Approaches of Qualitative Research
Approaches of Qualitative Research
Approaches of Qualitative Research
PHENOMENOLOGICAL STUDIES
Phenomenology has its roots in a 20th century philosophical movement based on the
work of the philosopher Edmund Husserl (1859-1938). As research tool,
phenomenology is based on the academic disciplines of philosophy and psychology
and has become a widely accepted method for describing human experiences.
Phenomenology is a qualitative research method that is used to describe how human
beings experience a certain phenomenon. A phenomenological study attempts to set
aside biases and preconceived assumptions about human experiences, feelings, and
responses to a particular situation. It allows the researcher to delve into the
perceptions, perspectives, understandings, and feelings of those people who have
actually experienced or lived the phenomenon or situation of interest. Therefore,
phenomenology can be defined as the direct investigation and description of
phenomena as consciously experienced by people living those experiences.
Phenomenological research is typically conducted through the use of in-depth
interviews of small samples of participants. By studying the perspectives of multiple
participants, a researcher can begin to make generalizations regarding what it is like
to experience a certain phenomenon from the perspective of those that have lived the
experience.
Following is a list of the main characteristics of phenomenology research:
• It seeks to understand how people experience a particular situation or
phenomenon.
• It is conducted primarily through in-depth conversations and interviews;
however, some studies may collect data from diaries, drawings, or observation.
• Small samples sizes, often 10 or less participants, are common in
phenomenological studies.
• Interview questions are open-ended to allow the participants to fully describe
the experience from their own view point.
• Phenomenology is centered on the participants’ experiences with no regard to
social or cultural norms, traditions, or preconceived ideas about the experience.
• It focuses on these four aspects of a lived experience: lived spaced, lived body,
lived time, and lived human relations.
• Data collected is qualitative and analysis includes an attempt to identify themes
or make generalizations regarding how a particular phenomenon is actually
perceived or experienced.
Researchers conducting phenomenological studies are interested in the life
experiences of humans. This type of research can be applied to wide variety of
situations and phenomena. Below are just a few examples of topics that would lend
themselves to phenomenological study:
• How do parents of an autistic child cope with the news that their child has
autism?
• What is it like to experience being trapped in a natural disaster, such as a flood
or hurricane?
• How does it feel to live with a life-threatening aneurism?
• What is it like to be a minority in a predominantly white community?
• What is like to survive an airplane crash?
• How do cancer patients cope with a terminal diagnosis?
• What is it like to be a victim of sexual assault?
Methods
Analysis
The ‘problem’ for many researchers with phenomenological research is that it
generates a large quantity of interview notes, tape recordings, jottings or other records
all of which have to be analysed. Analysis is also necessarily messy, as data doesn’t
tend to fall into neat categories and there can be many ways of linking between
different parts of discussions or observations.
Strengths
Weaknesses
The method depends on the articulate skills of the participants who provide the
information; logistical and generalisation issues are connected with this. The
language and terms employed in existential-phenomenological philosophy and
phenomenological inquiry are usually obtuse or difficult. Conclusions depend on the
particular participants chosen for the study. In its orientation toward a particular time
frame or moment, the method may miss information about broader periods or about
the development (time course) of an experience. In focusing on a rich description of
an experience, the method may miss information about what led up to that
experience, what its outcomes or consequences might be, and what the concomitants
and other factors associated with the experience are. There is little interest in
conceptualising the experience or in “explaining” it.
ETHNOGRAPHY
Value of ethnography
A case study is a type of ethnographic research study that focuses on a single unit, such as
one individual, one group, one organization, or one program. The goal is to arrive at a
detailed description and understanding of the entity (the “case”). In addition, a case study
can result in data from which generalizations to theory are possible. Freud, for example,
used the case study extensively in building his theory of personality. Case studies use
multiple methods, such as interviews, observation, and archives, to gather data. Education
and psychology researchers have used the case study widely. For example, you might
conduct a case study of an inner-city school in which the students have achieved at a high
level on standardized tests.
Classifications
In a case study, one or more cases can be investigated. When examining one case, we refer
to a singular case study, and a multiple or plural case study is used to describe a study
examining several cases. In multiple case studies, each case is studied as if it is a singular
study and is then compared to other cases.
– Retrospective case studies: The simplest type of study; it involves the collection of data
relating to a past phenomenon of any kind. The researcher is looking back on a
phenomenon, situation, person, or event and studying it in its historical integrity.
– Snapshot studies: The case is being examined in one particular period of time, such as a
current event, a day in the life of a person, a diary, etc. Whether a month, a week, a day, or
even a period as short as an hour, the analysis is aided by the position of events. As the
snapshot develops, the picture presents itself as a Gestalt over a tight timeframe.
– Diachronic studies: Change over time and are similar to longitudinal studies.
• – Disciplined configurative case studies: Use established theories to explain the case.
• – Heuristic case studies: Identify new, unexpected paths; for such studies, marginal,
deviant, or outlier cases may be particularly useful.
A case study is usually a study of a single case or a small number of cases. The use of the
term “unit” can cause confusion. Some authors believe that it relates to the case or research
subject, while others use it to describe the object with the understanding that the unit
(object) and the case influence each other mutually (Van Wynsberghe and Khan in Thomas
2011, p. 513). In this article, the term unit is associated with the case (subject). Mesec
suggests selecting such case for a research unit (an individual, family or other group,
organization, or community) where a practical problem that we are interested in exists. We
may also examine several individual cases that are selected in such a way that their analysis
provides us with the most diverse information that we are able collect. We should select
interesting cases (e.g., contrasting, extreme, exceptional cases) instead of typical, average
cases (Mesec 1998, p. 55). The subject (the case) is not selected based upon a representative
sample, but rather is selected because it is interesting, unusual, striking, and may cause
changes in the characteristics and specificities of the object (Thomas 2011, p. 514). Similar
to Mesec, Thomas also suggests choosing an atypical case, where the subject and object
interact in a dynamic relationship.
Case selection has also targeted by some case study critics. Their criticism mainly focuses
on possible subjective case selection, the so-called selection bias (i.e., the impact of a
researcher’s prior knowledge about the case and his possible favouritism toward certain
hypotheses) that can impact the case selection (George and Bennett 2005, p. 24). However,
the selection of a case based on prior knowledge leads to a better research plan. Cases
selected on the basis of prior knowledge are most likely crucial for enabling the
development of a strong theoretical base for the research, which makes the procedure of
theory testing more rigorous. In addition, there are several methodological provisions to
protect a study from the influence of researcher bias, such as diligence and consistency in
the tracking process . This includes an accurate and comprehensive description of the data
collection procedures and documentation of every piece of information in order to achieve
reliability of a case study.
Case studies are generally strong precisely where quantitative studies are weaker . There are
advantages of case studies in comparison to quantitative methods: Their potential to achieve
high conceptual validity, strong procedures for fostering new hypotheses, usefulness for
closely examining the hypothesized role of causal mechanisms in the context of individual
cases, and their capacity for addressing causal complexity.
Conceptual validity
Conceptual validity refers to the identification and measurement of the indicators that best
present the theoretical concepts that a researcher wants to measure. Many of the variables
that social scientists are interested in, such as democracy, power, etc., are difficult to
measure, so the researcher has to carry out a “contextualized comparison,” which
automatically searches for analytically equivalent phenomena even if they are expressed in
different terms and contexts. This requires a detailed consideration of contextual factors,
which is extremely difficult to do in quantitative research but is very common in case
studies. Whereas quantitative research runs the risk of “conceptual stretching” by throwing
together dissimilar cases to get a larger sample, case studies allow for conceptual refine-
ments with a higher validity level over fewer number of cases .
Case studies are very suitable for serving the heuristic purpose of inductively identifying
additional variables and new hypotheses. Quantitative studies lack procedures for
inductively generating new hypotheses. Moreover, case studies can analyse qualitatively
complex events and take into account numerous variables precisely because they do not
require many cases or a limited number of variables. Case study researchers are not limited
to readily quantified variables or pre-existing, well-defined datasets.
Quantitative research can be used to identify deviant cases that may lead to new hypotheses
but, in and of themselves, lack any clear means of actually identifying new hypotheses.
Without additional examination, such as open-ended interviews, it is not possible to find
inductive means of identifying omitted variables.
The use of case studies has some additional advantages as well. The connectedness to
everyday life and case studies’ abundance of individual elements and details are important
for researchers from two viewpoints. First, a case study is important for developing different
views of reality, including the awareness that human behaviour cannot be understood merely
as an act that is driven by a rule or a theory. Second, case studies can contribute to the
professional development of a researcher, as case studies can provide concrete, context-
dependent experience that increases their research skills.
Criticisms
I. It is impossible to generalize on the basis of an individual case; therefore, the case study
cannot contribute to scientific development.
II. The case study is most useful for generating hypotheses (that is, in the first stage of a
total research process), whereas other methods are more suitable for hypotheses testing
and theory building.
III. Case studies contain a bias toward verification; that is, a tendency to confirm the
researcher’s preconceived notions.
IV. It is often difficult to summarize and develop general propositions and theories on the
basis of specific case studies.
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George, A. L. and Bennett, A. (2005). Case Studies and Theory Development in the Social
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Gerring, J. (2004). What is a case study and what is it good for? The American Political
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Aronoff, Myron J. (2006). Forty years as a political ethnographer. Ab Imperio, 4, pp. 1-15.