the same designs, although

    the terminology slightly differs, and the guidelines for reporting the data can be more stringent (e.g., see

    Schultz, Altman, & Moher, 2010, and Appendix H for guidelines and checklist). These guidelines are designed

    to enhance the quality of the application of the design, which in turn leads to enhanced reproducibility. The

    most common term used to express experimental research in the field of medicine is randomized control tri-

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    als (RCT). RCT simply infers that subjects are randomly assigned to conditions. The most common of the

    RCT designs is the parallel-group approach, which is another term for the between-subject approach and is

    discussed in more detail in the following sections. RCTs can also be crossover and factorial designs and are

    designated under the within-subjects approach (repeated measures).

    Quasi-Experimental Research

    The nonrandom assignment of participants to each condition allows for convenience when it is logistically

    not possible to use random assignment. Quasi-experimental research designs are also referred to as field

    research (i.e., research is conducted with an intact group in the field as opposed to the lab), and they are also

    known as nonequivalent designs (i.e., participants are not randomly assigned to each condition; therefore,

    the groups are assumed nonequivalent). Hence, the major difference between experimental and quasi-exper-

    imental research designs is the level of control and assignment to conditions. The actual designs are struc-

    turally the same, but the analyses of the data are not. However, some of the basic pretest and posttest de-

    signs can be modified (e.g., addition of multiple observations or inclusion of comparison groups) in an attempt

    to compensate for lack of group equivalency. In the design structure, a dashed line (- – -) between groups

    indicates the participants were not randomly assigned to conditions. Review Appendix A for more examples

    of “quasi-experimental” research designs (see also the example of a diagram in Figure 1.2).

    Because there is no random assignment in quasi-experimental research, there may be confounding variables

    influencing the outcome not fully attributed to the treatment (i.e., causal inferences drawn from quasi-experi-

    ments must be made with extreme caution). The pretest measure in quasi-experimental research allows the

    researcher to evaluate the lack of group equivalency and selection bias, thus altering the statistical analysis

    between experimental and quasi-experimental research for the exact same design (see Cribbie, Arpin-Crib-

    bie, & Gruman, 2010, for a discussion on tests of equivalence for independent group designs with more than

    two groups).

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    https://methods.sagepub.com/book/an-applied-guide-to-research-designs-2e/i583.xml#i596

    Figure I.2 Double Pretest Design for Quasi-Experimental Research

    Note: This is an example of a between-subjects approach with a double pretest design. The double pretest

    allows the researcher to compare the “treatment effects” between O1 to O2, and then from O2 to O3. A major

    threat to internal validity with this design is testing, but it controls for selection bias and maturation. The two

    pretests are not necessary if random assignment is used.

    It is not recommended to use posttest-only designs for quasi-experimental research. However, if theoretically

    or logistically it does not make sense to use a pretest measure, then additional controls should be imple-

    mented, such as using historical control groups, proxy pretest variables (see Appendix A), or the matching

    technique to assign participants to conditions.

    The reader is referred to Shadish, Clark, and Steiner (2008) for an in-depth discussion of how to use linear

    regression and propensity scores to approximate the findings of quasi-experimental research to experimental

    research. They discuss this in the greater context of the potential weaknesses and strengths of quasi-experi-

    mental research in determining causation.

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      SAGE Research Methods

    • An Applied Guide to Research Designs: Quantitative, Qualitative, and Mixed Methods
    • Figure I.1 Quantitative Method Flowchart

      Figure I.2 Double Pretest Design for Quasi-Experimental Research

  • SAGE Research Methods
  • The SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Research in

    Psychology

    Author: Kathy Charmaz, Karen Henwood

    Pub. Date: 2017

    Product: SAGE Research Methods

    DOI:

    https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781526405555

    Methods: Narrative research

    Keywords: grounded theory, grounded theory, qualitative methods, qualitative methods, psychology,

    psychology, data analysis, data analysis, coding, coding, theories, theories, data collection, data collection

    Disciplines: Psychology

    Access Date: January 13, 2023

    Publishing Company: SAGE Publications Ltd

    City: London

    Online ISBN: 9781526405555

    © 2017 SAGE Publications Ltd All Rights Reserved.

    https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781526405555

    Grounded Theory Methods for Qualitative Psychology

    Kathy Charmaz Karen Henwood

    Introduction

    This chapter discusses the grounded theory method and its evolution over sixty years since sociologists

    Barney Glaser and Anselm Strauss (1967) put forth their original statement of the method. They presented

    grounded theory as consisting of flexible, successive analytic strategies to construct inductive theories from

    the data. Over the past few decades, many qualitative psychologists have adopted grounded theory, as we

    outline below. We draw on developments in diverse sub-fields of psychology, interdisciplinary research, to

    which psychologists contribute, and selected contributions from key grounded theory researchers and re-

    searcher-practitioners within allied health and social disciplines.

    While our chapter is targeted at issues customarily discussed about a particular methodology and set of in-

    quiry methods, we limit our historical view of the method and instead write from the perspective of the pre-

    sent. We want our readers to have ready, up-to-date access to the substance, character, and developing use

    of grounded theory method, and to current debates about these methods. Grounded theory, as one of us

    has previously argued (Henwood and Pidgeon, 2003), is not a unitary method but a useful nodal point where

    contemporary issues in qualitative social science are discussed. The method originated in sociology but has

    become a general method that has informed qualitative inquiry across and between disciplines. We aim to

    capture fundamentals of these discussions but because of the vast number of relevant works, our review here

    is illustrative rather than exhaustive.

    The Logic, Emergence and Use of Grounded Theory

    Grounded Theory Logic

    Grounded theory methods consist of a systematic inductive, comparative, iterative, abductive and interactive

    approach to inquiry with several key strategies for conducting inquiry (Charmaz, 2006, 2014, 2015a). As

    grounded theorists, we integrate and streamline data collection and analysis through making systematic com-

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    Page 2 of 35

  • The SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Research in Psychology
  • parisons throughout inquiry by interacting with our data and emergent analyses. By making comparisons, we

    define the properties or characteristics of our codes and categories, discern research participants’ and our

    own assumptions about the studied phenomenon, make implicit meanings and actions explicit, connect our

    categories, and delineate the implications of our analyses. In addition, our comparisons lead us to identify

    negative cases (i.e. cases that do not fit the patterns we define in the data) and puzzling find

    ings.

    Since its inception, a major contribution of grounded theory has been its emphasis on simultaneous data

    collection and analysis. The iterative process of going back and forth between data collection and analysis

    prompts us to increase both the abstract level and precision of our emerging categories. We start analysing

    data from the beginning of our data collection and begin building inductive theoretical analyses but do not

    stop with inductive logic. Rather, we check and refine our emerging theoretical ideas about the data while

    keeping these ideas grounded in

    data.

    In this sense, grounded theory methods are abductive (Charmaz, 2014; Richardson and Kramer, 2006;

    Strübing, 2007) because we rely on reasoning to account for surprising discoveries we find in the data by

    entertaining all conceivable theoretical explanations of them. Then we proceed to check these explanations

    empirically through further data collection – to pursue the most plausible theoretical explanation (Deely, 1990;

    Peirce, 1938/1958; Rosenthal, 2004; Shank, 1998; Stainton Rogers, 2011). Thus, a strength of grounded the-

    ory is that our budding conceptualisations can lead us in the most useful – perhaps a new or unanticipated –

    theoretical direction to understand our data.

    Both the turn away from the positivist heritage in psychology and a growing interest in constructivism make

    grounded theory particularly appealing. Researchers with either objectivist or constructivist proclivities can

    adopt grounded theory strategies. Like many researchers in other fields, some psychologists such as An-

    drews et al. (2009) and Scull, Mbonyingabo and Kotb (2016) continue to use Strauss and Corbin’s (1990,

    1998) early texts to frame their studies. By now, however, numerous qualitative psychologists adopt the con-

    structivist version of grounded theory (e.g. Buckingham and Brodsky, 2015; Byrne et al., 2011; Martin and

    Barnard, 2013). The constructivist approach embraces reflexivity and takes positionality into account – of

    the researcher’s starting points and standpoints before and during inquiry, as well as the conditions shaping

    the research situation, process, and product. Constructivists view data as contingent upon language, co-con-

    structed with participants, and rooted in relationships and the social, cultural, historical, and situational condi-

    tions of its production.

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    In contrast, objectivists assume that they make discoveries in a real world separate from themselves and

    develop theories whose generalisations transcend particularities. How objectivists and constructivists use

    grounded theory strategies differs. As constructivists avow, grounded theory is fundamentally an interactive

    and interpretive method (Charmaz, 2006, 2014). Not only do we interact with our research participants but al-

    so we interact with and interpret the resulting data about them through our successive levels of analysis. We

    select and use grounded theory strategies according to our interpretations of the data and assessments of

    our emerging analyses of them. The entire process relies on creating these interpretations. By using ground-

    ed theory methods, we learn how to raise the level of abstraction at each stage of the analytic

    process.

    Grounded theory strategies provide ways of working with data – of seeking, interrogating, managing, and con-

    ceptualising data – but how we use these methods depends on our readings of our data, repeated scrutiny of

    them, and nascent analyses. Thus, grounded theory is an emergent interpretive method rather than a method

    of formulaic application.

    This method appeals to psychologists for four major reasons: (1) grounded theory offers a rigorous approach

    to qualitative analysis; (2) it fits studying meanings of experience (Rennie and Nissim, 2015); (3) it can be

    used in conjunction with numerous qualitative approaches such as phenomenological psychology (Ataria,

    2014), narrative inquiry (Doucet and Mauthner, 2008; Lal et al., 2012; Rice, 2009), thematic analysis (Griffith,

    2016), discursive analyses (McCreaddie and Payne, 2010), participatory action research (Andrews et al.,

    2009), and varied mixed forms of qualitative analysis (Ehrlich et al., 2016; Floersch et al., 2010; Frost et al.,

    2009); and (4) grounded theory is useful in mixed methods studies (Butterfield, 2009). Psychologists have

    been moving away from atomised analyses of individuals and moving toward understanding the varied con-

    texts in which they live. Adopting the logic of either objectivist or constructivist grounded theory furthers this

    move. Researchers with both epistemological leanings find that grounded theory strategies increase their ef-

    ficiency and effectiveness in gathering useful data and in constructing focused analyses. These strengths

    combined with the logic and rigour of grounded theory make the method a good choice for both shaping quan-

    titative tools and following up on quantitative findings in mixed method studies (e.g. Kamo et al., 2015).

    Using Grounded Theory Guidelines

    Grounded theory studies begin with open-ended research questions to explore but follow ideas that re-

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    searchers generate once in the field (Pidgeon and Henwood, 2004). Grounded theory guidelines invoke at

    least a two-phased qualitative coding that fosters analytic treatment of processes from the start. (See Box

    14.1 for an outline of grounded theory guidelines.)

    Box 14.1Basic Grounded Theory Methods

    General Strategies

    Engage in simultaneous data collection and analysis – early data analysis informs subsequent data col-

    lection, which then allows the researcher to define and follow leads in the data and to refine tentative cate-

    gories.

    Invoke constant comparative methods – involves making comparisons at each level of analysis, including

    data with data, data with codes, codes with codes, codes with categories, category with category, category

    with concept. Last, we compare our constructed grounded theory with theories and studies in the relevant

    literatures.

    Develop emergent concepts – analyse the data by constructing successively more abstract concepts arising

    from the researcher’s interactions with these data and his or her interpretations of them.

    Adopt an inductive-abductive logic – starts by analysing inductive cases but checks this emerging analysis

    by entertaining all possible theoretical explanations and confirming or disconfirming them until the most plau-

    sible theoretical interpretation of the observed data is constructed.

    Specific Guidelines

    Initial coding – begins data analysis early while collecting data by asking the kind of questions Glaser (1978:

    57) raises: ‘What is happening in the data?’ ‘In which major process(es) are participants engaged?’ ‘What

    is this data a study of?’ ‘What theoretical category does this specific datum indicate?’ and Charmaz (2014:

    116) asks: ‘What does the data suggest? Pronounce? From whose point of view? We think about how our

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    standpoints affect what we see, hear, and record. Throughout coding, constructivists emphasise that we bring

    our meanings and language to what we define as ‘in’ the data. Subsequently, we, too, are open to scrutiny.

    The researcher examines the data for its potential theoretical importance, uses gerunds to code for process-

    es, and remains open to all theoretical possibilities. Codes are short, analytic, and active. Line-by-line coding

    fosters scrutiny of the data and minimises forcing them into preconceived categories and extant theories. In-

    terrogating each bit of data for its theoretical implications begins the move from description toward conceptual

    analysis.

    Focused coding – takes the most frequent and/or significant initial codes to study, sort, compare, and syn-

    thesise large amounts of data. Focused codes become tentative categories to explore and analyse. Focused

    coding expedites the research process.

    Memo-writing – involves writing analytic notes to oneself throughout the research process to raise the analyt-

    ic level of the emerging theory, identify tentative categories and their properties, define gaps in data collection,

    delineate relationships between categories, and engage in reflexivity about the research process. Memos be-

    come increasingly theoretical as analysis proceeds.

    Theoretical sampling – entails seeking specific data to develop the properties of categories or theory, not to

    achieve representative population distributions. Researchers also use theoretical sampling to learn the range

    of variation of the studied category or process and to specify connections between categories.

    Saturating theoretical concepts – means that gathering more data reveals no new properties of a theoreti-

    cal category nor yields further insights about the emerging grounded theory.

    Theoretical sorting and integrating – consists of weighing, ordering, and connecting theoretical memos (1)

    to show how the theory fits together, (2) to explicate relationships between theoretical categories or between

    the properties of one theoretical category, (3) to specify the conditions under which the category(ies) arises

    and (4) to state the implications of the theorised relationships.

    Coding defines and designates what the data indicate and are about. Traditional grounded theory coding has

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    favoured examining actions and events rather than the entirety or unity of research participants’ narratives.

    Initial coding opens the data to in-depth views. Line-by-line coding works well with interview and textual data.

    It forces us to look at bits of data anew, dissect them, and label them. Incident-by-incident coding provides

    a strong basis for making comparisons between data, particularly with intensive interview and ethnographic

    data.

    After engaging in initial coding, we adopt the most frequent and/or significant initial codes as focused codes

    to examine large amounts of data. From the beginning, we compare datum with datum, datum with code, and

    code with code in written memos, or extended notes.

    Memo-writing is the pivotal analytic step between coding and writing drafts of papers. Because memo-writing

    encourages us to stop and think about our data, codes, and/or emerging theory, we write them throughout the

    research process. Memos may range from fleeting ideas (Strauss, 1987) to analytic statements that take a

    code apart and explore its potential for development as a theoretical category (Charmaz, 2014). Memo-writ-

    ing prompts us to develop our ideas about our codes and to treat significant ones as tentative categories to

    explore and to check through further data-gathering. As a result, later memos are more analytic and often

    serve as sections of the first draft of the research report.

    After establishing some tentative categories, we conduct theoretical sampling to collect more data to fill out

    the properties of a theoretical category, find variation in it, and delineate relationships between categories.

    This sampling keeps the analysis grounded and makes it fit the studied phenomenon. As grounded theorists,

    we presumably sample until we achieve theoretical saturation, which means that we see no new properties

    of the theoretical category, its variations, or connections between categories. Criteria for saturation rest on a

    researcher’s claims but not all claims to saturation are merited. An analysis with several major categories that

    rests on skimpy data can hardly be saturated.

    After we have created a set of memos, we sort them to fit our theoretical categories and to integrate the theo-

    retical framework of the analysis and then write the first draft of the report. Standard grounded theory practice

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    includes creating the theoretical explication before revising the piece for a particular audience and positioning

    it in the literature. These practices encourage us to develop our ideas first and then compare them with earlier

    theories and studies.

    In essence, grounded theory is a method of data analysis with the intent of constructing theory. Until recently

    (Charmaz, 2014, 2015b; Charmaz and Belgrave, 2012; Clarke, 2005; Doucet and Mauthner, 2008; Scheibel-

    hofer, 2008), grounded theorists gave scant attention to data collection and some have reduced concerns

    about it to slogans such as Glaser’s (2001: 145) ‘All is data’. These grounded theorists argue that the qual-

    ity and quantity of data is not problematic if the analyst achieves ‘saturation’ of categories. Yet they do not

    delineate useful criteria for what should constitute either viable categories or saturation. Consequently, some

    grounded theory studies skimp on data collection and tout description as theory.

    Emergence and Evolution of the Method

    Glaser and Strauss (1967) developed qualitative inquiry by offering systematic guidelines for managing and

    analysing qualitative data. They departed from mid-twentieth century conventions about conducting research

    because they advocated: (1) integrating data collection and data analysis, (2) constructing theories from qual-

    itative research grounded in data rather than deducing testable hypotheses from existing theories, (3) treat-

    ing qualitative research as rigorous and legitimate in its own right, and (4) eschewing notions that theory-

    construction belonged to an elite few. Their ideas challenged conventional positivist notions of qualitative re-

    search as impressionistic, a-theoretical, and biased, and undermined traditional assumptions about academic

    turf and hierarchies.

    The objectivist and constructivist threads in grounded theory have their antecedents in Glaser and Strauss’s

    contrasting intellectual heritages. Glaser drew on his rigorous training in quantitative methods and imported

    positivist assumptions of objectivity, parsimony, and generality into grounded theory. Strauss brought the

    pragmatist emphases on agency, action, language and meaning, and emergence to grounded theory, all of

    which support its constructivist leanings. Both Glaser and Strauss saw grounded theory as a method that fa-

    cilitated studying processes.

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    Since 1967, each founder took grounded theory in different directions. Glaser (1998, 2003, 2013) still adheres

    to positivist principles of discovery, generality, parsimony, and objectivity and emphasises neutrality of data,

    variable analysis, and an authoritative researcher. He has, however, disavowed the quest for a basic social or

    social psychological process as forcing the data into a preconceived framework, rejected line-by-line coding

    in favour of incident-by-incident coding, and reversed his earlier insistence that participants will tell the re-

    searcher what concerns them. For over a decade, Glaser (2003) has advocated using grounded theory meth-

    ods to discover how research participants resolve a main concern rather than to study processes. Glaser’s

    commitment to comparative methods has become more explicit over the years; his defence of small samples

    has grown more strident, and his dismissal of typical methodological concerns such as attention to accuracy,

    standpoints, and reflexivity has become more transparent.

    Strauss (1987) moved the method toward verification and with Juliet Corbin (Strauss and Corbin, 1990, 1998),

    added technical procedures that sparked Glaser’s (1992) attack that their method was not grounded theory.

    Strauss and Corbin’s techniques made the method more formulaic because researchers could apply these

    techniques to their data, rather than developing emergent ideas – and analytic strategies – from their interpre-

    tations of data. Corbin (2008, 2009) has expressed regret that readers see their earlier books as rule-bound

    and prescriptive. She also has redefined her perspective on inquiry in these books as dated. Corbin’s (Corbin,

    2009; Corbin and Strauss, 2008, 2015) recent shifts bring her closer to the constructivist approach.

    Glaser’s version of grounded theory remains positivist while Corbin’s has become notably less so. Charmaz’s

    (2000, 2006, 2014) distinction between objectivist and constructivist grounded theory provides an epistemo-

    logical handle for moving grounded theory out of its positivist roots and further into interpretive social science.

    She adopts grounded theory strategies for coding, memo-writing, and theoretical sampling but shows how

    the resulting theory is constructed rather than discovered. A constructivist grounded theory is located in time,

    space, and circumstance, rather than general and separate from its origins, and aimed toward abstract un-

    derstanding rather than explanation and prediction. Constructivists assume that (1) researchers are a part of

    what they see, not apart from it; (2) facts and values are connected, not separate; and (3) views are multiple

    and interpretive, not singular and self-evident. These assumptions lead to reflexivity about producing data,

    constructing theories, and representing research participants.

    Clarke (2005; Clarke et al., 2015) extends grounded theory by integrating postmodern premises in her expli-

    cation of situational analysis. She rejects twentieth-century grounded theory assumptions of generality, truth,

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    discovery, and objectivity in favour of situated grounded theory analyses that take into account positionality,

    relativity, and reflexivity. Like numerous other scholars (e.g. Bryant, 2003, 2017; Charmaz, 1990, 2000, 2006;

    Henwood and Pidgeon, 2003, 2006; Tweed and Charmaz, 2011), Clarke sees grounded theories as con-

    structed, not discovered. She states that researchers already have theoretical knowledge and likely consider-

    able knowledge about their substantive areas and specific research situation before entering the field. Con-

    sistent with Strauss’s intellectual legacy, Clarke (2005) not only constructs situational analysis from symbolic

    interactionist sociology and pragmatist philosophy, but argues that symbolic interactionism and grounded the-

    ory form a theory-method package in which ontology and epistemology are co-constitutive and non-fungible.

    Her position (1) builds on the pragmatist agenda of empirical study of experiences and practices in obdurate,

    but multiple realities; (2) assumes that perspectives on these realities, including researchers’, are partial, situ-

    ated, and constructed; and (3) takes the situation of inquiry as the unit of analysis. Clarke augments grounded

    theory analytic strategies with maps depicting complex situations, social worlds/arenas, and positions taken

    and not taken.

    Grounded theory methods offer a path toward constructing theory, but not a direct route. If grounded theory

    methods point the way to theorising, why do numerous grounded theory studies remain descriptive? Three

    fundamental problems impede theoretical development. First, many grounded theorists do not attain the inti-

    mate familiarity (Blumer, 1969) with their studied phenomenon that permits looking at it from multiple perspec-

    tives and getting beneath the surface. Instead, their view remains partial and superficial. If so, they reproduce

    common-sense understandings of the phenomenon (Silverman, 2013) rather than regard such understand-

    ings as problematic objects of inquiry to take apart and begin to conceptualise. Subsequently, the finished

    categories remain mundane, descriptive, and devoid of theoretical incisiveness. A lack of intimate familiarity

    also reduces the researcher’s awareness of the range of variation of the phenomenon, its reach, and connec-

    tions with other phenomena and levels of analysis. Some grounded theorists (e.g. Glaser, 2003) express less

    concern about limited data collection. They argue that the inherent modifiability of a grounded theory allows

    extending or refining a theory later. Perhaps. But does it occur? Usually not. Thus, researchers need to aim

    for thoroughness and theoretical understanding of variation.

    Second, the analytic process starts with coding in grounded theory but most qualitative coding remains topi-

    cal, descriptive, and general. This coding leads to synthesising, sorting, and summarising data. All are useful

    but do not foster raising specific questions about the data and codes to take them apart and define what con-

    stitutes them. While coding, we define points and moments in the data that suggest analytic leads or illumi-

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    nate telling issues. What we do during initial analytic stages informs what we can develop later in the analytic

    process.

    Third, many researchers who claim grounded theory do not move back and forth between collecting data and

    refining abstract categories. The logic of grounded theory calls for successively raising the level of abstrac-

    tion of the analysis through interrogating it with emergent questions, filling and checking categories through

    theoretical sampling, and asking which theories best account for this analysis. If a researcher’s main category

    is descriptive, theoretical sampling remains at a low level of abstraction and, moreover, many researchers

    who claim to adopt grounded theory strategies do not conduct theoretical sampling at all. Recognition of the

    problems above can prompt researchers to pose theoretical questions and pursue theoretical connections.

    The Take-Up of Grounded Theory in Psychology and Emergence of Qualitative

    Psychology

    Why and how has grounded theory come to have a place in psychology? What role has it played in the emer-

    gence of qualitative psychology? In this section, we trace grounded theory’s insertion into, and influence upon,

    psychology’s methodological repertoire as it has expanded to include qualitative approaches and methods.

    It took 20 years for grounded theory to come to psychologists’ attention; however, having done so, it rapidly

    came to occupy a position in the vanguard of psychologists’ qualitative approaches and methods.

    The Earliest Grounded Theory Impetus: Clinical/Practitioner Psychology

    The first psychologists who took up grounded theory principles and practices did so in the late 1980s (Rennie

    et al., 1988). These psychologists worked primarily in the clinical psychology (mental health) research arena,

    and articulated two key areas of methodological concern: (1) the need to seek out and utilise holistic methods

    for understanding and representing clients’ and research participants’ lived experiences and actions, in situ,

    and in their full complexity and (2) the importance of fostering forms of theorising within psychology for those

    seeking to combine their clinical/practical interests and academic research. Qualitative methods, and in par-

    ticular grounded theory, were deemed to be important in both regards.

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    Researchers such as Rennie et al. found themselves outside the mainstream of an academic clinical psychol-

    ogy preoccupied with conducting controlled experimental studies – as was the discipline of psychology as a

    whole – and with emulating the standards and practices of a laboratory-based, natural science. This situa-

    tion persists to some extent, as the research concerns and priorities of academic clinical psychologists resist

    change for institutional reasons. More recently, however, new demands significantly undercut, or at least in-

    terrupt, traditional priorities. Clinical psychology research must now show itself to be more directly relevant to

    patients’ expressed concerns, as well as applying itself to the development and evaluation of treatment regi-

    mens and psychological/mental health services.

    This latter situation has considerably strengthened the hand of those advocating the need for clinical (and

    its later derivative, health psychology) to adopt more flexible, qualitative, and contextualised methods. They

    afford a better fit between clinical psychologists’ theories and practices and the meanings their clients assign

    to their experiences and problems. Hence, qualitative research methodologies and methods have gained ac-

    ceptability, noticeably as part of clinical and health psychology’s development in the UK and beyond. Ground-

    ed theory is one of the most popular and widely well-regarded of such methods (Marks and Yardley, 2004;

    Slade and Priebe, 2006) and has generated many valuable studies (e.g. Bennett et al., 2007; Horne et al.,

    2012; Jacobson, 2009; Priya, 2010).

    Questioning Scientific Orthodoxy, Expanding Psychological Methods: Critical

    Groundwork for Grounded Theory in the UK

    Interest intensified in grounded theory from the early 1990s in the UK, as part of more general arguments

    for challenging scientific/methodological orthodoxy and creating a space for qualitative research within an ex-

    perimentally, quantitatively and statistically defined discipline (Henwood and Nicolson, 1995). A major con-

    cern was with the unnecessary narrowness of psychology’s preoccupation with the control, prediction, and

    measurement of human behaviour and individual cognition. Social psychologists who critiqued ideas typically

    taken for granted within psychology about the practices and procedures of knowing and science (Harré and

    Secord, 1972; Gergen, 1973, 1982; Parker, 1989) – and who are now often known as social constructionists

    and critical psychologists (Stainton Rogers, 2011) – did the early groundwork. Proposals for an early progen-

    itor of qualitative psychology, in the form of an approach called ‘ethogenic’ psychology (Harré et al., 1985),

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    were also put in place. Research following this approach would analyse meaningful activity in situ, along with

    participants’ everyday understandings or subjective accounts. Intelligibility and orderliness of conduct would

    be established in relation to normative expectations, and its predictability by positing ‘real’ generative psy-

    chological mechanisms and structures as opposed to abstract cause–effect (or in behavioural terms, stim-

    ulus–response) sequences. Although ethogenic psychology never really took hold, it flagged the possibility

    of psychologists refusing to privilege modernist/dualistic practices such as the measurement of behaviour

    over the study of meaningful conduct and people’s subjective accounts, and the use of non-objectivist inquiry

    methods. In this way, it established the context of critical debate about psychological science, and prepared

    the foundation for grounded theory to enter UK (and later, North American) psychology.

    Grounded Theory and Qualitative Psychology

    In the contributions that made grounded theory visible in the UK (and later in US psychology), Henwood and

    Pidgeon (1992, 1995, 2003) argued directly for the uptake of grounded theory in psychology, as part of their

    wider observation that psychology had too long neglected the potential benefits of qualitative research ap-

    proaches. In making this claim, Henwood and Pidgeon echoed a major argument of critical, social construc-

    tionist and ethogenic psychologists – that psychology’s (dualistic) way of defining itself as an objective science

    opened up serious gaps in the logic and practice of psychological science. Additionally, they pointed out how

    grounded theory was a tried and tested qualitative social research method, developed within a cognate dis-

    cipline (sociology), epitomising many of the real potentials qualitative research offered to psychology. Shortly

    thereafter, Smith, Harré and Van Langenhove (1995) forecast the possibility of fundamentally changing the

    discipline of psychology through qualitative research methods. By including Charmaz’s (1995b) chapter on

    grounded theory in their edited volume, they brought the method into the classroom and increased its visibility

    among disciplinary colleagues.

    Grounded theory offered psychologists a set of clearly articulated principles and practices for working outside

    the confines of their discipline’s highly prescriptive quantitative stance. This method provided an entrée into

    the rigorous work of empirically gathering and analysing initially ill structured qualitative data, and of making

    sense of them in theoretical terms. It opened up a no less trustworthy or valid, but far more creative and ex-

    ploratory logic of inquiry than hypothetico-deductive theory and practice. It provided individual researchers

    with a set of working principles and practices aimed at both ‘disciplining’ and ‘stimulating’ the theoretical imag-

    ination.

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    Psychologists using grounded theory could inquire into research problems with substantive relevance to spe-

    cific problem domains (sometimes called ‘real world’ inquiry). As specified by grounded theory, one’s primary

    concern must be developing a close and meaningful understanding of a particular, substantive problem or

    social arena (e.g. the involvement of patients in decisions about their care; the introduction of new technology

    into a clinical setting; the management of risks in hazardous industries). Out of such understanding comes

    the possibility of research knowledge of close relevance to the lives of people inhabiting such domains, and

    also to the work and decisions of practitioners and policymakers dealing with problems people encounter in

    their everyday worlds.

    Grounded theory’s specific intellectual antecedents in American pragmatist philosophy and the symbolic in-

    teractionist perspective (Blumer, 1969; Mead, 1934) provided a further reason for its relevance to psychology,

    and role in stimulating the development of qualitative psychology. This linkage should not be surprising since

    both look back to the late-nineteenth-century psychological writings of Dilthey, who insisted that it would be

    mistaken to pursue causal explanation at the expense of understanding or verstehen, and that psychological

    and social investigations, alike, should ask questions about the creation of meaning. Pragmatist philosophy in-

    stantiates the idea that the value of any theoretical proposition or explanatory claim depends less on testing it

    against some absolute, transcendent reality, and more on considering the kinds of actions and consequences

    it allows for as people encounter and negotiate their empirical world (what, as a meaningful construction, it

    is ‘good for’, Camic et al., 2003). Symbolic interactionism articulates a coherent justification for studying how

    and why people come to attach meaning to their own and others’ conduct, other objects of experience, and

    their efforts at understanding, and representation (Blumer, 1969). Symbolic interactionism takes action as a

    central concern. Thus, the combination of symbolic interactionism and grounded theory creates the potential

    for forging stronger links between psychology and sociology.

    Grounded theory, then, provided a serious option to those psychologists who found themselves too con-

    strained by psychology’s traditional experimental and psychometric outlook. It posed a new mode of inquiry,

    creditably located in more expansive and constructive discussions of how to pursue human inquiry. It allowed

    psychologists to contemplate – many for the first time – how they might undertake exploratory research using

    qualitative, real world data, and with the goal of understanding and theorising about people’s lived experi-

    ences and meaningful worlds, so that their research might – in the manner highlighted by Dey (2004) and

    Punch (2005) – make some contribution to the ways in which people live with their daily problems. Although

    ethogenic psychology tried to achieve some of these goals earlier, especially centring the study of the mean-

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    ingfulness to people of their conduct and experiences in their everyday worlds, its designation as a separate

    type of psychology had, perhaps, not helped to sustain it within psychology’s institutional structures.

    What seems to have happened in the case of grounded theory is that initial interest in, and discussion of,

    grounded theory’s potentials has translated into considerable demand to know ‘how to do’ psychological re-

    search using the method. The demand has come from clinical and health psychology research, as already

    noted, but also from social, critical, and applied psychology (see Charmaz, 2005, 2011b, 2017 for develop-

    ing a critical grounded theory). The plethora of edited, introductory compilations of qualitative psychological

    methods texts appearing rapidly since the earliest days almost invariably continue to dedicate a chapter to

    grounded theory (e.g. Harper and Thompson, 2011; Smith, 2015; Smith et al., 1995; Wertz et al., 2011; Willig,

    2001b, 2013), as have texts developed to support training in inter- and multi-disciplinary human and social

    research including psychology (e.g. Silverman, 2016). Increasingly, such chapters also draw upon a body of

    original research studies, a selection of which we feature to exemplify specific methodological points through-

    out the remainder of this chapter.

    No discussion of qualitative psychology can overlook its global reach, and with it the increasing adoption of

    grounded theory methods around the world. Although early studies largely reflected methodological develop-

    ments in the UK and North America, both robust studies using grounded theory (e.g. Atari, 2014; Rihacek and

    Danelova, 2016; Scull et al., 2016; Tuason, 2013; Veale and Stavrou, 2007) and contributions advancing this

    method (e.g. Hallberg, 2006) now appear from around the globe. Important contributions have been made

    in a number of areas, including suffering and trauma. Whether or not psychologists happen to be clinicians,

    they often have the privilege of being a part of breaking silences and giving research participants a space and

    time for reflection to share and transcend their suffering (e.g. Priya, 2010; Rosenblatt, 1995). Priya (2010),

    for example, not only constructed the categories of his analysis but also developed a research relationship

    through ‘empathetic witnessing’ that supported his participants’ reaffirmation of a valued moral status.

    Atari (2014) conducted 36 phenomenological interviews with Israelis who had experienced terrorist attacks

    and afterward developed posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). She used grounded theory to analyse their

    fragmented traumatic memories. Atari aimed to learn about their subjective experience, including that of their

    bodies. She argues that the fragmented bodily memory ‘functions as a black hole’ and also accounts for the

    individual’s feeling the traumatic experience over and over again. This type of analysis not only conceptualis-

    es research participants’ stories of their experience, but also holds significant implications for practitioners.

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    Approaches to Implementing Grounded Theory in Original Research Studies

    One important message in introductory chapters on grounded theory as a methodology within qualitative psy-

    chology concerns the do-ability of research using grounded strategies and methods. Another concern is how

    researchers conduct original grounded theory over time, across a range of different sub-areas of psycholog-

    ical research, and in the form of smaller and larger scale studies by single researchers (e.g. Griffith, 2016;

    Lois, 2010; Priya, 2010; Tuason, 2013); students and their supervisors (e.g. Hussein and Cochrane, 2003;

    Qin and Lykes 2006; Tweed and Salter, 2000); collaborative research partnerships – frequently between clin-

    icians and academics (e.g. Borrill and Iljon-Foreman, 1996); and as part of funded psychological and multi-

    disciplinary projects often having a medical focus (e.g. Nielsen et al., 2013; Yardley et al., 2001), although not

    always (Cox et al., 2003, Eaton and Sanders, 2012; Henwood and Pidgeon, 2001).

    Looking across this range of studies, grounded theory ideas and practices have now been implemented and

    used in psychology, and in multidisciplinary studies involving psychology, in at least three different ways: (1)

    as a methodological approach supporting research that distinctively differs from traditional quantitative, hy-

    pothesis testing, experimental, psychological studies; (2) as a set of research principles and practical meth-

    ods for describing, understanding and explicating substantive problems in less distinctive ways in its method-

    ological approach to the quantitative, psychological mainstream; and (3) as a means of beginning an in-depth,

    qualitative investigation so that inquiries produce outcomes well-grounded in data, while other complementary

    approaches and methods are used to complete the theoretical explication and interpretation. This diverse set

    of interests is one reason behind the continuing, robust commitment shown in the perspective and methods of

    grounded theory within psychology, while consideration of these interests can illuminate debate about certain

    common practices.

    Grounded Theory as a ‘big Q’ Qualitative Methodology

    Willig (2001a) and Stainton Rogers (2011) introduce the terms ‘big Q’ and ‘little q’ to highlight the major differ-

    ences brought to the tasks of designing, executing and reporting psychological studies when working outside

    the canon of hypothetico-deductive method. Willig describes the meaning of the two terms as follows: ‘“big Q”

    refers to open-ended, inductive research methodologies that are concerned with theory generation and the

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    exploration of meanings, whereas “little q” refers to the incorporation of non-numerical data techniques into

    hypothetico-deductive designs’ (Willig, 2001a: 11). The place of grounded theory studies within this schema

    is clear: they cannot be ‘little q’. Accordingly, Willig (2001a) depicts grounded theory as the first of her ‘big Q’

    methodologies enabling psychologists to explore ‘lived experiences and participants’ meanings’.

    In discussing the position of grounded theory within Willig’s schema, characterising grounded theory as more

    ‘inductive’ in nature does not mean reverting to a naively dualistic way of thinking about qualitative inquiry.

    Grounded theory procedures and practices are inductive in the sense of not seeking to confirm extant theory.

    But, they are also much more because they involve pushing understanding forward and theorising through

    intensive engagement with data, investigating its potentially varied and multiple contextual meanings, and

    checking to see whether the categories hold up. Within psychology, Henwood and Pidgeon (1995, 2006)

    have referred to this mode of inquiry as more ‘exploratory’ and ‘generative’, and as involving a ‘flip-flop’ be-

    tween data and its conceptualisation. Willig (2001a) describes the qualitative inquiry process as epitomised

    by grounded theory as more ‘investigative’ in nature, always seeking to find out answers to questions, and

    never merely seeking to find out whether a single hypothesis is false or true when tested against a particular

    sample or quota of data.

    One arena illustrating how psychologists have harnessed the exploratory/generative and questioning/inves-

    tigative potential of grounded theory as ‘big Q’ psychology is critical, qualitative social psychological (specifi-

    cally feminist) studies into women’s life experiences and mental health (e.g. Allen, 2011; Bennett et al., 2007;

    Hussein and Cochrane, 2003; Martin and Barnard, 2013). Qin and Lykes’s (2006) study exemplifies this ap-

    proach. They used grounded theory to construct a critical feminist analysis from 40 interviews of 20 Chinese

    women graduate students about their experiences before and after coming to the US. Qin and Lykes identify

    a major process that these students experienced, ‘reweaving a fragmented self’, which includes three sub-

    processes. First, ‘weaving self’ refers to integrating traditional Chinese values into oneself, such as the high

    value placed on education, and being in a web of relationships that both sustained, yet constrained these

    women. Second, ‘fragmenting self’ depicts the discomfort and disparagement these women had endured in

    Chinese society and the self-questioning and critical consciousness it evoked in them. Third, ‘reweaving self’,

    involves reuniting the fragmented aspects of self to create a new and expanded self in the US. Yet these

    women also experienced racism, poverty, isolation, and an awareness of being cast as different and other in

    their host country.

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    Qin and Lykes’ study illustrates grounded theory logic because they: (1) conceptualise a problematic process,

    (2) define the sub-processes constituting this major process, (3) treat and analyse these sub-processes as

    categories, (4) specify how the sub-processes evolve and are linked, and (5) outline the implications of their

    study. Grounded theory provides strong methodological tools for such research because the constructed the-

    ory is rooted in the experiences, meanings, and actions of the studied individuals.

    The big Q/little q distinction encapsulates grounded theory’s potential in supporting the practice of more ‘criti-

    cal’ forms of applied, social and health/clinical psychology. Grounded theorists and critical psychologists’ con-

    cerns overlap as both seek to introduce a freshness and newness into arenas of investigation that are not well

    served by working within the parameters of normal, theory-testing, quantitative experimental science. Both

    specifically question reliance upon forms of prior theorising – and also reality-defining forms of public dis-

    course (e.g. Hallowell and Lawton, 2002) – that embody dominant frames and values. Grounded theory also

    offers a specific set of principles and practices that can strengthen critical psychologists’ goal of understand-

    ing and explicating people’s own life experiences, everyday problems, and the complexity of psychological

    and social processes within particular, substantive inquiry domains.

    Grounded Theory Forms Outside ‘big Q’ Psychology Within Psychology and

    Related Disciplines

    In order to include recognisable forms of grounded theory studies lying outside the concerns and achieve-

    ments of critical psychology, we now consider how social psychologists in other disciplines and practitioner-

    researchers have used grounded theory methodology and method. Medical sociology and symbolic interac-

    tionist social psychology have had a long and vibrant history of grounded theory studies (e.g. Corbin and

    Strauss, 1988; Charmaz, 1991, 1995a, 2011a). These areas share overlapping interests with psychologists

    as evidenced in the work of Charmaz and Lois, which we discuss in greater detail.

    In a demonstration project (Wertz et al., 2011) illustrating five different ways of doing qualitative analysis in

    psychology with the same data, Charmaz (2011a) shows how grounded theory strategies lead to substantive

    theorising. The primary data consisted of two young women’s personal accounts of an unfortunate event and

    subsequent interviews of them (although Charmaz also made comparisons with her own data). Teresa, who

    had aspired to becoming a professional opera singer, wrote about her experience of losing her voice after

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    having surgery for anaplastic cancer of her throat. Gail wrote about injuring her arm just after she had made

    the gymnastics team at her college.

    Charmaz begins with broad sensitising concepts such as identity and meaning, and explores possible con-

    nections with time. Her initial codes include ‘voice and self merge’, ‘defining certain impairment’, and ‘experi-

    encing forced loss’. Two major processes emerged through the analysis, losing and regaining a valued self.

    Charmaz focused the analysis on effecting intentional reconstruction of self after loss and distinguished be-

    tween losing a valued self in a context of an uncertain future and experiencing a disrupted self with certain

    recovery. Conditions of uncertainty and awareness of permanent loss profoundly affect a person’s meanings

    and actions. Under these conditions, regaining a valued self depended on facing loss, relinquishing the past

    self, drawing on lessons from the past, and realigning one’s earlier dream with the present situation. Charmaz

    constructed her analysis from the perspectives and experiences of the studied individuals. Grounded theory

    provides a lens for seeing beyond established professional concepts rather than only seeing through them.

    Jennifer Lois’s (2010) study of homeschooling mothers is an exemplar of grounded theory research, reason-

    ing, and theorising. Consistent with Barney Glaser’s question about what kind of study does the data indicate,

    Lois discovered that her data led her in an unexpected direction. She began her research with an interest in

    the emotion work of homeschooling mothers and thought she had a study of domestic labor. As she proceed-

    ed, she discovered that the inordinate amount of time that homeschooling took was a crucial issue for these

    mothers.

    Conceptions of the quantity of time devoted to homeschooling and the emotion work involved could not ac-

    count for all of Lois’s data. She imparts what can be transformative methodological advice when she says:

    ‘You should keep coming back to the quotes that won’t leave you alone’ (in Charmaz, 2014: 194). One home-

    schooling mother of 12 children told Lois that being around children all day was not easy, and acknowledged

    that she could send them off to school. This mother stated, ‘But what else was I going to do with my time?

    Hey, I could sit down and watch soap operas in the afternoon, but what better thing to do than to give it to

    your children?’

    Lois sensed that the quote above was significant and defined it as unresolved data for which she needed

    to theoretically account. She followed abductive reasoning (Peirce, 1938/1958) to account for the puzzling

    finding. Lois sought more data to explore the meanings of such statements. When she examined these data

    she realised that her questions about mothers’ quantity of time had only touched the surface of their temporal

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    experiences (in Charmaz, 2014: 196).

    After identifying ‘Subjective sense of time’ as a major theme in her data, Lois searched existing theoretical

    understandings about it. Was she theoretically contaminated by the literature in this field? No. In keeping with

    Henwood and Pidgeon’s (2003) concept of theoretical agnosticism, Lois maintained a critical view of the liter-

    ature and an open eye on her data. She used ideas from the literature to sensitise her to possible meanings

    of time. Yet she was consistently informed by her data and her emerging analysis of them and constructed

    the category, ‘time sacrifice’.

    Many grounded theorists would have stopped with this category. One could rather easily define what time-

    sacrifice meant in the data, spell out its properties, show how the mothers became immersed in it, explain

    how it occurred, and outline its consequences. Such an analysis would produce a competent paper. But Lois

    did much more.

    Instead of simply producing an analysis about time sacrifice, Lois built on both the extant literature and her

    data. She conducted some new interviews with focused questions to explore time sacrifice. How did Lois ac-

    count for her findings? She realised that the mothers’ daily temporal experiences and their meanings of them

    not only resulted in their ‘manipulating temporal experience to manage their selves, but also to manage their

    emotions’ (in Charmaz, 2014: 196). Their meanings and actions resulted in a particular type of construction

    of self, the sacrificial mother. This conception of self reduced the women’s resentments about having no time

    and alleviated feeling guilty for wanting time for themselves.

    Lois then developed new codes, ‘Subjective Experience of Time’, ‘Time Management’, ‘Manipulating Emo-

    tions to Manage Time’, ‘Manipulating Time to Manage Emotions’ and explored them further in follow-up in-

    terviews. Her work produced another code, ‘Temporal Emotion Work’. Subsequently, she investigated this

    code more deeply by going back to the data and creating new codes: ‘Sequencing: Eliciting Nostalgia and

    Anticipating Regret’ and ‘Savouring: Staying Present and Creating Quality Time’. Sequencing referred to the

    mothers’ efforts to create good memories of the family’s child-raising years and their fears of future regrets if

    they had not created these memories. Savouring meant treasuring present moments while using time to craft

    valued experiences.

    These codes are intriguing, but what Lois did with them is more compelling. In her article, Lois posits a sub-

    class of emotions, ‘temporal emotions’, that can only be felt by crossing ‘timeframes’ demarking the past,

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    present, and future (Charmaz, 1991). Lois claims that temporal emotions cannot be felt without bridging the

    timeframe of the present with the timeframes of the past or future. The emotions of nostalgia, regret, disil-

    lusionment, ambition, hope, optimism, and dread cannot be experienced without bridging the present to the

    past or future. Lois concludes her grounded theory by pointing out that how we use temporal emotions signif-

    icantly affects constructing a continuous self over time.

    Lois’s analysis underscores the significance of using grounded theory strategies to develop a successively

    more conceptual analysis. She engaged in the iterative process by going back and forth between her data

    and analysis. She sought additional data when her already collected data could not support her emerging

    analysis. She constructed focused questions to gather just enough new data to fill out her codes and tentative

    categories. By invoking abductive reasoning Lois developed a theoretical account of elusive data. Note that

    her codes reflect specific meanings and actions. Yet through studying these codes, and interrogating her da-

    ta, Lois created an abstract general category: temporal emotions. In short, Lois’s sequential coding and suc-

    cessive analyses led to a highly theoretical and innovative contribution.

    Both Charmaz and Lois conducted a close coding in precise terms that aimed to capture, compare, and ex-

    plicate specific meanings and actions in their interviews. Both researchers compared datum with datum, data

    with codes and categories, and categories with categories. Throughout the process, they asked analytic ques-

    tions. By successively working from specific codes to general, but definitive, categories, they construct the-

    oretical analyses. Thus, the way constructivist grounded theorists code their data and raise questions about

    them, as well as probe their emerging analyses, can resolve criticisms of grounded theory studies being de-

    scriptive.

    Charmaz also uses grounded theory strategies to plumb ordinary meanings in her data and makes them ob-

    jects of study, such as ‘living one day at a time’ (1991), ‘making trade-offs’ (1991) and ‘making a comeback’

    (2011a). This strategy simultaneously fosters remaining open and curious about studied life, learning the logic

    of research participants’ worlds, and minimises importing disciplinary concepts that contain imputed judg-

    ments, whether of participants’ motivations or their worlds.

    Grounded Theory in Practice-Oriented Research

    In health and clinical psychology, grounded theory enables researchers to pay close attention to articulating

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    the categories of experience and meaning that make up people’s subjective/phenomenal worlds. This ap-

    proach is both a major objective and an inextricable part of studying the social and psychological problems,

    questions and issues under investigation – often concerning dynamic social psychological processes.

    Byrne, Orange and Ward-Griffin (2011), for example, explored caregiving spouses’ responses to care transi-

    tions after their partners were discharged from a geriatric rehabilitation unit. Byrne conducted interviews with-

    in two days before the partners’ discharge, two weeks after discharge, and 4–6 weeks post-discharge. They

    defined ‘reconciling in response to fluctuating needs’ as the fundamental process the caregivers experienced.

    Caregivers had to reconcile the disjuncture and dissonance between their past and present lives. Reconcil-

    ing included three sub-processes ‘navigating’, ‘safekeeping’, and ‘repositioning’, and showed how caregivers

    responded to their spouses’ changing needs, as well as their own and those of being a couple. The authors

    delineated the contexts of reconciling as occurring in three phases ‘getting ready’, ‘getting into it’, and ‘getting

    on with it’. Their study not only illuminates caregivers’ experience but also hold implications for health policy

    and practice.

    The usefulness of grounded theory studies for policy and practice is apparent in numerous areas. Health

    psychologists Ray Chilton and Renata Pires-Yfantouda’s (2015) constructivist grounded theory explores what

    adolescents with type 1 diabetes confront in managing their care. As a result Chilton and Pires-Yfantouda pro-

    duce an insightful conceptual framework for understanding and conceptualising these adolescents’ psycho-

    logical mechanisms and contextualising them in a self-management continuum. The authors carefully qualify

    their results by explaining that restricted access to only those participants who agreed to be interviewed pre-

    cluded theoretical sampling. Nonetheless, they developed an analysis that can inform practitioners’ treatment

    plans.

    The rippling effects of the past are taken up by psychologists who use grounded theory to address clinical

    problems. Matthews and Salazar (2014) studied second-generation adults who were raised in religious cults.

    One of these researchers had been a second-generation cult member for 43 years while living in three coun-

    tries. This researcher had both an insider and outsider view, as she is no longer a part of the cult. These

    authors distilled the themes in their data and used them to draw out specific implications for practicing coun-

    sellors.

    Williams, King, and Fox (2016) also constructed sensitive recommendations following their in-depth study of

    people with a lifetime history of anorexia nervosa. They learned and analysed how anorexia nervosa comes

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    to become a part of the person’s self. These authors spell out specific points for practitioners to attend to and

    outline the kind of therapeutic interventions needed. They present a persuasive argument that practitioners

    must aim to disentangle the person’s self from anorexia nervosa to recover from the disorder, rather than fo-

    cusing primarily on weight.

    In a study that recasts practitioners’ definitions, Wright and Kirby (1999) sought to clarify and explicate the in

    vivo/in situ categories of experience and meaning of ‘adjustment’ to chronic illness relevant in the lives and

    worlds of people suffering end stage renal failure (ESRF), as a strategy to overcome poor conceptualisation

    of the term in a research literature dominated by notions of adjustment as ‘a return to normal social roles

    (e.g. work), an absence of psychiatric caseness (e.g. on depression) or compliance/adherence with treatment’

    (Wright and Kirby, 1999: 259).

    Clearly, for certain research purposes, and following some of the general principles of qualitative inquiry (e.g.

    Lincoln and Guba, 1985), charting or mapping out such categories of experience and meaning in more depth

    and detail than is possible in other forms of research aiming to count occurrences of events and establish

    general patterns, can be a valid research goal in and of itself. To an extent, this can also be the case, in

    grounded theory studies, when reporting early ‘descriptive’ stages of a project. In addition, providing a de-

    tailed description can be a primary means for researchers to demonstrate that they have, indeed, ‘grounded’

    any subsequent theoretical abstractions in a solid foundation of data and have grappled with making sense of

    them. Nonetheless, grounded theory studies that report primarily descriptive findings have elicited criticisms

    from numerous different perspectives.

    In the case of psychology, three main criticisms have arisen: (1) merely presenting the details and structure of

    experience does not amount to articulating a theory (a criticism that possibly insists on only using a complete

    version or a single ‘true’ definition of grounded theory); (2) arriving at categories of meaning and experience

    does not articulate or interpret their psychological meaning from the perspective of individual actors; and (3)

    simply reporting categories of experience and meaning does not provide an analysis of social dynamics or

    process, nor does it answer specific questions about or explore the theoretical and practical implications of

    the data (e.g. Willig, 2001b). From a sociological point of view, the weakness of such descriptive grounded

    theory studies lies in their reliance on a loose presentation of themes derived from the data in the manner

    of abstract empiricism, as if the data merely speak for themselves, and where the researcher fails to provide

    any analytical framing or reading of the data (Silverman, 2013). These criticisms may point out weak areas in

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    specific studies for which the authors have claimed to use grounded theory. However, these criticisms do not

    apply to the method per se. Nor do the criticisms argue against researchers varying in how they balance de-

    mands for detailed description and analytical/theoretical explications of participants’ experiences and mean-

    ings.

    Researchers who aim to use this method for theory construction need to develop ‘theoretical sensitivity’

    (Glaser, 1978), the ability to discern and interrogate possibilities for conceptualising the data in abstract terms.

    Hence, these researchers create codes – and from them, categories – that carry analytic weight. From the

    early stages of analysis to the final report, the work becomes increasingly theoretically driven by the emerging

    analysis.

    A notably different manifestation of grounded theory practice occurs when the method is no longer treated as

    a distinctively descriptive and analytical, open-ended/exploratory and investigative, creative/generative and

    exhaustive/rigorous mode of inquiry, but rather as a stage in an overall research process adopting a verifica-

    tionist approach to method. For example, Michie et al. (1996: 455–456), studied family members attending

    a clinic for those at high risk of inheriting bowel cancer. They used grounded theory data analysis methods

    with interview data as a ‘pilot study’ to generate hypotheses about how people respond to predictive genetic

    testing ‘to be tested in a prospective, wider scale, quantitative study’. Yardley, Sharples, Beech and Lewith

    (2001) used grounded theory, in an interview study of people receiving chiropractic treatment for back pain,

    as a starting point for a more complex, evolving, multi-phased design, shifting from an exploratory/genera-

    tive to a verificationist study. They aimed to ascertain whether it was (dynamic) symptom perceptions, other

    factors (such as abstract illness representations and/or communication by and confidence in the therapist) or

    a combination of factors that influenced treatment perceptions and acceptability. These studies point to the

    continuing pull of discrete variable analysis and generalist hypothesis testing within clinical research, while

    also highlighting the valued (if, in its own terms, limited) role played by grounded theory within it.

    Grounded Theory Used in Combination with Other Approaches to Achieve

    Theoretical Explication and Interpretation

    A further variation in the implementation of grounded theory within psychology is its use in combination with

    other approaches. Studies in this mould clearly depart from the idea of grounded theory being a standard-

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    ised package, conceiving of it instead as part of a flexible toolkit of methods. Interest has emerged in social

    science internationally in developing principled and practical forms of ‘methodological combining’ – interest

    that further encourage researchers not to think of methods as hermetically sealed (e.g. Henwood and Lang,

    2005; Moran-Ellis, 2006; Tashakkori and Teddlie, 2000; Todd et al., 2004). Within qualitative psychology, in

    fact, investigators have always made decisions and choices about methodology and method in the light of

    a broadening comparative, possibly critical, awareness and understanding of a range of qualitative perspec-

    tives and methods with first ‘homes’ within and beyond psychology (e.g. discourse analysis, ethnography,

    phenomenological theory and method, voice relational psychology).

    Grounded theory and discourse analysis have been used as co-contributors as psychologists have worked

    across methodological boundaries. In their investigation into how men’s sense of masculinity is implicated in

    their involvement in crime, Willott and Griffin (1999: 449) used grounded theory tactics to identify a stratum

    of in vivo codes (e.g. earning, money, and the family) in the form of ‘words and phrases used repeatedly by

    discussants’. These codes were then used ‘to divide the huge quantity of data into manageable pieces, be-

    fore moving onto the more theoretical phase of the analysis’ (Willott and Griffin, 1999: 449). At this phase,

    the researchers began to attach greater significance to ideas and practices from discourse theory: focusing

    in particular on how men positioned themselves in their accounts and arguments, and cultural discourses of

    gender, masculinity and criminality.

    Typically, techniques for achieving theoretical abstraction, integration and explication in grounded theory stud-

    ies are through the constant comparative method, Strauss and Corbin’s three-Cs coding framework, Glaser’s

    integrating families of theoretical codes, and Charmaz’s theoretically sensitive interaction with and interpreta-

    tions of data – which is perhaps the culmination of grounded theorists’ aim to pay constant attention from the

    onset to theoretical possibilities in the data. In the two cited exemplar studies above, the authors built upon

    a range of ideas drawn from theory and the extant literature, to assist them in interpreting, integrating, and

    explicating the meanings in their data.

    Conclusion

    In summary, grounded theory studies in psychology attest to the strength of the method for producing fresh

    ideas and challenging past truths. The rapid acceptance and ascendance of the method in the discipline

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    confirm its usefulness in developing qualitative psychology. Like other scholars, perhaps psychologists first

    adopted grounded theory as a method of managing data and engaging in substantive coding. Yet grounded

    theory offers much more than coding strategies and data management. Raising the analytic level of initial

    coding practices is a start. Psychologists can enjoy a privileged place of access to people’s concerns and

    experience and a sensitivity to felt meanings. Grounded theory gives these psychologists tools to treat them

    analytically in ways that ultimately afford individuals new ways of understanding their experience.

    For academic as well as clinical psychologists, creating increasingly more theoretical memos advances the

    analytic process and can spark reflexivity about it. Engaging in theoretical sampling to sharpen abstract cate-

    gories and to dig deeper into the phenomena also enhances clarity and precision. The potential of grounded

    theory’s constant comparative method has yet to be mined as fully as it might be for constructing persuasive

    critical analyses to effect change. Taken to its logical extension, grounded theory holds much promise for new

    theorising in psychology, for critical inquiry within the discipline, and for innovative links between academic

    ideas and clinical practice.

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    https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781526405555

      SAGE Research Methods

      The SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Research in Psychology

      Grounded Theory Methods for Qualitative Psychology

      Introduction

      The Logic, Emergence and Use of Grounded Theory

      Grounded Theory Logic

      Using Grounded Theory Guidelines

      Box 14.1Basic Grounded Theory Methods

      General Strategies

      Specific Guidelines

      Emergence and Evolution of the Method

      The Take-Up of Grounded Theory in Psychology and Emergence of Qualitative Psychology

      The Earliest Grounded Theory Impetus: Clinical/Practitioner Psychology

      Questioning Scientific Orthodoxy, Expanding Psychological Methods: Critical Groundwork for Grounded Theory in the UK

      Grounded Theory and Qualitative Psychology

      Approaches to Implementing Grounded Theory in Original Research Studies

      Grounded Theory as a ‘big Q’ Qualitative Methodology

      Grounded Theory Forms Outside ‘big Q’ Psychology Within Psychology and Related Disciplines

      Grounded Theory in Practice-Oriented Research

      Grounded Theory Used in Combination with Other Approaches to Achieve Theoretical Explication and Interpretation

      Conclusion

      References

    1

    Research Methods

    for Social Workers

    A Practice- Based Approach

    T H I R D E D I T I O N

    Samuel S. Faulkner

    Cynthia A. Faulkner

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    1
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    Title: Research methods for social workers : a practice- based approach /
    Samuel S. Faulkner, Cynthia A. Faulkner.

    Description: Third edition. | New York, NY : Oxford University Press, 2019. |
    Cynthia A. Faulkner appears as the first named author on earlier editions.|

    Includes bibliographical references and index.
    Identifiers: LCCN 2018015252 (print) | LCCN 2018016001 (ebook) | 

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    CONTE NTS

    Preface ix
    Acknowledgments xi
    About the Authors xiii

    1. What Is Research? 1
    Importance of Social Work Research 1
    Defining Research 2
    Ways of Knowing 3
    Qualitative, Quantitative, and Mixed- Method Research 4
    Developing Your Research Questions 6
    What Is a Hypothesis? 7
    Research Designs 8
    Strengths and Limitations of Research 10
    Case Scenario 10
    Critical Thinking Questions 11
    Key Points 11
    Practice Exam 12

    2. Ethical Considerations 13
    Historical Overview 13
    Respect for Individuals 14
    Beneficence 20
    Justice 22
    Other Ethical Considerations 23
    Case Scenario 25
    Critical Thinking Questions 26
    Key Points 26
    Practice Exam 26

    3. Qualitative Research Designs 28
    How Is Qualitative Research Used? 28
    Descriptive Inquiry 29
    Speculative Inquiry 30
    Qualitative Research Methods 30
    Data Collection 35
    An Example of a Qualitative Study 39

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    vi C O N T E N T S

    Case Scenario 47
    Critical Thinking Questions 48
    Key Points 48
    Practice Exam 50

    4. Literature Review 52
    What Is a Literature Review? 52
    Step 1: Conducting Your Search for Research Articles 54
    Step 2: Choosing Your Articles 55
    Step 3: Reviewing Your Articles 56
    Step 4: Organizing Your Search Results 60
    Step 5: Developing a Problem Statement or Hypothesis 64
    Step 6: Compiling Your Reference Page 65
    Case Scenario 67
    Critical Thinking Questions 67
    Key Points 67
    Practice Exam 68

    5. Quantitative Research Designs 69
    Getting Started 69
    Developing a Testable Hypothesis 70
    What Is Descriptive Research? 70
    Correlation Versus Causation 71
    Data Collection 72
    Cross- Sectional and Longitudinal Designs 72
    Group Research Designs 74
    Case Scenario 80
    Critical Thinking Questions 80
    Key Points 81
    Practice Exam 81

    6. Variables and Measures 83
    Variables in Research Design 83
    Viewing and Using Variables 84
    Types of Variables 84
    What Is a Measure? 87
    Defining and Operationalizing Measures 87
    Levels of Measurement 88
    Reliability and Validity in Measurement 92
    Case Scenario 96
    Critical Thinking Questions 97
    Key Points 97
    Practice Exam 98

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    C O N T E N T S vii

    7. Sampling 99
    What Is Sampling? 99
    Random Selection and Random Assignment 100
    Sample Size: How Many Is Enough? 100
    External and Internal Validity 101
    Probability Sampling 103
    Probability Sampling Techniques 103
    Sampling Error 106
    Nonprobability Sampling 106
    Limitations of Nonprobability Sampling 107
    Case Scenario 108
    Critical Thinking Questions 108
    Key Points 108
    Practice Exam 109

    8. Survey Research 111
    Defining Survey Research 111
    Appropriate Survey Topics 112
    Developing a Survey 112
    Administering Surveys and Expected Rates of Returns 121
    Advantages and Disadvantages of Survey Research 124
    Case Scenario 125
    Critical Thinking Questions 125
    Key Points 125
    Practice Exam 126

    9. Evaluative Research Designs 127
    Program Evaluation 128
    Process Evaluation 128
    Outcome Evaluation 132
    Strengths and Weaknesses of Program Evaluation 135
    Practical Considerations and Common Problems 136
    Case Scenario 137
    Critical Thinking Questions 138
    Key Points 138
    Practice Exam 138

    10. Single- Subject Design 140
    What Is a Single- Subject Design? 140
    Elements of Single- Subject Design Research 141
    Types of Single- Subject Designs 144
    Strengths and Limitations of Single- Subject Designs 147
    Case Scenario 147
    Critical Thinking Questions 148

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    viii C O N T E N T S

    Key Points 148
    Practice Exam 148

    11. Introduction to Descriptive Statistics 150
    What Is Data Analysis? 150
    The First Step of Data Analysis 150
    Descriptive Analysis 152
    Strengths and Limitations of Descriptive Statistics 160
    Case Scenario 161
    Critical Thinking Questions 161
    Key Points 161
    Practice Exam 162

    12. Introduction to Inferential Statistics 164
    What Are Inferential Statistics? 164
    Four Types of Correlation 165
    Determining the Strength of the Correlation 166
    Probability Values and Confidence Intervals 167
    Parametric Statistics 167
    Nonparametric Statistics 174
    Strengths and Limitations of Inferential Statistics 176
    Which Statistical Program Is Right for Me? 176
    Case Scenario 177
    Critical Thinking Questions 177
    Key Points 177
    Practice Exam 178

    13. Practicing Your Research Skills 180
    Example of a Research Proposal 180
    Example of a Research Report 190

    Answers to Practice Exam 205
    Glossary 217
    References 227
    Index 229

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    PR E FACE

    Welcome to the third edition of Research Methods for Social Workers: A Practice-
    Based Approach. When we set out to write the first edition (now almost fifteen
    years ago) we had two major goals in mind: to create a research text that students
    would be able to understand and a book that they would actually read. Now,
    after the first edition in 2009 and the second edition in 2014, we have attempted,
    with each new edition to make the book even more user friendly and helpful, to
    you, the reader. The feedback from students has been gratifying and rewarding.
    Students tell us over and over that they appreciate this text because it makes re-
    search accessible to them— they actually read it and understand it.

    At the same time, after having used the book (and garnering candid and
    appreciated feedback from other faculty who use the text), we have made some
    important additions and changes to the original text (while staying true to the
    readable and understandable style of the first edition). The order of the chapters
    is rearranged (not for the sake of having a new edition but because we feel this
    better fits the flow of introducing and developing the concepts of the research
    process). Also, in this edition, we have included some much- needed information
    to meet the changing and evolving standards of social work education.

    As we continue to teach from this book, it continues to evolve and grow based
    on comments from students and other faculty members. We appreciate the
    thoughtful comments from our students and colleagues. A  special thank you
    goes out to Daniel Weisman, Professor of Social Work at Rhode Island College
    of Social Work, for his thoughtful comments and feedback— much of which we
    incorporated into this edition.

    In short, we feel this new edition will be even more valuable in helping you
    to teach research methods to your students. As you use this book, we invite
    comments, feedback, suggestions, and other responses to help us know how
    we might improve future editions (and what you like or don’t like about this
    current edition). As fellow educators, we want to be as responsive and helpful
    as possible.

    Thanks,
    Sam and Cindy Faulkner

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    ACK NOW L E DGM E NTS

    As with most writings, there are many people who contributed their time and
    expertise to this text. A special thank you goes to our colleagues and friends,
    Lisa Shannon and Lynn Geurin, associate professors of social work at Morehead
    State University, Kentucky, who have given valuable feedback and support. Our
    gratitude goes to David Follmer, consultant to Oxford University Press, for his
    encouragement and patience in the rewrite of the third edition of this book.
    We want to thank Daniel Weisman, Professor of Social Work at Rhode Island
    College of Social Work, for his thoughtful comments and feedback— much of
    which we incorporated into this edition. And special thanks go to our children
    (Wayne, Shay, Christina, Alisa, McKennzie, and Ezra) for inspiring us to be life-
    long learners and our fourteen grandchildren (so far), and our great- grandson for
    helping us stay young. “I can do everything through God who gives me strength”
    (Phil. 4:13).

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    A BOUT TH E AUTHOR S

    Cynthia A. Faulkner has served as full- time social work faculty since 2001. She
    recently retired as Professor from Morehead State University after sixteen years
    of service to relocate to Corpus Christi, Texas, where she is near family. She is
    now serving as Professor and Program Director of the new online MSW pro-
    gram at Indiana Wesleyan University. Her previous titles include eight years
    as Field Education Coordinator and three years as BSW Program Coordinator.
    Dr. Faulkner has developed multiple online social work, courses including those
    used for a Chemical Dependency minor, and she is a Certified Quality Matters
    Reviewer. Dr.  Faulkner has also taught many study- abroad classes, taking
    students to England, Scotland, and Ireland to study child maltreatment with a
    specialty in abuse by priests. She is the co- author of a textbook under contract
    titled Addictions Counseling: A Competency- Based Approach (Oxford University
    Press).

    Samuel S. Faulkner has been full- time faculty in social work since 2001 and re-
    tired as Professor from Morehead State University in June 2017. Now relocated
    in Corpus Christi, Texas, he is employed as Associate Professor at Texas A&M—
    Kingsville teaching in their new MSW Program. Previously, he has served as BSW
    Program Coordinator, Director of International Education, and thirteen years as
    Chair of the IRB. Dr. Faulkner served as Campus Representative to the Board of
    Directors for the Cooperative Center for Study Abroad from 2006 to 2014, and he
    was the onsite administrator for multiple programs including London Summer,
    London Winter, Ireland Summer, and Australia Summer. Dr. Faulkner created
    the first Chemical Dependency Minor in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. He
    has taught research courses, and he is co- author of a textbook under contact ti-
    tled Addictions Counseling: A Competency- Based Approach (Oxford University
    Press).

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    Research Methods for Social Workers

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    1

    What Is Research?

    R esearch has become an increasingly valuable tool for social work
    practitioners and scholars. Research is a systematic and methodolog-
    ical approach to creating knowledge. In social work, research is instru-

    mental in the development of effective practice outcomes, or the outcomes of
    professional activities that are designed to improve or change the well- being of
    an individual, agency, or other system. For instance, we can research an issue
    concerning practice accountability, such as whether an intervention is effective,
    or we can measure an issue related to the characteristics of an agency population,
    such as changes in the ages of substance abuse admissions over time. Measuring
    practice accountability and monitoring agency populations both provide in-
    formation that can be used to create evidence- based practices. Evidence- based
    practices are practices whose efficacy is supported by evidence. In this chapter,
    we will discuss why research is important in social work practice and what re-
    search entails, critically examine ways of knowing, define the two fields of re-
    search, and provide an overview of four methods of research.

    IMPORTA NCE OF SOCIA L WORK RESEA RCH

    Perhaps you are asking yourself something along the lines of “Why should I have
    to take a class in research? After all, I  am interested in working with people.
    I could care less about research methods.” The reality is that research is gaining
    an increasingly important place in the practice of social work. For instance,
    managed care companies, insurance companies, and consumers themselves
    are demanding that social workers be able to demonstrate not only that the
    techniques, methods, and practices that they employ are useful and effective,
    but also that these practices can be used effectively in other settings and with
    other populations. Gone are the days when a social worker could rely on per-
    sonal intuition and undocumented outcomes as proof that his or her practices
    were effective. In fact, the Code of Ethics of the National Association of Social
    Workers has an entire section on evaluation and research. Section 5.02 stresses

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    2 R E S E A R C H M E T H O D S F O R S O C I A L W O R K E R S

    that “Social workers should monitor and evaluate policies, the implementation
    of programs, and practice interventions.” In addition, “Social workers should
    promote and facilitate evaluation and research to contribute to the development
    of knowledge” (National Association of Social Workers, 1999).

    There are other reasons why researchers are compelled to adopt more rigorous
    ways of measuring the effectiveness of social work practice. In difficult eco-
    nomic times, as programs are experiencing a decrease in funding, it is becoming
    increasingly important to utilize evidence- based practices to demonstrate
    accountability. An increasing number of both government and private grant-
    funding sources are requiring evaluation components to be incorporated into
    grant proposals. In this age of shrinking dollars, foundations and governmental
    funding agencies want assurances that money is spent in the most effective way
    possible. Program evaluation can help agencies obtain or retain grants and other
    such funding by demonstrating program success. When writing proposals and
    developing new programs, social workers need to have at least a basic under-
    standing of how to carry out a program evaluation.

    Additionally, by researching specific social problems, social workers can be-
    come agents of macro change. Social workers can devise social policies and
    large- scale interventions to alter inequality and injustice in their agencies and
    communities. For instance, a social service agency identifies a significant amount
    of no- shows for job- skills training appointments. The agency conducts a tele-
    phone survey to identify barriers that prevent clients from keeping appointments
    and discovers that lack of access to transportation is the most significant barrier
    and lack of child care the second most significant barrier. In response to these
    findings, an agency policy is developed to provide taxi tokens and child care
    vouchers to consumers with financial need.

    DEFINING RESEA RCH

    With that in mind, we turn to the question “What is research?” Chances are,
    you are already a researcher and do not know it. We often use research methods
    without actually labeling what we are doing as research. For example, think back
    to the last time you were going to see a movie. If you have ever solicited a review
    from a friend or read a review in a paper or magazine and then based your deci-
    sion to see the film on the reviewer’s opinion, you were utilizing research meth-
    odology. Similarly, if you have ever consulted a newspaper or a local television
    station for information about the weather so that you could decide how to dress
    for the day, you are utilizing research methods.

    Research is, in its simplest form, the assimilation of knowledge and the gath-
    ering of data in a logical manner in order to become informed about something.
    We often consult with others whose opinions we value (friends, experts, etc.)
    and then make a decision based on our informed judgment. The process of
    conducting research is essentially the same, but much more thorough.

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    What Is Research? 3

    WAYS OF K NOWING

    The Code of Ethics of the National Association of Social Workers (1999) states
    that “Social workers should promote and facilitate evaluation and research to
    contribute to the development of knowledge” (section 5.02b). Have you ever
    wondered how we gain knowledge (how we know what we know)? Here, we will
    discuss four ways in which knowledge can be gained.

    First, we can use our own experiences to gain knowledge. Simply by trial
    and error we can gradually make decisions about a problem and eventually de-
    velop enough knowledge to solve a problem. For instance, you require a cer-
    tain amount of sleep at night to feel rested the next day. A  pattern of sleep
    experiences over time provides you with enough information to determine the
    specific amount of sleep you require. However, in social work practice, personal
    experiences can be misleading because our experiences and the experiences of
    our consumers may be different, just as others may need more or less sleep than
    you do.

    Second, we can rely on the knowledge of others. Agency supervisors and other
    coworkers who have years of practice experience can be important sources of
    knowledge. Many have developed tried- and- true practices that have over time
    become evidence- based practices. For instance, a supervisor explains that a par-
    ticular judge prefers for documentation on a case to be presented in a certain way
    and that this practice increases the possibility of a positive outcome in court. In
    addition, consulting an expert or some authority in a field outside our own ex-
    pertise can help us make better practice decisions.

    However, if we rely on faulty information, we may be taking misperceptions
    as truth. For instance, many self- help books are available on how to intervene
    with an active alcoholic. While many are reliable resources, authors without
    evidence- based practice experiences may be offering advice that is based on just
    one person’s experience. Therefore, you must look at the qualifications of the
    person who is offering advice and ensure it has been shown to be reliable and
    valid through repeated positive outcomes.

    Third, we can rely on traditions. Tradition provides us with knowledge passed
    down over time. Many new social work practitioners are indoctrinated into agency
    practice through the established practices of those who have worked there over
    time. For instance, agency traditions may include weekly team meetings to staff
    cases, debriefing with a supervisor after a difficult assessment, and identifying
    caseload counts to ensure equitable distribution. These practices have proved
    to increase accountability, reduce turnover rates, and monitor workloads, all of
    which are beneficial. However, there are traditions that are not best practices.
    For instance, taking consumer files home to work on, giving consumers our
    home or cell phone numbers, and standardized group notes are practices that
    can bring up issues of confidentiality, boundaries, and lack of individualized
    documentation. We have to be careful when relying on tradition, however. Just
    because a practice or tradition is “how it has always been done” does not make

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    4 R E S E A R C H M E T H O D S F O R S O C I A L W O R K E R S

    it a best practice. In some ways, tradition is the least reliable source for gaining
    knowledge.

    The fourth way to gather knowledge is by using scientific methods to answer
    our questions. By researching our questions, we can increase our knowledge
    about a particular issue or population. It should be noted that one misconception
    about research is that studies are large experiments that are able to solve whole
    problems. The truth is that the research process involves small incremental steps.
    Each study adds a small piece of information to the whole. The process is much
    like painting a picture. Each brushstroke, each dab of paint, adds a small amount
    of detail until eventually a coherent picture emerges. Each stroke or dab of paint,
    standing alone, may not represent much, but when all the dabs of paint are viewed
    together as a whole, we see a picture. Research studies, by themselves, may only
    explain a small part of the whole, but, when linked together with other studies,
    they begin to help us see a larger picture or describe an occurrence. For example,
    there is a plethora of child maltreatment research. Some studies may examine
    characteristics of the abusers, others the abused children, and still others the
    family dynamics of families in which child abuse is occurring. Each study is a
    small part that contributes to our understanding of child maltreatment.

    Therefore, one study is not sufficient to apply to everyone. Different studies
    may have different— and sometimes opposite— findings because of the specific
    characteristics of the populations being researched. For instance, a child protec-
    tion agency in a large urban city may report a high percentage of parents using
    street drugs, whereas a small rural community may report a high percentage
    of parents using prescription drugs. As you can see, the findings of the larger
    urban study do not apply to the rural study because the characteristics of the
    populations are different.

    In summary, it is important to explore all possible ways of knowing about
    social work practice. The Code of Ethics of the National Association of Social
    Workers (1999) emphasizes that “Social workers should critically examine
    and keep current with emerging knowledge relevant to social work” (section
    5.01c). Critical examination of personal experiences, the experiences of others,
    traditions, and research methods can contribute to evidence- based practices in
    social work. The ability to use critical thinking to determine how reliable the
    information is an important skill for all social work practitioners. Incompatible
    findings are the result of different decisions made by researchers, and this book
    will teach you to determine which studies are relatively better.

    QUA LITATIVE, QUA NTITATIVE,
    A ND MIXED- METHOD RESEA RCH

    There are two overarching ways of gathering data, or fields of research. These
    are qualitative research methods and quantitative research methods. Qualitative
    research is concerned with developing knowledge where little or none exists
    and uses words, observations, and descriptions to develop this knowledge.

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    What Is Research? 5

    Quantitative research is concerned with expanding knowledge that already
    exists and using numerical data to report the findings from the research. But
    perhaps you want to use both qualitative and quantitative methods, or a mixed-
    method design, in your research. Mixed- method designs allow researchers to
    design a study using both qualitative and quantitative methods by using numer-
    ical and textual data.

    Qualitative Research

    Social work is a profession that owes a large debt of gratitude to many other
    disciplines. Anthropology, psychology, sociology, and medicine have all
    contributed to the development of our profession. One of the areas in which
    this becomes exceedingly clear is the field of qualitative research. Qualitative
    research has deep roots in the fields of anthropology and sociology, where
    the development of rigorous and exact methods for fieldwork has long been
    fostered.

    The use of qualitative research methods is debated among social work
    practitioners, faculty, researchers, and other professionals. It is generally agreed
    that qualitative research is employed when little or nothing is known about a
    subject or when the researcher wants to gain an in- depth understanding of a
    person’s experience. Some may argue that qualitative methods are better suited
    to studies on complicated topics such as a person’s comfort level with death, how
    it feels to be unemployed, or how a child views the drinking habits of an al-
    coholic parent. Qualitative research primarily relies on information generated
    from observations of the researcher and discussions and interviews with study
    participants. However, researchers engaged in qualitative research might also
    gather some descriptive information such as the demographics of participants
    and their settings in order to place their experiences within a context. In their
    simplest form, qualitative research methods are used to help us understand the
    characteristics of a phenomenon. Often this type of research uncovers these
    characteristics by focusing on the ideas of the people involved.

    As an example, let us imagine for a moment that you are a case manager in
    a community health agency and the year is 1982. You have noticed that a large
    number of your consumers who report being intravenous drug users are also
    suffering from a strange new illness that seems to impair their immune system.
    You may be aware that acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) was a rel-
    atively unknown disease in 1982 and that scientists were just beginning to un-
    derstand the causes of the transmission of this disease. As a case manager, you
    may want to design a qualitative study that will help you explore the experiences
    of those who are suffering from this disease by interviewing people living with
    AIDS (recording their own words). You may also want to collect some demo-
    graphic information such as sex, age, race, and length of illness to describe their
    experiences within the context of the research population.

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    6 R E S E A R C H M E T H O D S F O R S O C I A L W O R K E R S

    Quantitative Research

    Advocates of quantitative research argue that it is only through the use of
    methods that report numerical representation that the social sciences can be-
    come truly valid. Quantitative research seeks to explain relationships between
    two or more factors. The aim of quantitative research is to determine how one
    thing (a variable) affects another in a population. A variable is any attribute or
    characteristic that changes or assumes different values. Variables can represent
    subject characteristics (e.g., age, race, sex) or the things you are really interested
    in (e.g., agency performance; rate of relapse in addiction treatment; physiolog-
    ical, psychological, or sociological causes of child maltreatment). Variables can
    also represent the effect of any intervention that subjects receive, such as a cul-
    tural sensitivity training.

    Mixed- Method Research

    Mixed- method research uses both qualitative and quantitative research designs.
    Using more than one research method while collecting and analyzing data in a
    study is called concurrent mixed- method research. When data collected through
    the use of one type of research design provide a basis for the collection of data
    using the other type, this is called sequential mixed- method research. There are
    several reasons to use a mixed- method design. Among these are that it can test
    the consistency of findings obtained through different forms of data collection.
    This is referred to as triangulation; this means that the findings from the
    methods used are consistent and support each other. Or a researcher might use
    a mixed- method design because it allows him or her to use qualitative methods
    to add richness and detail to the results obtained from the use of quantitative
    methods. Researchers may also choose a mixed- method design so they can use
    results from one method to shape subsequent methods or steps in the research
    process. This is frequently seen when a qualitative study is used to shape a quan-
    titative study. In addition, mixed- method research can be used as a means to de-
    velop new research questions or to use one method to challenge results obtained
    through another method.

    DEVELOPING YOUR RESEA RCH QUESTIONS

    You may be asking yourself at this point, “Where do research questions orig-
    inate?” Research questions may arise from your personal experience. Thus,
    a person who was adopted may feel compelled to study the factors that make
    adoptions work well for children. Research questions may develop out of re-
    search articles or theories you are studying. A  theory is a statement or set of
    statements designed to explain a phenomenon based upon observations and

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    What Is Research? 7

    experiments and often agreed upon by most experts in a particular field. For
    example, you may want to test the credibility of the claims put forth by a devel-
    opmental theory on aging that you learned about in one of your human behav-
    ior classes. Research questions may arise out of your own practice experience.
    Regardless of the source, most questions are born out of the researcher’s personal
    interest in a subject.

    To illustrate this process, we may begin with an observation (“This person
    smiles at me and goes out of her way to help me”), then we have an idea (“This
    person would make a good friend”), and then we develop a question (“Does
    this person like me?”). We can examine this question by drawing from our past
    experiences, by consulting others, or by asking the person directly.

    When you are developing research questions, there are some issues to keep
    in mind. The first thing to consider is whether the question is empirical. This
    means the researcher must decide whether it can be quantified. For example, a
    question such as “What is the best religion?” is both value laden and subjective
    (“the best”). As a researcher, you need to be careful to remember that we can
    study values in order to understand what others think, but we cannot conduct
    research on values in order to evaluate them. Therefore, we can approach value-
    laden issues through qualitative methods that are meant to deal with the sub-
    jective questions we would have— this would eliminate any objectivity from the
    research. “How many people cheat on their partner?” or “Has having an abortion
    prevented further unwanted pregnancies?” are both examples of questions that
    attempt to quantify issues of moral worth and can be measured through quan-
    titative methods.

    WHAT IS A HYPOTHESIS?

    A hypothesis is a research statement about relationships between variables that
    is testable and that can be accepted or rejected based on the evidence. Therefore,
    you can only develop hypotheses that are quantifiable. To design a study to test
    your hypothesis, you use quantitative research methods. Hypotheses are divided
    into two categories:  research hypotheses and null hypotheses. The research hy-
    pothesis asserts that there is a relationship between the variables, and the null
    hypothesis claims that the relationship between the variables can be rejected.
    In other words, the null hypothesis is what the researcher is attempting to re-
    ject. For example, we may have a null hypothesis that no difference exists be-
    tween a treatment group and a nontreatment group after intervention. If this is
    rejected, then the research hypothesis that the treatment group will be different
    from the nontreatment group after intervention (e.g., less sick or more educated)
    is supported. Hypotheses are typically abbreviated as Ho (null hypothesis), Ha
    (research hypothesis), and H1, H2, H3 (a number is used when there is more than
    one research hypothesis).

    Imagine that you are working at an emergency shelter with a consumer named
    Joe.Joe is in need of permanent housing (he has been living on the streets for

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    8 R E S E A R C H M E T H O D S F O R S O C I A L W O R K E R S

    the past two years). While you are collecting assessment history with Joe, he
    discloses that he has a long history of drug abuse. One initial hypothesis may
    be “A history of substance abuse is related to not having stable housing.” In fur-
    ther discussions with Joe, you explore this hypothesis with him, and he confirms
    that his substance abuse has interfered with his ability to seek and keep a job— a
    strong factor in his being homeless. You then decide to design a research study to
    determine if this relationship between substance abuse and homelessness exists
    beyond your client. You can also test a second hypothesis that looks at the rela-
    tionship between substance abuse and unemployment.

    RESEA RCH DESIGNS

    There are different designs that researchers can choose from to collect data in
    conducting qualitative, quantitative, and mixed- method research. Exploratory
    designs are exclusively grounded in qualitative research, and explanatory designs
    are exclusively grounded in quantitative research. Descriptive designs, evaluative
    designs, and single- subject designs can draw from either or both types of research.

    Exploratory Designs

    An exploratory design is a type of research design that allows us to use our
    powers of observation, inquiry, and assessment to form tentative theories about
    what we are seeing and experiencing. It is generally used to explore understudied
    topics. In essence, we need to find out about a phenomenon. By asking an open-
    ended question (that is, a question that is worded in a way that allows the re-
    spondent to answer in his or her own words as opposed to merely soliciting a
    yes- or- no response) and observing the environment, we can begin to identify
    common themes from the information we gather. For instance, imagine you are
    a crisis call worker shortly after the 9/ 11 terrorist attacks. You are receiving a
    high volume of calls from rescue workers involved in the recovery of human
    remains. You have little or no knowledge about this experience; therefore, you
    explore the callers’ experiences with them by asking questions such as “What is
    it like for you?” After listening to several workers, you might discover evidence
    of a common theme, for example, that the callers have been experiencing periods
    of tearfulness. Based on this evidence, you can then tell other callers that this
    experience appears to be common among rescue workers.

    Explanatory Designs

    An explanatory design is a type of research design that focuses on examining
    the relationships between two or more factors and attempting to determine if

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    What Is Research? 9

    they are related, and, if so, in what ways and how strongly they are related. For
    example, you may believe there is a relationship between the amount of time
    students spend studying for their research methods class and their final course
    grade in that class. Your hypothesis might be “The more students study research
    methods, the better their grades in that course will be.” In fact, you would be able
    to find studies that have provided evidence that a relationship exists. If you were
    so inclined, it would be possible to design a study to examine just how strong the
    relationship is between hours spent studying and final course grades.

    Descriptive Designs

    In a sense, all research is descriptive by nature because it describes how and/ or
    why a phenomenon occurs. Qualitative research methods do this using words
    and quantitative research methods using numbers. A  descriptive design is a
    method that can be used to seek information that uses numeric language (how
    many, how much, etc.) to describe a population or phenomenon. This can be
    used in both qualitative and quantitative methods of research. For example, if
    you are conducting a quantitative study of victims of domestic violence, you may
    want to collect information on certain characteristics, such as their average age,
    what percentage of them have children, and the type of abuse and how frequently
    is occurs. You might also ask them to interpret the severity of the last abuse epi-
    sode using a scale from 1 to 5. It is important to note here that although this type
    of research looks at patterns such as how often an event occurs or ways these
    answers develop in relation to each other, it does not try to address why these
    patterns exist.

    Descriptive information is also collected during qualitative studies to help put
    the experiences into context with the population reporting them. For example,
    while conducting interviews with 9/ 11 rescue workers, you might also collect in-
    formation on how many of these individuals are firefighters, police officers, health
    professionals, volunteer civilians, and so forth. By using this mixed- method
    design, you may also be reporting how frequently the rescue workers reported
    similar textual information— for example, “Six out of ten volunteers stated they
    would volunteer again, regardless of the difficulties they are experiencing now.”

    Evaluative Designs

    Evaluative designs can also draw from both fields of research. An evalua-
    tive design draws from qualitative research methods when statements made
    in interviews and focus groups and written comments are used to describe
    outcomes. For instance, positive comments from a survey may be included in
    a program evaluation to demonstrate consumer satisfaction. Evaluative designs
    can also draw from the quantitative field of research. For instance, an evaluative

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    10 R E S E A R C H M E T H O D S F O R S O C I A L W O R K E R S

    design might examine how many and what type of residents were serviced at an
    agency over the past month.

    Single- Subject Designs

    Finally, a single- subject design uses systematic methodology to measure an
    individual’s progress over time and measures whether a relationship exists be-
    tween an intervention and a specific outcome. These designs can also draw from
    either or both methods of research. In a study using qualitative methods, the
    consumer’s own statement that he or she is suicidal might be used to justify an
    extension for mental health treatment from an insurance company.

    STRENGTHS A ND LIMITATIONS OF RESEA RCH

    A major strength of research is that it can help us gain an understanding of
    many social problems. Through research, we can gain knowledge of issues
    such as child maltreatment, domestic violence, and substance abuse. Another
    benefit is that research has led to the development of new agency policies,
    greater practice accountability, evidence- based treatment strategies, and new
    knowledge.

    Research also has inherent limitations. First, research is conducted in small
    steps that are often repeated to build evidence. Each new study adds to the
    overall body of knowledge, which is considered a strength. However, knowledge
    is built slowly over time— not in quantum leaps. A second limitation of research
    is that the knowledge that it yields is confined to the questions that are asked.
    Only by asking enough relevant questions can we obtain useful answers. Finally,
    research is subject to bias. Bias is the unknown or unacknowledged error created
    during the design of the research method, in the choice of problem to be studied,
    over the course of the study itself, or during the interpretation of findings. This
    is not to say that the research is necessarily flawed— only limited. For example,
    if your study examines parents’ use of corporal punishment with their children
    but all your research participants are white, your findings are racially biased.
    Therefore, bias can be unintentional and sometimes unavoidable but must al-
    ways be identified as a limitation.

    CASE SCENA RIO

    You are a case manager working in a homeless shelter in a large metropolitan
    city. Assigned to your caseload is a family of four— the father, Art; the mother,
    Janice; and twin boys (aged seven), Matt and Justin. The mother and father are
    both hearing impaired. The twin sons do not have a hearing impairment, but they
    use American Sign Language (ASL) to communicate with their parents. Art and

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    What Is Research? 11

    Janice communicate with each other using ASL and communicate with you (and
    other hearing people) using a combination of lip reading and written notes. Both
    the parents were employed at a local manufacturing plant until about six months
    ago when they were laid off. They moved in with relatives until the relatives were
    no longer able to afford having an additional four people living with them. They
    are now homeless and living on the street. As a case manager, you wish to learn
    more about them, their challenges in living with a disability (hearing impair-
    ment), and the customs and culture of the deaf community.

    CRITICA L THINKING QUESTIONS

    Based on the information in this chapter, answer the following questions:

    1. Which research method qualitative (exploratory) or quantitative
    (explanatory) would be most appropriate with your clients? Give reasons
    for choosing this method.

    2. What are three questions that you might ask your clients that would
    help you to better understand them, their world, and their culture?

    3. What would be at least one limitation of your findings?

    KEY POINTS

    • Research is the process of systematically gaining information.
    • Research is becoming increasingly important as governing agencies

    demand evidence that programs and practices are effective.
    • Knowledge is gained through our own experiences, through others,

    through tradition, and through the use of scientific methods.
    • There are two types of research methods: qualitative research methods

    and quantitative research methods. When both research methods are
    used, this is called a mixed- method design.

    • Research questions may arise from personal experience, out of research
    articles or theories under study, or out of practice experience and are
    born out of the researcher’s personal interest in a subject.

    • Hypotheses are research statements about relationships between
    variables that are testable and that can be accepted or rejected based on
    the findings from a study.

    • Exploratory research designs allow the researcher to use his or her
    powers of observation, inquiry, and assessment to form tentative
    theories about what is being seen and experienced.

    • Descriptive research designs use descriptive language to provide
    information about a phenomenon.

    • Explanatory research designs attempt to explain the relationship
    between two or more factors.

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    12 R E S E A R C H M E T H O D S F O R S O C I A L W O R K E R S

    • Evaluative research designs attempt to examine the effectiveness of
    programs and services.

    • Single- subject designs are used to measure a person’s progress
    over time.

    PR ACTICE EX AM

    True or False

    1. There are four types of research. These are qualitative, inferential,
    descriptive, and informative.

    2. Quantitative research is usually characterized by the fact that results are
    reported in numerical terms (in numbers and figures).

    3. The Social Work Code of Ethics promotes social workers conducting
    research.

    Multiple Choice

    4. Knowledge is transferred in four ways. These four ways are:
    a. tradition, others’ experiences, our experience, our best guess.
    b. others’ experiences, our experience, scientific inquiry, expert opinion.
    c. our experience, others’ experiences or knowledge, tradition, and the

    scientific method.
    d. others’ experiences, our knowledge, tradition, and the Internet.

    5. Quantitative research is most often associated with what?
    a. explanatory research
    b. research that determines why a phenomenon exists
    c. research that is generalizable to a large population
    d. exploratory research
    e. none of the above

    6. The NASW _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ of _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ recommends
    that social workers conduct research.

    7. Hypotheses are divided into two categories: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ hypotheses
    and _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ hypotheses.

    8. Single- subject designs measure an _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ progress over time.

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