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Leadership Foundations : Qualitative Research : Proposal Writing
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Introduction to Qualitative Research
This course is offered online every fall semester.
Professor: Shirley Freed, PhD Class Times: 6-10 hours/week
- your choice
Office Hours: by appointment Phone: 471-6163 (of), freed@andrews.edu
Office Address: Bell Hall Rm 173 e-mail: freed@andrews.edu
Web page: http://www.andrews.edu/~freed
Course Description: An introduction to the
philosophy, theory, and methods of qualitative research. Features
different theoretical approaches to ethnography. Initial training
in using qualitative research methods with an emphasis on participant
observation and the ethnographic interview.
Resources: The wonderful thing about
teaching online is that I can share with you multiple links and
many excellent resources. You should not feel compelled to chase
every link to its' origin but should view many of these links
as opportunities to expand your understanding of qualitative research.
Required Textbooks:
Clandinin, D. J. & Connelly, R. M. 2004. Narrative Inquiry:
Experience and Story in Qualitative Research. Jossey-Bass:
San Francisco.
Eisner, Elliot. 1998. The Enlightened Eye. Merrill Publishers.
Columbus, Ohio.
Merriam, Sharan. 1998. Qualitative Research and Case Study
Applications in Education. Jossey-Bass Publishers. San Francisco.
Optional Textbooks:
Goodall, H. L. 2000. Writing the New Ethnography. AltaMira
Press: Walnut Creek.
Hart, Chris. 1998. Doing a Literature Review. Sage Publishers.
Thousand Oaks.
Kopala, Mary & Susuli, Lisa. 1999. Using Qualitative
Methods in Psychology. Sage Publishers. Thousand Oaks.
Paul, James L. 2005. Introduction to the Philosophies of Research and Criticism in Education and the Social Sciences. Pearson Education, Inc. New Jersey.
Wolcott, Harry. 1990. Writing Up Qualitative Research.
Sage Publishers. Thousand Oaks.
Other readings will be available in a packet of articles from
my office.
Conceptual Framework: Andrews University School
of Education embraces the theme, "True education means more
than the pursual of a certain course of study. It means more than
a preparation for the life that now is. It has to do with the
whole being, and the whole period of existence possible to all
people. It is the harmonious develpment of the physical, mental,
and spiritual powers. It prepares the student for the joy of service
in this world and the higher joy of wider service in the world
to come. . . In the highest sense the work of education and the
work of redemption are one." White, pg. 13, 30.
The mission of the School of Education is to provide programs
based on a redemptive Christian worldview to prepare professionals
for global service. To Educate is to Redeem.
We believe we accomplish this mission through six major elements
- one of which is research. This element addresses valuing and
conducting disciplined inquiry for decision-making. The outcomes
of this knowledge base and shared by all programs in the School
of Education are that each graduate will be able to:
- Read and evaluate research in their discipline
- Conduct research in their specialty area(s)
- Report research findings according to standard guidelines
in their field
While these are the major outcomes for this course, you can
expect to see some connections with the other SED core elements
- in particularly, the knowledge bases on worldview and communication
and technology. Throughout the course we will be challenged as
researchers living in a postmodern world. How does our worldview
influence the way we do research? We will be sharpening our technology
skills as we use the data bases in the library as well as the
internet as a sources of information.
What to expect:
Since qualitative research itself is nonlinear, you can expect
this class to be an intertwining of reading, writing, talking,
and listening as we seek to unravel some of the many issues surrounding
interpretive forms of inquiry. Firstly, the idea of researcher
as instrument is seminal to this kind of research. So you will
be engaged in an ongoing internal critical examination of yourself
as the instrument of social research. I'll be trying to move you
to a more objective place from which you might view yourself,
others, and then to once again view yourself through a different
lens. I'll be wanting you to be thinking about the boundaries
into which you were born; the boundaries of higher education;
the boundaries of each field experience; the boundaries of culture,
gender and race. The stories you will share will help facilitate
this piece!
As a researcher myself, I will be sharing my philosophical
viewpoint which comes from a Christian world view. In this online
version of the class, we will not be discussing the 4 gospels,
however, should you wish to access a Harmony of the Gospels, - you'll find it fascinating how one gospel writer included some
incidents while another completely left out that account. What
does that tell us about how researchers collect and tell stories?
Finally, it was Antony de Mello who said, "The Master gave
his teaching in parables and stories which his disciples listened
to with pleasure - and occasional frustration, for they longed
for something deeper. The Master was unmoved. To all their objections
He would say, 'You have yet to understand, my dears, that the
shortest distance between a human being and Truth is a story'."
In this class we begin to develop your observational skills
and interviewing techniques. I believe these kinds of research
skills can only be developed by using them! So you will have many
opportunities in class and outside of class to practice these
skills. At first you will feel somewhat tenuous and awkward but
as the course progresses you will develop confidence in your own
abilities and in the value of these methods as sources of data.
You will have opportunity to read qualitative studies and to
conduct a small research project of your own. It's important that
you see this requirement as something more than a class requirement.
It should involve a serious "wonderment" that you have
- something that you have wanted to understand on a deeper level
- something that you have wished you had more time to figure out
or understand.
I will be approaching this class as a teacher/researcher which
means that all the activities and interactions I'm orchestrating
for you will be modeling ways that you might conduct your own
research from data collection to data analysis and representation.
I'll be working hard to develop a responsiveness in you that will
build trust and confidence with those whom you might work.
Finally, this class will be very short on lecturing but very
long on experiential learning.
So what is qualitative research anyway? Several attempts at
explanation might be helpful as we begin this journey together!
Thomas Schwandt in Qualitative Inquiry: A Dictionary of Terms
states that "qualitative" is a
not-so-descriptive adjective attached to the varieties of social
inquiry that have their intellectual roots in hermeneutics,
phenomenological sociology, and
the Vertehen tradition. Most scholars
use the phrase "qualitative inquiry" as a blanket designation
for all forms of such inquiry including ethnography,
case study research, naturalistic inquiry ethnomethodology, life
history methodology, narrative inquiry, and the
like. It has been used as a modifier for the terms "data,"
"method," "methodology," "research,"
and "paradigm" and as a synonym for "nonexperimental"
and "ethnographic." Because the adjective does not clearly
signal a particular meaning, a great number and variety of scholars
have attempted to define just what is the so-called qualitative
paradigm, what are the basic characteristics of qualitative research,
and so on. One might reasonably view the entire Handbook of
Qualitative Research (Sage, 1994) as an attempt at an extended
definition of the term. "Qualitative research" is simply
not a very useful term for denoting a specific set of characteristics
of inquiry.
Often, attempts at definition involve both implicit and explicit
comparisons to the equally ambiguously used adjective 'quantitative.'
Perhaps the clearest use of the adjective is to distinguish between
qualitative data-nonnumeric data in the form of words-and quantitative
data-numeric data. The earliest qualitative versus quantitative
debates might have been called "The Merits of Nonnumeric
Versus Numeric Data Debates," but that doesn't have quite
the same ring to it as the more common designation of the controversy.
The same debate also meant defending as reliable and valid methods
used to generate qualitative data (i.e., unstructured open-ended
interviews, participant observation, and so on) from attacks by
defenders of methods used to generate quantitative data (questionnaires,
psychometric measures, tests, and so on).
'Qualitative' denotes of or relating to quality, and a quality,
in turn, is an inherent or phenomenal property or essential characteristic
of some thing (object or experience). Ironically, there appears
to be only one variety of qualitative inquiry that takes the definition
of quality as its starting point. Elliot Eisner's (e.g., The
Enlightened Eye, Macmillan, 1991) explication of qualitative
inquiry begins from the point of view that inquiry is a matter
of the perception of qualities and an appraisal of their value.
The work of Eisner and his students aims to define and illustrate
an aesthetics that explains how qualitative aspects of the experiences
and settings of teaching and learning are to be perceived, appreciated,
interpreted, understood, and criticized. The metaphors he employs
for capturing the dual features of this methodology are connoisseurship
and criticism (p 129-130).
I often feel like C. George Boeree of Shippensburg University
who says:
The most common question I am asked by students considering
taking my course is "what are qualitative methods?"
Unfortunately, that's a hard one to answer.
I could start by telling you who uses them: philosophers, psychologists,
sociologists, anthropologists, students of literature, historians,
biologists...anyone, in fact, who finds the methods of the physical
sciences somehow inappropriate for understanding human (and, occasionally,
even animal) realities.
But perhaps the best way to get at a definition is to look
at why these people have turned to qualitative methods:
1. For some, the manipulation most experimental studies require
at least verges on the unethical. Whereas a chemical substance,
a subatomic particle, or perhaps a white rat has no cause to object
to being manipulated, human beings certainly may. To frighten
them, persuade them of something, expose them to various conditions,
etc., even in the name of science, may undermine their self-respect,
their psychological integrity, their sense of self-determination,
or even their physical health.
2. For others, it is the reliance on measurement that is disturbing.
While reducing everything to numbers may be justified in the physical
sciences, doing the same to human experience seems to dismiss
the other, non-quantitative dimensions of that experience. How
do you quantify meaning, for example, or love, or anger, or confusion?
You can describe the Grand Canyon using only numbers -- but somehow
that wouldn't capture the essence of it!
3. For still others, the issue is control. In order to find
the relationship between two variables, all others must be controlled,
whether by a reduction of actual variety, or by the establishment
of control groups, or by statistically factoring out other variables.
But how do you control the lifetime of experiences that a person
brings to an experiment? What is the significance of a causal
relation that does not occur independently outside the laboratory?
And do results established by examining group tendencies then
apply to individuals. Control is problematic in complex physical
systems; imagine the problem with human beings.
4. Others are disturbed by the tendency to reductionism. In
the process of manipulating, measuring, and controlling variables,
it is a matter of practicality to go down a level-of-analysis.
Hence the predominance of physiological and information-processing
explanations for human behavior. But, by their nature, these explanations
avoid the very problems they were originally intended to explain
-- e.g. consciousness, meaning, personality, self, etc.
5. One more problem is that the experimental method and related
methods are intrinsically deterministic. What, in fact, would
be the point of establishing causal relations if these relations
could not be relied on? On the other hand, many people involved
in the human sciences are interested in things that assume at
least some degree of freedom. Morality, for example, has little
meaning if people are as determined as falling bricks. What are
we to do with concepts such as bravery, responsibility, generosity,
honesty, or compassion (or, for that matter, evil, guilt, cowardice...)
if these are not a matter of choice?
Generally, what disturbs so many people about traditional approaches
in the human sciences is that they don't capture life as it is
lived. And that, perhaps, is the closest we'll get to an essence
of qualitative methods: They are methods that at least attempt
to capture life as it is lived.
SO - with that introduction, let's look at
what we'll be doing on a weekly basis! Please note that I have
set this up so the week ends on Sunday night - I'm hoping that'll
give you the better part of the weekend to work on assignments,
if you haven't been able to get to them earlier.
Date |
Objectives |
Readings Due
(Check modules) |
Assignment Due |
Intro Week
Aug 28 - Se3 |
Go into d2l and follow the module for "getting started" |
Syllabus |
Share research interests and syllabus responses |
Week One
Sept 4 - 10 |
1.1. Articulates
philosophical issues related to research |
Cland 1-3
*Articles |
Qualitative
Research WebQuest optional activity |
Week Two
Sept 11-17 |
1.2. Articulates
assumptions of basic research communities: positivist, interpretive,
and critical and understands basic qualitative methods: case
study, ethnography, phenomenology, narrative, |
Eisner 1,2, 4
Merr 1,2
*Articles |
#20 Chart of Dis Abs
email freed@andrews.edu |
Week Three
Sept 18-24 |
1.3. Articulates life
experiences that affect the research study when self is the primary
research instrument - articulates personal bias |
Eisner3
Merr pg 22-24 |
#Self As the Research Instrument - post in bb |
Week Four
Sept25-Oct1 |
1.4. Applies reliability,validity
and generalizability concepts to qualitative |
Eisner 6,9
Merr 10
*Articles |
Rubric to Evaluate Qual Studies - post in bb |
Week Five
Oct2 - 8 |
1.5. Critiques qualitative
studies for integrity, rigor, utility, ethics, verisimilitude
and other criteria |
Eisner 5 |
Eval of 5 qual studies - email freed |
Week Six
Oct 9 - 15 |
2.1. Collects and
analyzes observational data from several sources |
Cland 4
Eisner 8
Merr 5 |
#Observation Descriptions
Interpretation - post in bb |
Week Seven
Oct 16 - 22 |
2.2. Interprets
data by asking "why" and"what does this mean"
and keeping field notes of emerging ideas |
Cland 5, 6
*Articles |
(you may want to get a head start on your interviews) |
Week Eight
Oct 23 - 29 |
2.3. Conducts and
transcribes data from structured interviews,
active interviews, and/or focus group interviews, understands
purposive sampling processes |
Merr 4
*Articles |
#Transcribed, Coded Interviews - email freed |
Week Nine
Oct 30-Nov5 |
2.4. Explores the
use of other heuristic devices in data collection: life lines,
photographs, journals etc. and other sources of data such as
documents |
Cland 7
Merr 6,7
*Articles |
#Description of Alternative Data Collect. - post in bb |
Week Ten
Nov 6 - 12 |
2.5. Analyzes data
for "meaning" categories and makes connections across
categories, displays data analysis to show connections with theoretical
frameworks |
Cland 8
Eisner 7
Merr 8, 9 |
Analysis of Raw Data - post in bb |
Week Eleven
Nov 13 - 19 |
3.1. Articulates
the value of different forms of representation: story, poetry,
graphic organizers, photographs etc. |
Cland 9
Merr 11
*Articles |
Writing up research report - feedback to Shirley on individual
basis as needed |
Week Twelve
Nov 20 -26 |
3.2. Represents
data in multiple forms and reflects on the process |
Cland 10
Eisner 10
*Articles |
#Alternative representation - post in bb |
Week Thirteen
Nov 27-Dec3 |
3.3. Writes research report to include "thick
description", coherent interpretation, and reflexivity |
*Articles |
Writing up research report - feedback to Shirley on individual
basis as needed |
Week Fourteen
Dec 4 - 10 |
3.4. Writes report with strong connections to
the relevant literature |
*Articles |
#Research Project |
Week Fifteen
Dec 11-17 |
3.5. Evaluates peer
research reports. |
*Articles |
Response to research project - final exam |
Evaluation: Your final grade will be calculated
on the following basis:
1) Research Project 400 points
The project should involve a serious "wonderment"
you have. I have tried to set up the assignments in such a way
that you'll be working on your research project throughout the
semester. The # symbol should help you see how the pieces are
all connected. The project will include a review of the literature
(a minimum of 20 dissertation abstracts and 5 other qualitative
if possible, research studies - not opinion papers); a chart portraying
the findings from the literature review including author, title,
date, research questions, theoretical standpoint, evidence used,
results, and other items you might choose; self as the research
instrument stories; interviews (a minimum of 1 hour - could have
multiple interviews) observations (if appropriate) and transcriptions
of the interviews showing the way you have coded them, and analysis
chart showing the themes that are common to all cases; a written
piece connecting the literature with your findings with at least
one alternative representation of your findings.
|
3 points |
2 points |
1 point |
Problem Statement (Background) |
Clear, focused, stated in 2 - 3 sentences |
Clear, focused, stated in 1 - 2 paragraphs |
General, lacks clarity and focus |
Self as Research Instrument |
Directly connected to the study & logical rationale provided |
Directly connected to the study |
Not connected to the study |
Purpose Statement (Rationale) |
Clear, focused, stated in 3 - 4 sentences |
Clear, focused, stated in 2 - 3 paragraphs |
General, lacks clarity and focus |
Research Questions |
Stated in the beginning, revisited in the end, and are clearly
evident throughout the project |
Stated in the beginning - revisited in the end |
Stated in the beginning |
Literature Review (min. 20 diss. abst) |
Literature is analyzed and synthesized to support (or not) main
points of the project, depth of support for each major statement
or claim made in the project |
Literature is cited to support main points of the project |
Random references to literature |
Methods (min 1 hr interview) |
Detailed description of methods (when, how, where data collected),
connecting citations from authorities in the field to method(s)
used, thick description of the interview setting, transcription
of interview in appendix |
Detailed description of methods (when, how, where data
collected), description of interview setting, transcription of
interview in appendix |
Minimal description of methods used, transcription included
in appendix |
Validity/Reliability/Generalization |
Includes 2 - 3 methods (i.e. triangulation, member check, etc.
and supports with citations from authorities in the field |
Includes 1 method (i. e. traingulation, member check, etc.) and
supports with citations from authorities in the field |
Includes 1 method |
Results (Themes) |
Clear, concise reporting of multi-faceted themes, strong connection
back to the research questions |
Clear, concise reporting of multi-faceted themes |
Thin description of themes |
One Alternative Form of Representation |
Captures emotion in a powerful way that would not be as powerful
in traditional text, uses more than one poetic device (i.e. repetition,
rhyme, onomatopoeia, alliteration, varied length of lines, multiple
voices, dialogue, etc.) |
Captures emotion in a powerful way that would not be as powerful
in traditional text, uses one poetic device |
Captures emotion in a way that would not be as powerful in traditional
text |
Recommendations/Rationale/
Usefulness |
More than one, logical, based on findings reported in the study |
Logical, based on findings reported in the study |
One recommendation |
Appendix |
1. transcription with coding
2. 20 abs (chart)
3. theme chart |
1. transcription
2. 20 abs (chart) |
1.incomplete transcription
2. 20 abs |
2) Daily Reading &Online Conversations in
WebCT 300 points
Each week there are a number of required readings you'll want
to explore. As you read, write down questions to bring to the
WebCT bulletin board. You'll notice some suggestions for discussion
starters in the modules - you should not feel limited to those
and you should feel free to ask other questions. I will not be
controlling or dominating the bulletin board space. Nor will I
be counting your posts. I will be looking for quality and presence
- not quantity. I will also be limiting the conversation
to the one week assignment -- after which I will close that discussion
thread so we can start another one. This is a reflective
activity and you need to use it to ask real questions and to respond
in authentic ways.
Use the rubric below to help you think about your interactions:
Four Mental Models of Bulletin Board Posting
Mental Model |
Posting |
Questioning |
Reflecting/connecting |
Dialoguing |
Definition |
You post your message as if you were submitting
an assignment - often repeating what has already been said -
you don't respond to others |
You ask questions but often they aren't connected
with what others have said - you don't engender a response |
You respond to what others have said - using
their name or quoting them - sharing your personal experience
or metaphor to explain further |
You are present in the bulletin board - listening,
asking for clarification, sharing experiences, affirming others,
extending the conversation |
|
|
|
|
|
Sometimes |
2 |
4 |
5 |
7 |
All the time |
1 |
3 |
6 |
8 |
3) Weekly assignments 150 points
Many weeks, there will be an assignment. These will usually
be part of the final project. These will not represent a lot of
time but are more to give me an indication of your progress in
the class. Please note on the weekly schedule where you should
post your assignments - sometimes I'd like you to send those to
my email - freed@andrews.edu. Other times - when I believe the
whole class could benefit from seeing your work, I'd like you
to post those in the bulletin board spaces.
4) Examinations 150 points
There will be one final examination in this class. It will
be taken online and timed.
Criteria: A 95-100%
A- 90-94
B+ 87-89
B 84-86
B- 80-83
C+ 77-79
C 74-76
C- 70-73
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