Analyzing Qualitative Data. Graham R Gibbs

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Analyzing Qualitative Data - Graham R Gibbs Qualitative Research Kit

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in other cases, the interaction in the text is relevant as well (as in focus groups) or the central focus of the analysis (as in conversation analysis).

      In this book, the basic analytic strategies of analyzing qualitative data are unfolded in detail. The first focus is on coding and categorizing. The second focus is on narratives and biographies. A third focus is on the use of computers in this context. Considerable attention is paid to comparative analysis and issues of quality and ethics specific to analyzing data. On a more practical level, the use of the three major software programs for analyzing qualitative data (ATLAS.ti, MAXQDA, NVivo) is presented in a comparative perspective – showing what can be done with them and how they influence the analysis.

      In this second edition, the references to literature and the presentation of the software have been updated. The discussion of preparing data for analysis has been extended, as have areas such as how to apply qualitative analysis to studying discourses and narratives. The discussion of comparative analysis is also expanded in this new edition.

      With these focuses, this book first of all provides a basis for analyzing all sorts of qualitative data in verbal data like statements and stories. In the context of The SAGE Qualitative Research Kit, it is complemented by the book by Rapley (2018), which is more about the analysis of interactions, and conversations in particular, and by the book by Banks (2018), which addresses the analysis of visual materials. It is also complemented by chapters in the books on ethnography by Coffey (2018), on interviews by Brinkmann and Kvale (2018), and on focus groups by Barbour (2018), which address particular problems of analyzing the data resulting from each method. Finally the new book on grounded theory by Flick (2018d) also complements its perspectives. A major addition to the scope of the other books in The SAGE Qualitative Research Kit is that this book pays a lot of attention to using computers in qualitative research and on writing in the context of creating data (like writing notes or memos and research diaries). It also gives helpful suggestions for transcription of verbal data. Its suggestions regarding ethics and quality of analysis add to the books by Flick (2018b, 2018c) on designing and managing quality in the research process. For its second edition, Analyzing Qualitative Data has been updated throughout and extended, so that it also is linked to the new versions and new books in the new edition of The SAGE Qualitative Research Kit.

      Chapter One The Nature of Qualitative Analysis

      Contents

       Analysis 2

       Qualitative data 3

       Practicalities of qualitative analysis 4

       Methodology 5

       The aim of qualitative analysis 10

       Ethics 13

      Objectives

      After reading this chapter, you should:

       see that some features of qualitative analysis are distinctive, but at the same time they are features over which there is often disagreement between qualitative researchers;

       know about some of the different understandings of qualitative research; and

       understand that they bear upon analysis and map out the limits of the qualitative ‘territory’, and understand some of the distinctive styles and approaches qualitative analysts adopt.

      Analysis

      The idea of analysis implies some kind of transformation. You start with some (often voluminous) collection of qualitative data and then you process it, through analytic procedures, into a clear, understandable, insightful, trustworthy and even original analysis. There is disagreement even about this transformation. Some researchers focus on the ‘office’ processes involved; the sorting, retrieving, indexing and handling of qualitative data, usually with some discussion of how these processes can be used to generate analytic ideas (Maykut and Morehouse, 2001; Miles et al., 2013; Spencer et al., 2014). The processes are designed to deal with the sheer amount of data that is created in qualitative research, in interview transcripts (see Brinkmann and Kvale, 2018), field notes (see Coffey, 2018), collected documents, video and audio recordings (see Rapley, 2018), etc. Sorting and searching through all these data while at the same time creating a consistent and perceptive analysis that remains grounded in that data – that is, so the data provide good supporting evidence – is a major headache. It requires good organization and a structured approach to the data. This is one of the reasons why CAQDAS, computer-assisted qualitative data analysis, has become so popular. The software doesn’t do the thinking for you, but it helps enormously with these ‘office’ processes.

      Other researchers emphasize the idea that analysis involves interpretation and retelling and that it is imaginative and speculative (Denzin, 1997; Giorgi and Giorgi, 2003; Mishler, 1986; Riessman, 1993). There are a range of approaches involved here including conversation and discourse analysis (see Rapley, 2018), some forms of phenomenology, biographical and narrative approaches as well as recent ethnographic methods (see Coffey, 2018). These approaches emphasize the idea that qualitative data are meaningful and need to be interpreted in analysis, not just to reveal the range of subject matter people are talking about but also to recognize and analyze the ways in which they frame and mould their communications and even the ways these communications frame and mould them and their actions.

      Most writers about qualitative data analysis recognize that it involves both these aspects of analysis; data handling and interpretation (Coffey and Atkinson, 1996; Flick, 2014, 2018b; Mason, 2002; Bazeley, 2013). Sometimes they are used simultaneously, but often they are used in sequence starting with the use of the ‘office’ procedures then moving to the reduction of data into summaries or displays, before finishing with interpretative analysis and drawing conclusions.

      Qualitative data

      As I have suggested above, qualitative data are essentially meaningful, but aside from that they show a great diversity. They don’t include counts and measures, but they do include just about any form of human communication – written, audio or visual – behaviour, symbolism or cultural artefacts. This includes any of the following:

       individual and focus group interviews and their transcripts;

       ethnographic participant observation;

       email;

       web pages;

       advertisements – printed, film or TV;

       video recordings of TV broadcasts;

       video diaries;

       videos of interviews and focus groups;

       video recordings of laboratory sessions;

       records of meetings and other organizational documents;

       various documents such as books and magazines;

       diaries;

       online discussion group conversations;

       online social networking pages;

       online

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