focus groups analysis of qualitative data

22
FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA BUSN 364 – Week 14_2 Özge Can

Upload: raleigh

Post on 22-Feb-2016

77 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA. BUSN 364 – Week 14_2 Özge Can. What is Focus Group Research?. Qualitative research technique in which people are informally “interviewed” in a group discussion setting - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

FOCUS GROUPS

ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

BUSN 364 – Week 14_2Özge Can

Page 2: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

What is Focus Group Research? Qualitative research technique in

which people are informally “interviewed” in a group discussion setting

The researcher gathers 6-12 people in a room to discuss issues, generally for about 45-90 minutes

There is a moderator (facilitator) in the room to facilitate free, open discussion by all group members

The group should be moderately homogenous

Clear instructions and careful selection of participants

Page 4: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Purposes of Focus Groups Gathering opinions, beliefs, and attitudes

about issues of study interest Encouraging discussion about a

particular topic Providing an opportunity to learn more

and deeply about a topic or issue Testing your theoretical assumptions Interpreting quantitative research results

Page 5: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Research Topics for Focus Groups: Public attitudes (e.g., workplace

equality, social relations) Personal behaviors (e.g., dealing with

cancer) A new product being introduced to the

market (e.g., a new breakfast cereal) Improving an existing product or

service A political candidate

Page 6: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Before the Focus Group: Define the objectives of the focus group Establish a timeline Identify the participants Generate the questions Develop a script/plan of the whole

session Select a facilitator Choose the location Conduct the focus group!

Page 7: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

During The Focus Group: Set the tone; participants should have fun and

feel good about the session. Make sure every participant is heard; draw out

quieter group members. Get full answers (not just "we need more

money" but "we need more money to hire a receptionist to answer phones").

Monitor time closely; don’t exceed time limits. Keep the discussion on track; try to answer all

or most of the questions. Head off exchanges of opinion about personal

lives.

Page 8: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

After The Focus Group: Interpret and report the results

In your report: Summarize each meeting individually Analyze the summaries Write the report

Page 9: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Evaluation of Focus Groups

Core Advantage: The natural discussion setting allows

people to express opinions/ ideas freely and in detail

Limitations: A “polarization effect” exists (attitudes

become more extreme after group discussion)

Only one or a few topics can be discussed in a group session

Moderator may unknowingly limit open, free expression of members

Page 10: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Qualitative Data The data is in the form of text from

documents, observational notes, open-ended interview transcripts, physical artifacts, audio-video tapes, and images and photos

To qualitatively analyze data => systematically to organize, integrate and examine it; searching for patterns and relationships among specific details

To analyze, we connect particular data concepts, make generalizations and identify broad themes

Page 11: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Qualitative vs. Quantitative Data Analysis

Similarities Inferential (both infer

from empirical data to abstract ideas)

Public and scientifically accepted methods/process

Comparison is central Both avoid errors,

false conclusions, misleading inferences

Differences– Quantitative

• Standardized• Analysis follows data

collection• Generally deductive (tests

existing theories)• Use of statistical analysis

– Qualitative• Less standardized, various• Analysis as data is collected• Generally inductive (builds a

new theory)• Use of non-statistical

analysis

Page 12: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Explanations with Qualitative Data

Not only descriptions in qualitative research; there are explanations too, BUT they are different from quantitative ones:

Less abstract theory Rich in detail, sensitive to context Capable of showing complex processes of

social life Provides supportive evidence to eliminate

some theoretical explanation from consideration and to increase plausibility of explanation

Page 13: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Coding and Concept Formation Conceptualization:

Grounded in data Categories based on themes Ideas and evidence interdependent

Coding Data: Open coding Axial coding Selective coding

Page 14: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Coding and Concept Formation Open coding: The first coding of

qualitative data that examines the data to reduce them into preliminary analytic categories or codes

1. It helps us see emerging themes at a glance

2. It stimulates us to find themes in future open coding

3. We can make a list of all themes in the study, which we reorganize, sort, combine or discard in further analysis

Page 15: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Coding and Concept Formation Axial coding: Second stage of coding

during which the researcher organizes the codes, links them, and discovers key analytic categories

Selective coding: Last stage in coding qualitative data that examines previous codes to identify and select data that will support the conceptual coding categories that were developed

Page 16: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Coding and Concept Formation

Analytic Memo Writing: It is a special type of note involving the

discussion of thoughts and ideas about the data and the coding process that you write to yourself.

Each code or concept forms the basis of a seperate memo

It links concrete data or raw evidence to abstract, theoretical thinking

Memos form the basis for analyzing data in a research report

Page 17: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Coding and Concept Formation

Analytic Memo Writing:

Page 18: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Qualitative Data in Field Research

Page 19: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Analytic Strategies for Qualitative Data Ideal Types:

It is a model or mental abstraction of social relations or processes. The ideal types is an artificial device used as a pure standard against which data or reality can be compared.

Successive Approximation: Repeatedly moving back and forth between

the empirical data and the abstract concepts, theories, models, adjusting theory and refining data collection each time

Page 20: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Analytic Strategies for Qualitative Data Illustrative Method:

Qualitative data analysis that takes theoretical concepts and treats them as “empty boxes” to be filled with specific empirical examples and descriptions. Evidence in the boxes confirms, modifies or rejects the theory.

Domain Analysis: Qualitative analysis that describes and

reveals the structure of a cultural domain (“minicultures” in a certain setting can be analyzed)

Page 21: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Analytic Strategies for Qualitative Data

Narrative Analysis: Qualitative data analysis that presents a

chronologically linked chain of events in which individual or collective social actors have an important role

Narrative text refers to data in a storylike format that people apply to organize and express meaning and understanding in social life

Tools of narrative analysis: path dependency, periodization, historical contingency

Page 22: FOCUS GROUPS ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

Analytic Strategies for Qualitative Data Negative Case Method:

Analysis that focuses on a case that does not conform to the theoretical expectations and uses details from the case to refine theory

Some types of negative evidence: Events that population is not aware or

wants to hide, overlooked commonplace events