If you had done interviews with participants, that were quite open ended i.e. 30-40 minute discussion about their love of x factor, then coded the interviews with numerical codes and analysed those statistically....
is that a mixed methods study? or a quantitative study?
You've quantitised qualitative data, which is an example of mixed methods data analysis. Just make sure that you've laid the ground work for why this is the case in your methodology at some point. So, based on your pragmatic research philosophy, you've applied methods traditionally associated with positivism to analyse data collected that you would associate with interpretivism (open ended interviews and thematic analysis). It is very difficult for someone to argue that it is quantitative because the collection of data in the qual stage required completely different ontological, epistemological and axiological assumptions than in the quan stage and without using a mixed methods apporach it would be very difficult to justify what you've done.
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Thanks Wal, that's what I thought. I'm having an argument with my sup who thinks its a purely quantitative study.
However, I've gone with 'constructivism' not 'interpretivisim???' :$ so I'm saying I'm using 'storytelling' (constructivist) type methods for the qual stage and then analysing them quantitatively.
I analyse this data qualitatively and then do a quantitative questionnaire study later, so I know I do do mixed methods, its just this particular study, which I think within itself is a mixed methods study - she thinks not :-s
yeah - what is axiological??
Hi Sneaks and Ady. I never had much to do with social constructivism back when I did my research, but there won't be any issue with that. WRT you supervisor, some people have conducted studies in the past that combine qual and quan data collection and analysis, and see them as quantitative. However, if you then peel away the layers of the study until you reach the philosophical core, you find they don't hold much water. Anyway, with regards to axiology, it is a term that relates to the values we have when we conduct an inquiry. With qualitative research, the inquiry is often attached with our own values. For example, if we're working with disenfranchised people, we might have caring feelings and desperately want to help them. On the other hand, quantitative research is positivistic and supposed be value free; we're objective scientists and are not supposed to have any feelings that might influence our work. I think post-positivism rectified this somewhat, acknowledging that it is difficult to be a completely objective being without any feelings when conducting research.
I totally agree with Ady. Straight forward explanation and no hole in the pocket as well.
Although, I would say that the question lacked any clarity that is needed at a doc level..
Perhaps, Sneaks could explain how she coded her interviews? Was this with a Morse Key?
My teachers always emphasized that PhD is all about twisting appearance, easy>difficult
and vice versa!!!
Hey Sneaks, I don't know what you've coded or how, but to the best of my knowledge 'content analysis' is one type of analysis that refers to qualitative interviews that have been coded numerically and then reported in a quantitative fashion. But it depends on what you are coding and the type of stats you are doing- I think content analysis is more reporting how often something occurs in the interviews etc, rather than doing any complex stats or anything. Possibly irrelevant but thought I'd throw it in your direction in case it was of any use! Best, KB
Thanks all, I think I might hire you Wal to be my personal epistemology expert!
I'm using a complicated sort of coding, to say more would give myself up, but its basically coding statements in terms of how they match 10 things. So each statement gets 10 scores based on a likert scale and then you can play around with the stats e.g. compare groups, predict outcomes based on these scores etc. PM me if you want to know specifics :p
I have a similar question. I assumed my analysis which involves (Content analysis and Discourse Analysis) as a mixed method. I have one chapter in which I did content analysis. The rest four analysis chapters are qualitative. But, I have quantitatively analysed some responses of the participants in one of these mainly qualitatively analysed chapter. My supervisor does not like saying this as a mixed method. As per them, this is 'limited quantification of the qualitative data' and I removed saying 'mixed method' in my Methodology chapter. I rather stated: This is the combination of quantitative and qualitative methods in which qualitative methods had precedence over quantitative method. I am convinced to state like this but bit worried if the examiner ask why not used 'mixed method'. Sups say this is not the mixed method although the combination of quantitative and qualitative methods since this is mainly the qualitative analysis and quantitative part is just to support my qualitative analysis. Swetch
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