Entry for 10 May 2008:
Paper presented at BACP Research Conference, Cardiff Bay, May 2008.
Validity Threats in Qualitative Research
• Cook & Campbell, 1979, and others have describe sets of validity threats for experimental studies
• Need similar framework for qualitative research
• Guidelines for reviewing qualitative research (e.g., Elliott, Fischer & Rennie, 1999)
• Here: Start by describing bad practice, then look at potential solutions
1. Closing down Qualitative Investigation from the Beginning
a. Problems:
• Attachment to own expectations or excessive professional socialization in psychology
• Starting with specific hypotheses (closed questions)
• Focusing on closed questions in the interview
• Selecting the data you like from the transcripts, ignoring things that don't fit your expectations
b. Solutions:
• Open up your research questions
• Reflect on your expectations and attachments
• Attempt to bracket your expectations and hopes
2. Qualitative Research Skill Deficits
a. Problems:
• Poor interviewing skills/personal qualities: Listening, empathy, compassion, technical process guiding skills
• Under-developed analytic skills: Empathy, vocabulary, concept formation, access to own experiencing, care/systematicness/ compulsiveness
b. Solutions:
• Practice & training
• Patience
• Switch to quantitative research
3. Methodolatry: Getting Stuck on a Particular Method
a. Problems:
• May not fit you or your topic/questions
• The seductions of brand names (GTA, CQR, IPA)
• Limitations of computer software
• Rigidities of common methods
• Arbitrary sample size requirements (too small or too large)
b. Solution:
• Use generic approach, adapt to own style, topic
4. Carelessness and Impatience
a. Problems:
•Failing to check your results by auditing, checking with informants
• Stopping data collection and analysis before you reach saturation
• Failing to extract rich conceptual structure from your categories (see flat, uninformative results)
• Failing to obtain credibility checks
• Group designs: Not sampling broadly enough to support general knowledge claims
• Single case studies: Not analyzing deeply enough to really understand the person
b. Solutions:
•Manage expectations: good qualitative research is harder (more demanding, time-consuming) than good quantitative research
•Allow enough time & energy to finish and check analyses
•Get adequate academic support
5. Flat, Uninformative Results
a. Problems:
•Often due to “going through the motions” without fully engaging with your data
• Claiming formal domains (topic areas) as substantive results
• The 37-category problem: too many unrelated but overlapping categories
• Giving up on analysis too soon
b. Solutions:
• “Stomach coding” (Rennie)
• Use of narrative structures or organize data
• Use of hierarchies of categories
• Constant comparison and the Rule of Four
• Make a picture or flowchart
6. Presentation Problems
a. Problems (from Elliott, Fischer & Rennie, 1999):
• Not owning your perspective
• Not describing the sample
• Abstract/ungrounded categories
• Disorganized/incoherent categories
• Not presenting the results in rich enough detail to allow readers to evaluate your categories for themselves
b. Solutions:
• Full reporting
• Provide narrative/visual model
• Provide rich case example
Conclusion: Realizing the Potential of Qualitative Research
•Need to reflect carefully at our research practice, make conscious efforts to improve
This blog expresses my personal views and experiences, and may or may not reflect reality as others see it. It documents my years living in Scotland, 2006-2023, working as Professor of Counselling at the University of Strathclyde, as well as my continuing experiences from Dec 2016 commuting between Scotland and California. It covers Emotion-Focused Therapy news, as well as my personal and scientific experiences, and poetry
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