Wednesday, December 18, 2019

Content Analysis - Research Methodology



Content Analysis: An Introduction to Its Methodology
Klaus Krippendorff
SAGE Publications, 09-May-2018 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 472 pages
https://books.google.co.in/books/about/Content_Analysis.html?id=FixGDwAAQBAJ&redir_esc=y

Content Analysis: An Introduction to Its Methodology
Front Cover
Klaus Krippendorff
SAGE, 2013 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 441 pages
https://books.google.co.in/books/about/Content_Analysis.html?id=s_yqFXnGgjQC&redir_esc=y

The Content Analysis: An Introduction to Its Methodology
Klaus Krippendorff
SAGE, 2004 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 413 pages

Since the publication of the first edition of Content Analysis: An Introduction to Its Methodology, the textual fabric in which contemporary society functions has undergone a radical transformation -- namely, the ongoing information revolution. Two decades ago, content analysis was largely known in journalism and communication research, and, to a lesser extent, in the social and psychological sciences. Today, content analysis has become an efficient alternative to public opinion research -- a method of tracking markets, political leanings, and emerging ideas, a way to settle legal disputes, and an approach to explore individual human minds. The Second Edition of Content Analysis is a definitive sourcebook of the history and core principles of content analysis as well as an essential resource for present and future studies. The book introduces readers to ways of analyzing meaningful matter such as texts, images, voices -- that is, data whose physical manifestations are secondary to the meanings that a particular population of people brings to them.Organized into three parts, the book examines the conceptual and methodological aspects of content analysis and also traces several paths through content analysis protocols.The author has completely revised and updated the Second Edition, integrating new information on computer-aided text analysis. The book also includes a practical guide that incorporates experiences in teaching and how to advise academic and commercial researchers. In addition, Krippendorff clarifies the epistemology and logic of content analysis as well as the methods for achieving its aims. Author Klaus Krippendorff discusses three distinguishing characteristics of contemporary content analysis: that it is fundamentally empirically grounded, exploratory in process, and predictive or inferential in intent; that it transcends traditional notions of symbols, contents, and intents; and that it has been forced to develop a methodology of its own, one that enables researchers to plan, execute, communicate, reproduce, and critically evaluate an analysis independent of the desirability of its results.Intended as a textbook for advanced undergraduate and graduate students across the social sciences, Content Analysis, Second Edition will also be a valuable resource for practitioners in a variety of disciplines.
https://books.google.co.in/books/about/Content_Analysis.html?id=q657o3M3C8cC


1989
Content Analysis
Klaus Krippendorff
University of Pennsylvania
http://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1232&context=asc_papers

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Grounded Theory Approach


Grounded theory is inductive approach to theory building


Remenyi on Grounded Theory


In business and management  studies established and accepted theories are not many still.   As a result the business and management researcher has opportunity to build new theories. The grounded theory is  a concept developed by Glaser and Strauss(1967). They define it as: ‘ an inductive, theory discovery methodology that allows the researcher to develop a theoretical account of the general features of a topic while simultaneously grounding the account in empirical observations or evidence.’             

The grounded  theory methodology normally relies heavily on the use of in-depth interviews with experts in the field of study for the collection of evidence that will be used in an inductive way to assist in the theory generation.

Theoretical Conjecture

The primary aim of the researcher developing a grounded theory is to describe the phenomena of interest accurately.  The grounded theory emerges through the process of concept discovery, within which the researcher develops abstract concepts and categories from the evidence.   It is important to note that in this approach to research, concepts and theories are regarded simply as more or less useful and not as more or less true or valid.

Once the grounded theory has been developed, the researcher in business and management studies is in a position to  make a theoretical conjecture or thesis, but there is no structured methodology for doing this.  Rather, this aspect of research or scientific study can be regarded as an art that relies almost entirely on the imagination and creative abilities of the researcher.

The researcher develops a theoretical conjecture from the data or evidence, and he or she needs to be able to defend how the concepts and ideas which exist in the literature and which arose from the evidence lead to the theoretical conjecture.

The following is an example of a theoretical conjecture developed through the use of the grounded theory approach for a doctoral dissertation in information systems management (Remenyi,1990a).

Strategic Information Systems (SIS) occur as a result of pressure or opportunities directly related to industry drivers.  The firm’s response to this pressure or opportunity is influenced by its strategy and by its critical success factors (CFS), and these issues determine the formulation of the SIS.  The decision to attempt to take advantage of SIS is made with little attention to detail concerning cost-justification and vendor selection, but with more attention to communicating with the staff, training appropriate people and setting up support facilities.

An important change occurs at this stage of the research.  Whereas the formulation of the research problem began as a description of the known facts from which a narrative theory was developed, this narrative will now be used paradigmatically.  That is to say, it will provide a set of logical conjectures as the basis on which to predict and explain observations. 

Whereas in the physical sciences the theoretical conjecture will frequently be expressed as a formula or as a series of simple propositions, in business and management research the theory or thesis will be presented as a diagram also for the purpose of clarification and presentation.

Hypotheses or Empirical Generalisations

When the new theoretical conjecture or paradigm has been developed the next step is to use it to derive hypotheses or empirical generalisations.  If the theory or thesis has been derived from a review of the literature  then the term hypothesis is more generally used, while if the grounded theory approach was employed then the term empirical generalisation is usually more appropriate. 

Strategic Information Systems occur as a result of pressure or opportunities directly related to industry drivers.

The firm’s response to this pressure or opportunity is influenced by its strategy and by its CSFs and these issues determine the formulation of the SIS.

The decision to attempt to take advantage of SIS is made with little attention to detail concerning cost-justification and supplier selection.

More attention is given to communicating with the staff, training appropriate people and setting up support facilities.

Note that from the theoretical conjecture provided on the previous page, four hypotheses or empirical generalisations were developed.  This is regarded as a reasonable number of empirical generalisations with which to work at a doctoral level.

Some research studies stop at the stage of theoretical conjecture, perhaps having developed some hypotheses or empirical generalisations.  It is argued that at this stage a contribution has already been made to knowledge and this may well be so.  Certainly achieving a theoretical conjecture and producing empirical generalisation would normally be more than adequate for a masters degree and depending on the subject area it might even be enough for a doctorate.

However, if the newly discovered knowledge is to be more widely useful, then it is usually necessary to progress to a further stage in the research in which the new thesis is tested against a larger sample population.  In most circumstances this additional step would be required for a doctorate degree.

Reference: Positivist Approach to Empirical Research - Dan Remenyi - Chapter Summary
https://phd-research-methodology.blogspot.com/2013/06/the-positivist-approach-to-empirical.html

Books


Glaser, Barney G & Strauss, Anselm L., 1967. The Discovery of Grounded Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research, Chicago, Aldine Publishing Company - Brief Summaries of the chapters
http://faculty.babson.edu/krollag/org_site/craft_articles/glaser_strauss.html


Glaser and Strauss - Grounded Theory - Chapter 2 - Generating Theory - Quotations and Summary

Papers on the Method


Guiding the Use of Grounded Theory in Doctoral Studies – An Example from the Australian Film Industry
International Journal of Doctoral Studies,  Volume 6, 2011

The place of the literature review in grounded theory research
Ciarán Dunne
International Journal of Social Research Methodology
Vol. 14, No. 2, March 2011, 111–124

Thomas, G. & James, D. (2006) ―Re-inventing grounded theory: some questions about theory, ground and discovery‖ British Educational Research Journal, 32, 6, 767–795.
http://eprints.bham.ac.uk/501/2/Thomas_BriEdResJ_2006.pdf

Remodeling Grounded Theory
Barney G. Glaser with the assistance of Judith Holton
Volume 5, No. 2, Art. 4 – May 2004
http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/607/1315

Conceptualization: On Theory and Theorizing Using Grounded Theory
Barney G. Glaser, PhD, Hon PhD, The Grounded Theory Institute.
International Journal of Qualitative Methods 1 (2) Spring 2002
https://sites.ualberta.ca/~iiqm/backissues/1_2Final/pdf/glaser.pdf



Papers and Dissertations Using Grounded Theory


Leadership under Severe Stress:
A Grounded Theory Study
Gerry Larsson, Ann Johansson, Tina Jansson, Gunilla Grönlund
http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/au-24/larsson2.pdf


Updated on 18 December 2019, 2 September 2013

Monday, December 16, 2019

Qualitative Analysis of Content - Introduction

Introduction

Qualitative content analysis has been defined as:

• “a research method for the subjective interpretation of the content of text data through the systematic classification process of coding and identifying themes or patterns” (Hsieh & Shannon, 2005, p.1278),

• “an approach of empirical, methodological controlled analysis of texts within their context of communication, following content analytic rules and step by step models, without rash quantification” (Mayring, 2000, p.2), and

• “any qualitative data reduction and sense-making effort that takes a volume of qualitative material and attempts to identify core consistencies and meanings”
(Patton, 2002, p.453).

These three definitions illustrate that qualitative content analysis emphasizes an integrated view of speech/texts and their specific contexts. Qualitative content analysis examines meanings, themes and patterns that may be manifest or latent in a particular text. It allows researchers to understand social reality in a subjective but scientific manner.

Qualitative content analysis was developed primarily in anthropology, qualitative sociology, and psychology, in order to explore the meanings underlying physical messages.Qualitative content analysis is mainly inductive, grounding the examination of topics and themes, as  well as the inferences drawn from them, in the data. In some cases, qualitative content analysis attempts to generate theory. Samples for qualitative content analysis  usually consist of purposively selected texts which can inform the research questions  The qualitative approach usually produces descriptions or typologies, along with expressions from subjects reflecting how they view the social world. By this means, the perspectives of the producers of the text can be better understood by the investigator as well as the readers of the study’s results (Berg, 2001).  Qualitative content analysis pays attention to unique themes that illustrate the range of the meanings of the phenomenon rather than the statistical significance of the occurrence of particular texts or concepts.

In real research work, the two approaches are not mutually exclusive and can be used in combination. As suggested by Smith, “qualitative analysis deals with the forms and antecedent-consequent patterns of form, while quantitative analysis deals with duration and frequency of form”(Smith, 1975, p.218). Weber (1990) also pointed out that the best content-analytic studies use both qualitative and quantitative operations.


Qualitative content analysis involves a process designed to condense raw data into categories or themes based on valid inference and interpretation. This process uses inductive reasoning, by which themes and categories emerge from the data through the researcher’s careful examination and constant comparison.

Hsieh and Shannon (2005) discussed three approaches to qualitative content analysis, based on the degree of involvement of inductive reasoning. The first is conventional qualitative content analysis, in which coding categories are derived directly  and inductively from the raw data. This is the approach used for grounded theory development. The second approach is directed content analysis, in which initial coding starts with a theory or relevant research findings. Then, during data analysis, the researchers immerse themselves in the data and allow themes to emerge from the data. The purpose of this approach usually is to validate or extend a conceptual framework or theory. The third approach is summative content analysis, which starts with the counting of words or manifest content, then extends the analysis to include latent meanings and themes. This approach seems quantitative in the early stages, but its goal is to explore the usage of the words/indicators in an inductive manner.



Source
Qualitative Analysis of Content by Yan Zhang and Barbara M. Wildemuth


Content Analysis

Types of Coding

Five major types:

Theoretical coding
Open coding
Axial coding
Selective coding
Thematic coding


Theoretical coding is the procedure for analyzing data which have been collected in order to develop a grounded theory.

Open coding is designed to express data in the form of initial concepts.

Axial coding follows open coding as the next step to refine and differentiate the codes resulting from open coding.   Axial coding is the process of relating subcategories to a category.

Selective coding continues axial coding at yet a higher level of abstraction. The aim of this step is to elaborate the core category around which the other categories can be grouped and by which they are integrated.

Thematic coding was initially developed by Strauss (1987) and elaborated by Boyatzis (1988). Thematic coding can be performed inductively or deductively, Thematic coding makes distinction between manifest(themes directly observable in the information) and latent coding (themes underlying the phenomenon).

Source: Qualitative Research in the study of Leadership by Karin Klenke, 2 edition, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 2016



http://groundedtheoryreview.com/2009/11/30/theoretical-coding-in-grounded-theory-methodology/


Updated on 17 December 2019, 5 January 2014

Naturalistic Philosophy - Humanistic Philosophy

Sunday, September 22, 2019

What is Philosophy?




https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/philosophy/studywithus/ugstudy/what-is-philosophy/

https://philosophy.missouri.edu/undergrad/what-philosophy

https://www.sun.ac.za/english/faculty/arts/philosophy/why-philosophy/what-is-philosophy


Philosophy is an activity of thought, a type of thinking. Philosophy is critical and comprehensive thought, the most critical and comprehensive manner of thinking which the human species has yet devised.


Philosophy Online Text


http://www.qcc.cuny.edu/SocialSciences/ppecorino/INTRO_TEXT/default.htm

http://www.qcc.cuny.edu/SocialSciences/ppecorino/INTRO_TEXT/Chapter%2012Conclusion/What_is_Philosophy.htm

https://philosophy.fsu.edu/undergraduate-study/why-philosophy/What-is-Philosophy


Updated on 23 September 2019, 13 November 2018

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Cognitive Dissonance and Cognitive Peace of Scientists



Test for Cognitive Abilities
https://www.cognivue.com/about/overview/


Cognitive Dissonance: Its Use in Science
By Edwin G. Boring
Science  14 Aug 1964:
Vol. 145, Issue 3633, pp. 680-685
https://science.sciencemag.org/content/145/3633/680


1: Emotion as Cognitive and its Therapy
PART I: Emotions as Judgements versus Irrational Forces
1: Emotion as Cognitive and its Therapy
https://www.giffordlectures.org/books/emotion-and-peace-mind/1-emotion-cognitive-and-its-therapy


Einstein's God: Conversations About Science and the Human Spirit
Krista Tippett
Penguin, 23-Feb-2010 - Religion - 304 pages

A New York Times bestseller
"An exhilirating exploration of the meaning of it all." --Robert Wright, author of The Evolution of God

Drawn from Krista Tippett's Peabody Award-winning public radio program, the conversations in this profoundly illuminating book reach for a place too rarely explored in our ongoing exchange of ideas--the nexus of science and spirituality. In fascinating interviews with such luminaries as Freeman Dyson, Janna Levin, Parker Palmer, and John Polkinghorne, Krista Tippett draws out the connections between the two realms, showing how even those most wedded to hard truths find spiritual enlightenment in the life of experiment and, in turn, raise questions that are richly, theologically evocative.

Whether she is speaking with celebrated surgeon and author Sherwin Nuland about the biology of the human spirit or questioning Drawin biographer James Moore about his subject's religious beliefs, Tippett offers a rare look at the way our best minds grapple with the questions for which we all seek answers.
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=g7XUY74yEoQC


What Happens to the Brain During Cognitive Dissonance?
—Thea Buckley, India
November 1, 2015
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/what-happens-to-the-brain-during-cognitive-dissonance1/




How to Think Like Einstein: Simple Ways to Break the Rules and Discover Your Hidden Genius
Scott D. Thorpe
Sourcebooks, Inc., 01-Dec-2015 - Self-Help - 272 pages
You can be a genius too! Learn the skills and hacks from the greatest minds in history!

From creative business and to improving relationships, How to Think Like Einstein provides the tools for the everyday challenges at the home and in the office. Innovator and author Scott Thorpe guides you step-by-step through the process of freeing yourself from your "rule ruts" so you can dream up amazing (and doable) solutions to the seemingly impossible. With brand-new material for today's readers, this new edition will reveal how you can solve problems in astonishing ways, including:

• thinking like a bug
• organizing a party
• learning the game of poker
• pretending you're James Bond
• acting like a millionaire
• and more!
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=Hn3ICgAAQBAJ

Saturday, September 14, 2019

The Research Process - Dan Remenyi - Chapter 7 - Summary - Narrative - Paradigm

Ch.7.Research Process



Kinds of Evidence, Ways of Thinking

Qualitative and quantitative – and it is useful to consider two kinds of thinking which are referred to here as narrative and paradigmatic.  Qualitative evidence uses words to describe situations, individuals, or circumstances surrounding a phenomenon while quantitative evidence uses numbers usually in the form of counts or measurements to attempt to give precision to a set of observations.

Narrative thinking involves the construction of a consistent and convincing description of the process or subject matter under investigation.

Paradigmatic thinking involves the construction of laws, rules or conjectures from which it is hoped deductions can be made that can be tested against the evidence or observations.  The construction of a narrative will depend largely, but not exclusively, on the qualitative information that is available, while be construction of paradigms will generally depend on both qualitative and quantitative evidence.

Sometimes the researcher will find him or herself drawing on quantitative evidence for a narrative. In other words quantitative evidence is also incorporate in the narrative.


It is possible to regard narrative thought and paradigmatic thought as two poles of a continuum along which ideas are refined from descriptive generalisations to quite specific statements of relationships.

From Primary Narrative to Paradigm
The transition from narrative to paradigm can be described in five distinct steps,

Primary   Narrative - -> Higher order  narrative --> Theoretical conjecture  --> Hypotheses  -> Paradigm                                                                        



Narrative analysis
The most difficult part of the transition process from primary narrative to paradigm or scientific statement often lies in the first two steps leading to the theoretical conjecture.

From the narrative to the theoretical conjecture
Creativity in research lies primarily in the narrative mode of thinking which dominates the five steps and it is mostly here that new discoveries are made and new ideas are developed.

By reformulating narrative accounts of the world in terms of paradigmatic laws and theories, however, one is then able to do several important things.

First of all, the relatively loose narrative description is developed into a tighter paradigmatic framework that enables the consistency of the ideas expressed in the narrative to be more rigorously tested.  Secondly, by a process of measuring and quantifying observations made on the environment and suggested by the theory, it is possible to begin to make predictions that can then be tested (testing the theory).

Finally, the paradigms so developed may be used to make predictions about what will happen in other situations, making it possible to discover both the extent to which the paradigmatic theory is of general applicability and the areas in which it breaks down and requires further elaboration (Further testing as well as use of theory).


Definition of a Primary Narrative


A primary narrative may be defined as a detailed textual description of the phenomenon being studied, based either on the literature or on a combination of the literature and other evidence collected through a grounded theory approach.

Typically a primary narrative will be a lengthy document that tells the story of the phenomenon being researched in a comprehensive way.
It is from this story that the theory will ultimately be distilled.

Definition of a Higher Order Narrative


A high order narrative may be defined as a description which both captures the essential aspects of the information represented in the primary narrative but provides a more parsimonious conceptual framework in which the ideas, concepts relationships have been defined.  The high order narrative will form the basis of the theoretical conjecture that will eventually be presented, reduced to hypotheses or empirical generalisations, and rigorously tested.

Theoretical conjecture. 


The theoretical conjecture can simply be the formalisation of the conclusions of the higher order narrative in such a way that it will be relatively easy to produce empirical generalisations or hypotheses for the purposes of further testing.

 Paradigmatic Thinking


In paradigmatic thinking, the theoretical conjecture be developed into one or more hypotheses or empirical generalisations.  Once this has been done quantitative evidence needed is collected  and  the hypotheses is  be rigorously tested using appropriate statistical techniques

---------------------

More Details given in the Chapter


Introduction

In this chapter some of the basic issues involved in the early stages of constructing a research project are discussed, and in particular the relationship between the collection of evidence and the formulation of a theoretical framework or model within which to interpret the results of the study are examined.


From the narrative to the theoretical conjecture
Creativity in research lies primarily in the narrative mode of thinking which dominates the five steps and it is mostly here that new discoveries are made and new ideas are developed.

By reformulating narrative accounts of the world in terms of paradigmatic laws and theories, however, one is then able to do several important things.

First of all, the relatively loose narrative description is developed into a tighter paradigmatic framework that enables the consistency of the ideas expressed in the narrative to be more rigorously tested.  Secondly, by a process of measuring and quantifying observations made on the environment and suggested by the theory, it is possible to begin to make predictions that can then be tested (testing the theory).

Finally, the paradigms so developed may be used to make predictions about what will happen in other situations, making it possible to discover both the extent to which the paradigmatic theory is of general applicability and the areas in which it breaks down and requires further elaboration (Further testing as well as use of theory).

Of course this is a positivistic view which would not always be shared by a phenomenologist, who might not be interested in generalisation in this sense.


The Point of Departure
It is possible that a researcher might wish to investigate an entirely new aspect of a subject on which little has been published, perhaps based on ideas or thoughts that arise from the research worker’s own experiences in organisations.

In such cases various empirical techniques such as grounded theory (Glaser and Strauss, 1967), or concept discovery (Martin and Turner,1986) can be used to establish the point of departure.

Whichever technique is used, the information generated in this way will form what is referred to as the primary narrative.

  This was done in a dissertation on Strategic Information Systems:  Current Practice and Guidelines(Remenyi,1990a)  where a grounded theory approach was applied to 55 interviews in order to develop a primary narrative.

Definition of a Primary Narrative
A primary narrative may be defined as a detailed textual description of the phenomenon being studied, based either on the literature or on a combination of the literature and other evidence collected through a grounded theory approach.

  Typically a primary narrative will be a lengthy document that tells the story of the phenomenon being researched in a comprehensive way.
It is from this story that the theory will ultimately be distilled.

In the dissertation mentioned above(Remenyi,1990a) the primary narrative was some 200 pages long.

   An example of this process is discussed later in this chapter.
Qualitative versus Quantitative Evidence
It is necessary to produce a primary narrative if a theoretical conjecture is to be competently developed.


The importance of the primary narrative and the theoretical conjecture

Figure 7.3 also shows how a positivistic approach to research leads to an analytical test of hypotheses or empirical generalisations, whereas a phenomenological approach may, or most probably will not lead to a formal test of the hypothesis.

A phenomenological approach will generally be judged by the extent to which it provides a convincing synthesis of the available information.

In the dissertation referred to above (Remenyi,1990a) both qualitative and quantitative evidence was collected and approximately equal effort was expended on the collection and analysis of qualitative evidence through structured interviews and quantitative evidence collected through the use of self-completion, postal questionnaires.

Evidence Collection
During the course of a research project a large amount of information may be collected and incorporated into the primary narrative.
The problem now is how to use this to construct a higher order narrative.

A high order narrative may be defined as a description which both captures the essential aspects of the information represented in the primary narrative but provides a more parsimonious conceptual framework in which the ideas, concepts relationships have been defined.  The high order narrative will form the basis of the theoretical conjecture that will eventually be presented, reduced to hypotheses or empirical generalisations, and rigorously tested.

Narrative Thinking
Unfortunately the importance of narrative thinking, the construction of a consistent story that describes the essential features of the problem under investigation, is frequently not recognized or at least not openly acknowledged  in academic research.

Language and the Free Invention of the Mind
Starting from observations made on the environment, how can the laws be discovered or inferred, from which by a process of education, observations can be explained?
Einstein (1954) states the problem quite explicitly: ‘I am convinced that… concepts which arise in our thought and in our linguistic expression are all, when viewed logically, the free creations of thoughts which cannot inductively be gained from sense experiences.

‘The justification (truth content) of the system rests in the proof of usefulness of the resulting theorems on the basis of the sense experiences, where the relations of the latter to the former can only be comprehended intuitively’.
The challenge to modern science, according to Einstein, is that there is no strict, well-defined inductive method that can lead to the formulation of laws and theories, i.e. the creation of knowledge, but rather that these are ’the  free invention of the human mind’ (Einstein,1936).  The issue then is how to go about inventing theories and discovering paradigms.

Mental Models
Einstein as quoted by Holton(1978) makes reference to different types of thinking when he describes the drive to understand the world:
Man seeks to form for himself in whatever manner is suitable for him, a simplified and lucid image of the world, and so to overcome the world of experience by striving  to replace it to some extent by this image.
This is what the painter does, and the poet, the speculative philosopher, the natural scientist, each in his own way.  Into this image and its formation, he places the centre of gravity of his emotional life, in order to attain the peace and serenity that he cannot find within the narrow confines of swirling personal experience.

Scientific discovery is akin to explanatory story telling, to myth making and to poetic imagination.

Moszkowski(1970) quotes Einstein as describing the process of scientific discovery:

In every true searcher of Nature there is a kind of religious reverence; for he finds it impossible to imagine that he is the first to have thought out the exceedingly delicate threads that connect his perceptions.  The aspect of knowledge which has not yet been laid bare gives the investigator a feeling akin to that experienced by a child who seeks to grasp the masterly way  in which elders manipulate things.

Imagination and Models
When one attempts to develop models of the world, these start as narrative descriptions within which the imagination is allowed to range freely and widely over many possibilities.  After many years he arrived at his now celebrated theory in which a combination of random variation and survival of the individuals best adapted to their environment leads to selection for particular traits and eventually the appearance of new species.
Darwin developed his theory entirely narratively without the use of any formal paradigms.  The strength then of narrative thinking is that it encourages the free play of the imagination.

The Researcher’s Natural Aptitude
It is interesting to note that some individuals have much greater skill at narrative thinking than others and it is perhaps this skill which attracts them to qualitative rather than to quantitative research.  Various quantitative techniques, such as content analysis (Berelson,1980) and correspondence analysis(Greenacre,1984), may be used to help develop a higher order narrative based on the primary narrative before this is in turn developed into theoretical conjectures.

The importance of the list in table 7.1 is that it suggests that there are 16 key concepts which arise out of the primary narrative which need to be incorporated in the higher order narrative and perhaps ultimately in the theoretical conjecture.

In the research referred to above, only the nine top-scoring concepts were eventually incorporated into the theoretical conjecture.  This is because it was felt that these were the most important issues that had been brought to the researcher’s attention, and also that more than nine issues might make the  theoretical conjecture unwieldy and difficult to understand.

Honing a Paradigm

According to the positivistic tradition, narrative thinking on its own does not generally yield sufficient rigour for what one now regards as modern science and it is usually necessary to progress beyond the purely narrative presentation.   Such as fitness, inheritability, rates of mutation and population growth rates.
It can now be said that if a certain trait in an individual has a certain inheritability and produces individuals with a certain degree of fitness relative to others, it will in a predictable period of time become the dominant trait in that population.

In other words, one can subject Darwin’s theory to much more stringent tests than were previously possible.  One can now do more than simply argue (as Darwin did) that the validity of his theory follows from its consistent explanation of a large class of facts, but can make precise and  testable predictions based on quantitative analysis of the theory.

It is equally true that many years elapsed between Einstein’s reflections in the patent office and the development of his field equations and eventually the general theory of relativity which explains the nature of gravity in terms of the curvature of space-time brought about by the presence of massive bodies.  However, in both cases, the narrative description can be seen as a necessary prelude to the formulation of the fully paradigmatic quantitative theory .

Medawar(1984) express this connection between the two modes of thought as follows:
Scientific theories…. begin as imaginative constructions.  They begin, if you like, as stories, and the purpose of the critical or rectifying episode in scientific reasoning is precisely to find out whether or not these stories about real life.

To synthesise the many thoughts into a few more powerful explanations.

To see what is general; in what is particular and what is permanent in what is transitory is the aim of scientific thought.

In the eye of science, the fall of an apple, the motion of a planet round a sun, and the clinging of the atmosphere to the earth are all seen as examples of the law of gravity.  This possibility of disentangling the most complex evanescent circumstances into various examples of permanent laws is the controlling idea of modern thought.

The next step in the research process is to use the higher order narrative to develop a theoretical conjecture.  If the narrative has been constructed with this in mind then the theoretical conjecture can simply be the formalisation of the conclusions of the higher order narrative in such a way that it will be relatively easy to produce empirical generalisations or hypotheses for the purposes of further testing.

At this stage a substantial amount of research has been done and it is clearly, the case that if this has been conducted well, a major contribution could have been added to the body of knowledge and, in some cases, may be sufficient for a research degree.

For this to happen paradigmatic thinking is needed which requires that the theoretical conjecture be developed into one or more hypotheses or empirical generalisations.  Once this has been done quantitative evidence is required that can allow the hypotheses to be rigorously tested using appropriate statistical techniques.

The Range of Evidence
Research workers who espouse the qualitative or narrative approach to research sometimes argue that a single case study is enough to enable the researcher to add to the body of knowledge.
This single case study approach has interesting implications.  Clearly the discovery of a phenomenon as a result of a single case study may add significantly to the body of knowledge simply because it is established that this phenomenon exists.   A broader exercise, including multiple case studies or evidence from a variety of sources, is more likely to lead to interesting generalisations about the phenomenon under investigation.

The steps involved in qualitative research
Quantitative Research and Paradigms
For quantitative research it is usually obvious what evidence is required and this evidence may usually be collected within a tight structure.  Thus in the social sciences in general and information systems research in particular, evidence collection often involves the use of questionnaire.  Information systems research especially information systems management research that relies exclusively on evidence obtained from techniques such as questionnaires, should be regarded with particular circumspection.

Scientific understanding proceeds by way of constructing and analysing ‘models’ of the segments or aspects of reality under study.  The purpose of these models is not to give a mirror image of reality, not to include all its elements in their exact sizes and proportions, but rather to single out and make available for intensive investigation those elements which are decisive.  We abstract from non-essentials, we blot out the unimportant to get an unobstructed view of the important, we magnify in order to improve the range and accuracy of our observation.
A model is, and must be, unrealistic in the sense in which the word is most commonly used.
Nevertheless, and in a sense paradoxically, if it is a good model it provides the key to understanding reality.

A Model of the Quantitative Research Process
It omits the development of the primary and the higher order narratives as these techniques are not necessary, given that the researcher will already have a model or paradigm with which to work.



References - Latest

Interesting article
Narrative: An ontology, epistemology and methodology for pro-environmental psychology research
Philip Brown
Energy Research & Social Science
Volume 31, September 2017, Pages 215-222
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214629617301767

ISSA Proceedings 2002 – Bourdieuian Criticism Of The Narrative Paradigm: The Case Of Historical Texts
by: Junya Morooka - University of Pittsburgh
http://rozenbergquarterly.com/issa-proceedings-2002-bourdieuian-criticism-of-the-narrative-paradigm-the-case-of-historical-textsi/

Barbara Czarniawska, Narrating the Organization: Dramas of Institutional Identity, University of Chicago Press, 1997
http://books.google.co.in/books/about/Narrating_the_Organization.html?id=oIHB7aJEipQC

The book referenced in the chapter  Jung C.G. Memories, Dreams, Reflections is available on archive.org


An article containing the process using primary narrative, higher order narrative and conjuncture development
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=S7CDl-cbPnUC&pg=PA94#v=onepage&q&f=false

Full thesis of the above paper by Marian Carcary
http://issuu.com/academic-conferences.org/docs/marian_carcary_june20

Full thesis having the primary narrative - higher order narrative - theoretical conjencture
A Model for the Formulation of Strategic Intent Based on a Comparison of the Business and the Military
by Colin George Brand
Supervisor: Dr. D. Remenyi
November 2010
University of South Africa
http://uir.unisa.ac.za/bitstream/handle/10500/4926/thesis%20brand%20cg.pdf?sequence=1

Full Thesis
ECommerce Information Systems Success: A South African Study
Shaun Pather
Supervisor: Prof D. Remenyi
November 2006
Cape Peninsula University of Technology
http://academic-publishing.org/pdfs/ECIS_Success_ShaunPather.pdf




Narrative method of enquiry
http://www.sonic.net/~rgiovan/essay.2.PDF


Theorizing or Coneptualizing Research in Economics
Chapter 7 http://home.sandiego.edu/~sumner/econ490/Lecture_7.pdf


Analyzing Qualitative Data and Concept Discovery
Ch. 8 From Filing Cabinet to Computer
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=zuCIAgAAQBAJ&pg=PT224#v=onepage&q&f=false

in
Analyzing Qualitative Data
Alan Bryman, Bob Burgess
Routledge, 09-Sep-2002 - Social Science - 246 pages
This major inter-disciplinary collection, edited by two of the best respected figures in the field, provides a superb general introduction to this subject. Chapters include discussions of fieldwork methodology, analyzing discourse, the advantages and pitfalls of team approaches, the uses of computers, and the applications of qualitative data analysis for social policy. Shrewd and insightful, the collection will be required reading for students of the latest thinking on research methods.
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=zuCIAgAAQBAJ


Updated  15 September 2019,  8 September 2016, 23 December 2014



Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Symbolic Interactionism - Introduction and Bibliography


Symbolic interactionsim addresses how meanings are produced by agents through their interaction with symbols (Klenke, 2016)

Herbert Blumer (1969) articulated the major premises of social interactionism. He was students of  George Mead.


Symbolic Interactionism: The Basics


Charles Quist-Adade
Vernon Press, 15-Mar-2019 - Social Science - 218 pages

This book is a survey of Symbolic Interaction. In thirteen short chapters, it traces the history, the social philosophical roots, the founders, “movers and shakers” and evolution of the theory. Symbolic Interactionism: The Basics takes the reader along the exciting, but tortuous journey of the theory and explores both the meta-theoretical and mini-theoretical roots and branches of the theory. Symbolic interactionism or sociological social psychology traces its roots to the works of United States sociologists George Hebert Mead, Charles Horton Cooley, and Herbert Blumer, and a Canadian sociologist, Erving Goffman; Other influences are Harold Garfinkel’s Ethnomethodology and Austrian-American Alfred Schutz’s study of Phenomenology.



Symbolic Interactionism: Basics explores the philosophical sources of symbolic interactionism, including pragmatism, social behaviorism, and neo-Hegelianism. The intellectual origins of symbolic interactions can be attributed to the works of William James, George Simmel, John Dewey, Max Weber, and George Herbert Mead. Mead is believed to be the founder of the theory, although he did not publish any academic work on the paradigm. The book highlights the works of the intellectual heirs of symbolic interactionism— Herbert Blumer, Mead’s former student, who was instrumental in publishing the lectures of his former professor posthumously with the title Symbolic Interactionism.
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=CluZDwAAQBAJ


Symbolic Interactionism: Perspective and Method

Herbert Blumer
University of California Press, 1986 - Social Science - 208 pages

This is a collection of articles dealing with the point of view of symbolic interactionism and with the topic of methodology in the discipline of sociology. It is written by the leading figure in the school of symbolic interactionism, and presents what might be regarded as the most authoritative statement of its point of view, outlining its fundamental premises and sketching their implications for sociological study. Blumer states that symbolic interactionism rests on three premises: that human beings act toward things on the basis of the meanings of things have for them; that the meaning of such things derives from the social interaction one has with one's fellows; and that these meanings are handled in, and modified through, an interpretive process.
https://books.google.co.in/books/about/Symbolic_Interactionism.html?id=lhdyvDMUeLMC





Key Sociological Thinkers: Second Edition


Rob Stones
Macmillan International Higher Education, 06-Nov-2007 - Social Science - 408 pages

The second edition of this popular and established text provides a comprehensive guide to 23 of the most influential thinkers in sociology. Written by leading academics in the field, Key Sociological Thinkers 2e provides a clear and contextualized introduction to classical and contemporary theory.

Each chapter offers an insightful assessment of a different theorist, exploring their lives, works and legacies. Drawing upon examples from the everyday world, an innovative 'Seeing Things Differently' section in every chapter demonstrates how theoretical ideas can be used to illuminate aspects of social life in new ways.

Included in this new edition:
• Four new chapters, looking at Theodor Adorno, Michael Mann, Dorothy Smith and Zygmunt Bauman
• Chapter updates on recent developments
• An important new introduction
• Three types of contents page to provide easy navigation of the text
• Useful glossary boxes throughout, with their own dedicated contents page, to highlight and explain complex theoretical ideas.

Key Sociological Thinkers 2e provides a stimulating overview of the best of sociological thought, from Karl Marx, Emile Durkheim and Georg Simmel to Nancy Chodorow, Michel Foucault and Anthony Giddens. It continues to be an essential text for all students of sociological theory.
Chapter 5 is Herbert Blumer

Symbolic Interactionist Theory
Sociological Paradigm #3: Symbolic Interactionist Theory
https://courses.lumenlearning.com/suny-herkimer-intro-to-sociology-1/chapter/reading-symbolic-interactionist-theory/

Mead vs. Blumer: The Divergent Methodological Perspectives of Social Behaviorism and Symbolic Interactionism
Clark McPhail and Cynthia Rexroat

American Sociological Review
Vol. 44, No. 3 (Jun., 1979), pp. 449-467 (19 pages)
https://www.jstor.org/stable/2094886

Hermeneutic Phenomenology



As a branch or method of phenomenology, hermeneutic phenomenology is concerned with the life world or human experience as it is lived. The focus is toward illuminating details and seemingly trivial aspects within experience that may be taken for granted in our lives, with a goal of creating meaning and achieving a sense of understanding.  While Husserl focused on understanding beings or phenomena, Heidegger focused on ‘Dasein’, that is translated as ‘the mode of being human’ or ‘the situated meaning of a human in the world’. Husserl was interested in acts of attending, perceiving, recalling, and thinking about the world and human beings were understood primarily as knowers. Heidegger, in contrast, viewed humans as being primarily concerned creatures with an emphasis on their fate in an alien world.

Consciousness is not separate from the world, in Heidegger’s view, but is a formation of historically lived experience. He believed that understanding is a basic form of human existence in that understanding is not a way we know the world, but rather the way we are. Koch (1995) outlined Heidegger’s emphasis on the historicality of understanding as one’s background or situatedness in the world. Historicality, a person’s history or background, includes what a culture gives a person from birth and is handed down, presenting ways of understanding the world. Through this understanding, one determines what is ‘real’, yet Heidegger also believed that one’s background cannot be made completely explicit. Munhall (1989) described Heidegger as having a view of people and the world as indissolubly related in cultural, in social and in historical contexts.

Interpretation is seen as critical to this process of understanding. Claiming that to be human was to interpret, Heidegger (1927/1962) stressed that every encounter involves an interpretation influenced by an individual’s background or historicality. Polkinghorne (1983) described this interpretive process as concentrating on historical meanings of experience and their development and cumulative effects on individual and social levels.

This interpretive process is achieved through a hermeneutic circle which moves from the parts of experience, to the whole of experience and back and forth again and again to increase the depth of engagement with and the understanding of texts [interview transcripts] (Annells, 1996; Polkinghorne, 1983). Kvale (1996) viewed the end of this spiraling through a hermeneutic circle as occurring when one has reached a place of sensible meaning, free of inner contradictions, for the moment.

Sources

http://www.ualberta.ca/~iiqm/backissues/2_3final/pdf/laverty.pdf
(Laverty explains the differences between Husserl's way of phenomenology and Heidegger's way phenomenology)

Hermeneutic Phenomenological  Research Method Simplified - 2011 article
http://www.ku.edu.np/bodhi/vol5_no1/11.%20Narayan%20Kafle.%20Hermeneutic%20Phenomenological%20Research%20Method.pdf



Hermeneutic Phenomenological Research: A Practical Guide for Nurse Researchers
 By Marlene Zichi Cohen
http://books.google.co.in/books?id=jPIqRic8TXMC  

Hermeneutic Phenomenological study of Philanthropian Leaders
Lisa Barrow
http://www.bookpump.com/dps/pdf-b/1122373b.pdf


Understanding and Leading Organization - A Hermeneutic Philosophical Investigation
Dominik Heil
http://libraryofprofessionalcoaching.com/wp-app/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Issue1_2010-Heil.pdf


Phenomenological Reduction and Emergent Design: Complementary Methods for Leadership Narrative Interpretation and Metanarrative Development
Donald L. Gilstrap
University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma, USA
International Journal of Qualitative Methods 6 (1) March 2007
http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/IJQM/article/viewFile/469/455


Authentic leadership and the narrative self
Raymond T. Sparrowe
The Leadership Quarterly 16 (2005) 419 – 439

Researching Lived Experience: Human Science for an Action Sensitive Pedagogy (Google eBook)
Max Van Manen
SUNY Press, 01-Jan-1990 - Education - 202 pages
http://books.google.co.in/books?id=fBCZ5n6okOYC


Researching Lived Experience, Second Edition: Human Science for an Action Sensitive Pedagogy
Max van Manen
First published in 1990
Routledge, 16-Jun-2016 - Social Science - 220 pages

Bestselling author Max van Manen’s Researching Lived Experience introduces a human science approach to research methodology in education and related fields. The book takes as its starting point the "everyday lived experience" of human beings in educational situations. Rather than rely on abstract generalizations and theories in the traditional sense, the author offers an alternative that taps the unique nature of each human situation. First published in 1990, this book is a classic of social science methodology and phenomenological research, selling tens of thousands of copies over the past quarter century. Left Coast is making available the second edition of this work, never before released outside Canada. Researching Lived Experience offers detailed methodological explications and practical examples of inquiry. It shows how to orient oneself to human experience in education and how to construct a textual question which evokes a fundamental sense of wonder, and it provides a broad and systematic set of approaches for gaining experiential material which forms the basis for textual reflections. The author: -Discusses the part played by language in educational research-Pays special attention to the methodological function of anecdotal narrative in research-Offers approaches to structuring the research text in relation to the particular kinds of questions being studied
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=1LZmDAAAQBAJ

Investigating subjectivity: Research on Lived Experience
Carolyn Ellis, 1992
http://books.google.co.in/books/about/Investigating_Subjectivity.html?id=Fakwo1jA8mMC

Researching Entrepreneurship as Livid Experience
http://henrikberglund.com/Phenomenology.pdf

Conducting phenomenological research: Rationalizing the methods and rigour of the phenomenology of practice.
Errasti-Ibarrondo B1,2,3, Jordán JA4, Díez-Del-Corral MP1,3, Arantzamendi M2,3.
To offer a complete outlook in a readable easy way of van Manen's hermeneutic-phenomenological method to nurses interested in undertaking phenomenological research.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29543383



A presentation of research on negative capability done using hermeneutic phenomenology by Anil Behal.
Phd oral presentation
8 April 2014

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNURaOGy8Hg
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Read Transcendental Phenomenology  also

Updated  14 Sep 2019,  20 July 2013

Qualitative Research in Psychology



Qualitative Psychology: A Practical Guide to Research Methods
Jonathan A Smith
SAGE, 18-Dec-2007 - Social Science - 288 pages

Covering all the main qualitative approaches now used in psychology - the Second Edition offers readers a step-by-step guide to carrying out research using each particular method with plenty of pedagogical advice. All chapters are written by international experts - many of them key figures in either the inception or development of their chosen method.
Key features of the Second Edition include:

- updated and extended chapters

- examples of good research studies using each approach

- text boxes and further readings
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=D5xHYpXVDaAC


Psychology and 'Human Nature'
Peter Ashworth
Routledge, 12-Nov-2012 - Psychology - 198 pages

Psychology and 'Human Nature' problematizes what psychology usually takes for granted - the meaning of the psyche or 'human nature'. Peter Ashworth provides a coherent account of many of the major schools of thought in psychology and its related disciplines, including: sociobiology and evolutionary psychology, psychoanalysis, cognitive psychology, radical behaviourism, existentialism, discursive psychology and postmodernism. For each approach he considers the claims or assumptions being made about 'human nature', especially regarding issues of consciousness, the self, the body, other people and the physical world.

Psychology and 'Human Nature' will be essential reading for all students of psychology.
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=KsWJ7uxTizYC

Tuesday, September 10, 2019

Postmodernism - Introduction - Bibliography



https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/postmodernism/




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postmodernism

Postmodernism relies on critical theory, an approach that confronts the ideological, social, and historical structures that shape and constrain cultural production. Common targets of postmodernism and critical theory include universalist notions of objective reality, morality, truth, human nature, reason, language, and social progress. Postmodernist approaches have been adopted in a variety of academic and theoretical disciplines, including political science, organization theory, cultural studies, philosophy of science, economics, linguistics, architecture, feminist theory, and literary criticism, as well as art movements in fields such as literature and music.

Postmodern thinkers frequently call attention to the contingent or socially-conditioned nature of knowledge claims and value systems, situating them as products of particular political, historical, or cultural discourses and hierarchies. Accordingly, postmodern thought is broadly characterized by tendencies to self-referentiality, epistemological and moral relativism, pluralism, and irreverence. Postmodernism is often associated with schools of thought such as deconstruction and post-structuralism, as well as philosophers such as Jean-François Lyotard, Jacques Derrida, and Fredric Jameson.


Good explanation of various cultures in the context of postmodernism:
https://www.cla.purdue.edu/academic/english/theory/postmodernism/modules/introduction.html

Logical Positivism - Empiricism - Introduction - Bibliography



Logical Empiricism
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/logical-empiricism/

Some sentences to be examined and understood from the article.

In late 1929 Wittgenstein proposed (Waismann 1967/1979), in conversations with Schlick and Waismann, a strict verificationism as a basis for identifying the legitimate parts of discourse, this seemed to the logical empiricists to be a very attractive tool for setting aside the unscientific parts of philosophy.

This does not mean, however, that all logical empiricists or even all members of the Vienna Circle accepted the strict verificationist view that in order to be meaningful a claim must be implied by a finite number of observation sentences. Even though those observation sentences need not be true, this view had the drawback that so-called laws of nature would not be meaningful on this criterion. Schlick was prepared to bite the bullet and hold that laws were not statements at all but principles of inference. Others were not prepared to go so far and sought more liberal formulations. 


The central idea behind verificationism is linking some sort of meaningfulness with (in principle) confirmation, at least for synthetic sentences. The actual formulations embodied not only such a link but various particular accounts of confirmation as well.

Ayer was careful to restrict his criterion of meaningfulness to synthetic sentences and to demand only in principle confirmation. And the formulation seems very natural: Confirmation is a feature that applies to sentences (or groups of them) and not to sub-sentential parts, and for an empiricist the content that a synthetic sentence has would be empirical content. So it would seem that to have empirical content a sentence, A, should either directly imply some observational sentence or add to the observational content of some other sentence, B. That is, the conjunction of A and B should imply some observational sentence not implied by B alone.

Ayer understood the principle to be a definition, defining a technical term, ‘meaning’. If so, then the sentence expressing the principle would indeed be analytic.

By 1935 Carnap had introduced an important new element into his philosophy called the Principle of Tolerance. Tolerance is a radical idea. There is no uniquely correct logic (1934/1937 xiv–xv). Empiricism is a convention (Carnap, 1936/1937 33). Perhaps more precisely each of the various versions of empiricism (including some sort of verificationism) is best understood as a proposal for structuring the language of science. Before tolerance, both empiricism and verificationism are announced as if they are simply correct. Correspondingly, what Carnap called metaphysics is then treated as though it is, as a matter of brute fact, unintelligible. But what is announced thus dogmatically can be rejected equally dogmatically. Once tolerance is in place, alternative philosophic positions, including metaphysical ones, are construed as alternative proposals for structuring the language of science.


Carnap believes that there are indeed very good practical reasons for adopting the proposal of verificationism, for choosing a language of science in which all substantive (synthetic) claims can, at least in principle, be brought before the court of public experience. The reason is that if we do not require this, the result is “wearisome controversies” that there is no hope of resolving. 

Thought of in this way the verifiability principle does not describe natural language, it is not intended to. It is intended to reform language to make it a more useful tool for the purposes of science.



Logical positivism
PHILOSOPHY
WRITTEN BY: The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
https://www.britannica.com/topic/logical-positivism

Phenomenology - An Approach to Psychology

I came across the topic - Four Approaches to Psychology and Phenomenology was included as an approach to Psychology under Subjective approaches

Interesting article on phenomenal psychology
http://www.iep.utm.edu/phen-psy/


An Approach to Phenomenological Psychology: The Contingencies of the Lifeworld
in Journal of Phenomenological Psychology
Author: Peter Ashworth  (Ashworth wrote number of articles on phenomenology)
https://brill.com/view/journals/jpp/34/2/article-p145_1.xml


Phenomenology and sociology
http://sociology.about.com/od/Sociological-Theory/a/Social-Phenomenology.htm



Updated on 11 Sep 2019, 23 July 2015

The Non-Positivist Research Strategy - Phenomenology - Qualitative Evidence





Phenomenology and Non-Positivism - Introduction


To understand and develop theory of the problems of people and organisations, an alternative to positivist research strategy is non-positivist approach to research to evidence collection..  It is increasingly accepted among business and management scholars that phenomenology provides a suitable base for researching the central issues concerning people and their behavior.

Different Definitions


Cohen and Manion (1987) : ’Phenomenology is a theoretical point of view that advocates the study of direct experience taken at face value; and one which sees behaviour as determined by the phenomena of experience rather than by external, objective and physically described reality.’

In phenomenology, the perception of an individual about an external event or stimulus is the basic object of the enquiry. The meaning given by a person to the external event or stimulus can be expressed by that person only. Hence direct experience of the person is the basic evidence on input side and his response to the perceived meaning as expressed by him and his actual behavior can be the output.

Rudestein and Newton(1992) suggest that phenomenology ‘attempts to describe and elucidate the meanings of human experience’.

The above definition also indicates the attention to human experience or perception of external events.

According to Camus (O’ Brien,1965, ‘phenomenology declines to explain the world, it wants to be merely a description of actual experience’.

Phenomenology does not explain or describe external event as the important thing. Its focus is on the description of the experience or the  perceived external object.


Phenomenology- What? Why? And How?




The Context of the Research

In business and management studies it is essential to understand the context within which the research is being conducted by considering social or cultural factors that impinge on the research problem.

Some Philosophical Underpinnings


Philosophically the non-positivist position derives from phenomenology, which emphasises the primacy of  experience (perception). 

The term phenomenology essentially describes the philosophical approach that what is directly perceived and felt is considered more reliable than the explanations or interpretations of the external events by the researcher.   It is a search for understanding based on the interpretation of the person participating as informer rather than the interpretation of the external event made by the researcher. 

The phenomenological approach is now one of the qualitative evidence collection and research approached to research.

The primacy of Context

Phenomenology assumes that knowledge can be gained by concentrating on phenomena as experienced by people.

Within phenomenology also there are multiple approaches. One approach is based on  the relationship between self and society, as expressed in the work of Mead(1934), the originator of phenomenological psychology.  Mead accorded primacy to the process from which the ‘organism creates its environment’ ( Clegg and Dunkerley, 1980:267) which leads to the distinction between act and content, with the stress on the act and what that means to the actor (Yontef,1993).

In phemenological approach, the external variables being manipulated could not be treated as independent of the meaning ‘which individuals assigned to them’. This is a finding of Hawthorne study. Today this is one of the fundamental assumptions of phenomenological researchers (Collins and Young, 1988)


Phenomenology and Qualitative Methods


The evidence-gathering technique in the theoretical tradition of phenomenology uses a very specific method in which the researcher must first attempt to remove all traces of personal involvement in the phenomena being researched. It means researchers should not give undue importance to the external event that he is aware of. He has to focus on the meaning given to it by the interviewee or the research subject person.

Similarly the researcher has to limit any other influences from impinging on the evidence – collection exercise before finally gathering data around specific themes.

The interviewing process  followed  by  feminist and hermeneutic researchers is different. 

Non-positivist research assumes that objects of enquiry in the social sciences are social issues – a key concern is that research should acknowledge and treat people as essentially human rather than as mere objects.

Central to this argument is the fact that people have the ability to think, argue, and experience the world or events in idiosyncratic ways and that positivistic research strategies (which assume universally common ways) are unable to deliver an understanding of these human dimensions.

Control and the Research Process

These assumptions about the need and use of controls are seldom relevant in non-positivist research, due to the difficulty of controlling variables in social settings.

Evidence Collection in a Natural Setting

Non-positivist research essentially relies on collecting evidence in as natural and non-controlled a setting as possible, rejecting the formalism imposed on research activity by a positivist approach. Experiments that involve controlled variables are not part of qualitative approaches.

Using Non-Positivist Methods


Researchers are subject to prejudices, cultural beliefs and values that they bring into the research process with them and they influence choice of research strategy. Certain characteristics of the researcher, supervisor and the institution favor selection of qualitative research strategy.  These include socialisation, the nature of the object being investigated, the outcomes sought from research and who is funding the research.

Socialisation

The disciplines from which the researcher comes, as well as his or her work experiences, will have a strong influence upon the research strategy that is favoured.

Funding the Research

The agency or organisation that is funding the research often determines the nature of the object to be investigated and the methods that are to be used in undertaking that task.

Developing the Qualitative  Research Strategy

By research strategy is meant consideration by students as to which research community they feel they belong to, and that the researchers know the epistemological, ethical and ontological assumptions of their research. 

Easter by-Smith et al.  (1994:27) proposed philosophical positions that generate a useful classification of the key features of positivist and phenomenological paradigms.  They can be visualized as a continuum and  can be used to explore the orientation of the researcher in order that strategies and tactics can be consciously selected.

Qualitative research strategy or paradigm is selected when certain positions on ontology, epistemology, human behavior and sample size are specified.


Epistemology is based on non-positivist criteria.
Actions of human beings are voluntary subject to their awareness of alternatives and choice.
Ideographic methods (small sample sizes) are preferred by qualitative paradigm. 

Beginning the Research


Howard and Sharp (1983) outline a process model that is useful in identifying the phases that form part of the qualitative research process.  They distinguish between the ‘planning’ and effectuation’ stages and these in turn can be broken down into the activities set out below :

Planning :

Identify a broad area of study
Select the research topic
Decide the approach
Formulate a plan of action

Effectuation:

Collect the evidence
Analyse or interpret the evidence
Present the findings.



As Marshall and Rossman (1995) argue, the planning stage is fundamental to the consideration of issues such as developing an argument that is convincing, showing how the particular case being investigated fits with the bigger picture, and that the design of the research is sound.  It is through this planning that the competence of the researcher is demonstrated.

Area of study and Topic
In this respect, creativity and immersion in a topic area are  important ingredients

Induction


Within a non-positivist paradigm, there is more emphasis on theory development and it is acceptable for the generation of a research topic or question to come from experience rather than reflection on existing theory and concepts. More research studies in positivist research are of theory testing nature  Thus, an inductive process to generate the research question is entirely acceptable in qualitative research.  Intuitive notions about phenomena often from part of the practice of researchers.  The most creative theories are often imaginative visions which spring from the observed or recorded facts.

Deduction


In the qualitative research, alternatively the student might well start from a deductive position and then seek to use the methods suggested by Howard and Sharp (1983) to generate research topics. These range from looking for ideas in text (theses, journal articles, books and reviews, the media) to communication with others (experts in the field, colleagues, potential users of the research outputs.)

In this approach, the researcher understands the existing theory, and selects his topics and subjects with a view to  see how the specific instance selected by him fits into the wider whole theory.


Importance of the Literature


Non-positivist researchers will use real-life problems that emerge from experience as the inspiration for research (Marshall and Rossman,1995:17).  It is important that this is done in tandem with at least an emerging understanding of the literature.

Formulating the research problem is the next important step in which intuitive notions should be more fully investigated and narrowed down into a researchable, informal hypothesis or statement

Feasibility of the Research


Once the research problem has been formulated, it is important to think about the feasibility of the research and to be satisfied that there is sufficient material (published literature, secondary and primary evidence) to work with.

Plan the Research


The main challenge in planning the research is for the student to consider, and explicitly state, the overall design of the study.  The research methodology and the specific research methods have to be explicitly stated at the beginning of the research study. Qualitative studies may have inbuilt flexibility to change the method as the study progresses. This feature is also mentioned in the research design stage.

There are differences in methods employed by different qualitative research approaches. A feminist researcher will specifically set out to exploit personal involvement, whereas phenomenological interviewing might stress the removal of ‘all traces of personal involvement in the phenomena being studied’, such that all preconceptions are removed and do not interface with the research process (Marshall and Rossman,1995:82).  On the other hand, a researcher wishing to undertake hermeneutical research will attempt to generate high–quality textual material for examination.


Marshall and Rossman (1995:41) have developed a table matching research questions with tactics. strategies. The purpose of the study and the research question is the starting point for determining specific research strategy and evidence-collection techniques.



Research Proposal - Qualitative Research Strategy


The final outcome of the above process will be a research proposal covering the following:

What :    outline of research problem, tracing historical roots and  linking specific to general; conceptual framework and   literature review; purpose of study and specific research              questions.

How :     description of research strategy and design which will yield specific evidence required to answer questions;  methods justified and linked back to research question and research site.

Where :  where the research will be conducted                                                                                                                                                      
When :   ideally a time line to spell out major phases of  research process

Gaining Access


Access to the interviewee (the ability to get close to the object of study, to really be able to find out what is happening) is the researcher’s biggest problem. The choice of site (interviewee) should be clearly justified and a good research site will have the following properties:

Entry should be possible;
The site will present the possibility of collecting pertinent evidence;
Trust can be established with respondents;
Evidence quality and credibility of the research can be assured.

The researcher can best ensure that conditions 1 and 3 are met by developing good relationships with gatekeepers and/or informants (Gummesson,1991).

Collecting Evidence


It is now well accepted that where a non- positivist approach is adopted, it is difficult to separate evidence collection from hypothesis construction and theory building.

Evidence collection can usefully be divided into three types: observation, interviews, textual analysis.

Observation


The main aim of observation in research is to gain an understanding of other cultures by sharing the space of the research site at least for some part of the duration of the research.   The argument for adopting observation as an evidence-collection strategy is that real understanding will come about through extended observation as this enables an understanding of both the context and process of behavior.

Interviews


This is a method commonly used in non-positivist research. Open-ended interviews and semi-structured interviews.

The schedule could for example be sent to academic and practitioner referees who can provide feedback on how they understood and responded to questions.

Advice that the key to getting on with evidence collection is that the researcher should really (and appear to) ‘have a sincere curiosity about the lives and experiences of others.  In our experience the best way to break the ice is to discuss informally an issue (mutual friends or interests, important recent news which relate to the company, etc.) unrelated to the research per se, which will allow both the researcher and the respondent too relax.

A second potential problem can arise from covering everything on the interview schedule or guide.  If there is an interview schedule to cover the researcher should be able to use questions as prompts to steer conversation in the desired direction or, indeed, to use  these to probe particular issues.

Researchers may supply informants with a copy of the interview transcripts.  This is done to ensure that the transcription is an accurate portrayal of the proceeding, which is an essential check on the validity of the evidence, but also to sustain the relationship with respondents.

Analysis of Texts (Transcript of the interview)

This is the most demanding aspect of non-positivist research.  In practice this means that the evidence has to be read, re-read, and such themes or concepts have to be catalogued.  It is vital that this process is based on the evidence itself and that these themes emerge from the bottom up, rather than being the result of selecting a theory by convenience and then dipping into fragments that support such a theory.

Evidence Analysis Software

Most qualitative researchers do not make use of computers in analysis, except for producing and keeping a record of interview transcripts.  Today, however, the situation is different and for those researchers who feel comfortable with using a computer-based approach to analysis there is a wide choice of software available -  from simple text retrievers through to conceptual network builders.

For instance, Silverman (1994) advocates the use of such analysis software to assist with analysis of field notes such that the researcher can more easily file and index text into several different categories. Alternatively, NUD.IST might be used to facilitate searching by indexes and to generate new categories and relationships.

Evaluation of Qualitative Research


Criteria used of positivist studies

Validity

In non positivist research validity concerns whether the researcher has gained full access to knowledge and meanings of respondents.  Hence the importance of good-quality access to enable such contact to be made within the research site.  There is also the need to feed research field notes or interview transcripts back to respondents for verification to ensure that it reflects their understanding of the phenomenon (Collins and Young,1988).  Access therefore becomes one of the criteria against which the research will be evaluated.

Collins and Young(1988) further contribute ideas regarding validity in hermeneutical research.   The authors argue that a positive response to the questions, together with an internally consistent argument, would place a particular research account in line to have validity conferred by readers and users of that research.

Reliability

The distinguishing characteristic here is that similar observations should be made by researchers on different occasions  (Easterby - smith et al.,1994) and the concern is therefore with how replicable the study is.   Marshall and Rossman (1995) advocate that, rather than pretend that research conditions can be replicable, it is much better to accept the particularist nature of the research and to follow good practice guidelines such as establishing an audit trail.

This can be achieved by keeping the evidence collected in an easily retrievable form to enable others to investigate it should doubts regarding the research ever be raised.  Second, the researcher should keep a log or journal cataloguing research design decisions and justifications for these.  In this way the methods used become transparent and the parameters regarding the research questions, setting, assumptions and theoretical frameworks are open to scrutiny.

Generalisability

Here the researcher is essentially concerned with the applicability of theories that were generated in one setting to other settings.   Gummesson (1991:79) argues that qualitative research is less concerned with making statements about the commonality of particular findings than with the fact that good qualitative research should enable one to attain an understanding of organisational processes.  He argues that generalisation can be understood in two ways:

Quantitative studies based on a large number of observations are required in order to determine how much, how often and how many.  The other… involves the use of in-depth studies based on exhaustive investigations and analyses to identify certain phenomena, for example the effects of change in corporate strategy, and lay bare mechanisms that one suspects will also exist in other companies.

Quality of Qualitative Research 

A list was constructed by drawing on the work of Lincoln and Guba (1995).

Credibility

The issue of credibility refers to being able to demonstrate that the research was designed in a manner that accurately identified and described the phenomenon to be investigated.  Here the credibility (rather than internal validity) will derive from an in-depth description of the complexities of the research setting, drawing on empirical evidence.  Such a representation of the phenomenon will therefore be valid for that particular study.  This does mean that the research should explicitly state the parameters of the study in terms of the population, setting and theoretical framework used.

Transferability

This refers to external validity and is dependent upon the researcher stating the theoretical parameters of the research explicitly.  Here it would be important to specify how the specific phenomenon or research setting being investigated ties into a broader case, making clear the specific organisational processes about which generalisations will be made.

Dependability

The positivist construct of reliability assumes unchanging conditions that enable replication of the study.  This assumption does not hold for non-positivist research and it is more appropriate for the researcher to account for changes in the conditions of the phenomenon being investigated, as well as research design changes which are made because of a better understanding of the research setting.

Confirmability

With phenomenological research the concept of confirmability is used instead of objectivity.  The question to pose is: does the research confirm general findings or not?  The test is whether the findings of the research can be confirmed by another similar study.



Additional Resources


An Introduction to Phenomenological Research
http://www.sld.demon.co.uk/resmethy.pdf
(A good reference to read - This article may be focusing on using phenomenology in educational research)

Nomothetic Approach to Science - Idiographic Approach to Science by KVSSNRao

Five Qualitative Approaches to Enquiry (Cresswell Book?)
Narrative Research, Phenomenological Research, Grounded Theory Research, Ethnographic Research, Case Study Research  (Interesting descriptions of each approach is given in this chapter)
http://www.sagepub.com/upm-data/13421_Chapter4.pdf

Research Methods for Managers

John Gill, Phil Johnson
SAGE, 21-Jan-2010 - Business & Economics - 288 pages


The  text  succeeds in providing a step-by-step guide to implementing particular methodologies, while simultaneously encouraging a strong awareness of philosophical assumptions.

NEW to the Fourth Edition:

- Expanded coverage to accommodate recent developments in management research methodology. New topics include: doing a literature review, case study research, action research, mixed methods, and writing-up.

- Packed with practical research examples and exercises that encourage students to reflect upon the issues raised and relate them to their own experience.

- Additional learning features including critical reflection boxes, case studies and chapter summaries.

- A companion website with a full Instructors' Manual and PowerPoint slides. Students have free access to downloadable journal articles and author podcasts.

Visit the companion website at www.sagepub.co.uk/gillandjohnson

Using a practical approach, but with explicit attention to the role of theory in management research, the new edition of Research Methods for Managers is a stimulating guide for students in management, organization and organization research.

Preview the book: https://books.google.co.in/books/about/Research_Methods_for_Managers.html?id=R4Q3u54hWEoC


Naturalistic Inquiry
Yvonna S. Lincoln, Egon G. Guba
SAGE, 1985 - Social Science - 416 pages

Showing how science is limited by its dominant mode of investigation, Lincoln and Guba propose an alternative paradigm--a "naturalistic" rather than "rationalistic" method of inquiry--in which the investigator avoids manipulating research outcomes. A "paradigm shift" is under way in many fields, they contend, and go on to describe the different assumptions of the two approaches regarding the nature of reality, subject-object interaction, the possibility of generalization, the concept of causality, and the role of values. The authors also offer guidance for research in the field (where, they say, naturalistic inquiry always takes place). Useful tips are given, for example, on "designing" a study as it unfolds, establishing "trustworthiness," and writing a case report. This book helps researchers "both to understand and to do naturalistic inquiry." Of particular interest to educational researchers, it is valuable for all social scientists involved with questions of qualitative and quantitative methodology.
https://books.google.co.in/books/about/Naturalistic_Inquiry.html?id=2oA9aWlNeooC


Relativism
Egon G. Guba
Curriculum Inquiry
Vol. 22, No. 1 (Spring, 1992), pp. 17-23 (7 pages)
Published by: Taylor & Francis, Ltd.
https://www.jstor.org/stable/1180091?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents