Lecture 3 Case Study and Ethnography
Lecture 3 Case Study and Ethnography
Ethnography
DR. Rania AlBsoul
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• Announcements
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DISCUSSION
Paper Title: How does accreditation influence staff perceptions of quality in residential aged care?
•What are the data collection methods you need to address the research questions?
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Learning objectives
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Case Study Research (Definition)
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Background about case study
• Case studies have been long established in healthcare, medicine,
anthropology, and psychology research.
• The case usually describes a series of events that reflect the activity or
problem as it happened.
• Triangulation
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Background about case study (continued)
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Background about case study (continued)
• Analytic generalisation is distinct from statistical generalisation
- It does not draw inferences from data to a population. Instead, analytic generalisation compares
the results of a case study to a previously developed theory.
- In doing a case study, your goal will be to expand and generalize theories (analytic generalization)
and not to enumerate frequencies (statistical generalization) (Yin, 2010).
- Research might produce analytical generalizability when a new concept or new theory is
constructed that later makes sense and has significance in other research, even if the contexts or
populations are different (Smith, 2018).
- The researcher might re-examine established concepts and theories in a study through a different
methodology and, in turn, produce new conceptual and theoretical understandings of a topic.
When that occurs, and the researcher or other researchers show the value of such concepts or
theories in other research, then again it can be said that the work generates a form of analytical
generalisation (Smith, 2018).
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Types of case study
• Exploratory: aims to explore and determine the purposes of any
subsequent research.
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How to perform a case study?
• Determine and define the research questions.
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Step 1: Determine and Define the Research
Questions
• The focus or intent is established once an intensive review of the
relevant literature has been completed and the problem has been
well identified.
• Broad aims often remain the same. What changes and evolves is the
set of research questions.
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Example on the evolving of research questions
• Research questions might be:
- What proportion of patients don't comply with medical advice on drugs?
- Are there differences (i.e. age, social class) between different categories of patient?
- Is age a factor?
- Is the medical condition a factor?
• As you get into the research, as you get to talk to patients, doctors and practice
nurses, other questions might emerge:
- how clearly are patients told about drug use and the need for compliance?
- Would follow-up improve compliance?
- Are patients taking the drugs but not complying with other aspects of medical advice
(diet, exercise)?
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Step 2: Select the Cases and Determine
Data-Gathering and Analysis Techniques
• Case can be called as Unit of Analysis.
• The researcher must select single or multiple cases that reflect the research questions in Step 1.
• This step also involves selecting the instruments and other data-gathering strategies that will be used.
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Step 2: Select the Cases and Determine
Data-Gathering and Analysis Techniques (continued)
• Construct validity requires the researcher to select the correct tool or
method for the concepts being studied.
• Reliability refers to how well the procedures are documented to ensure that
the research can be replicated
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Step 3: Prepare to collect the data
• Preparation for the vast amounts of data prior to collection will save
the researcher much time and frustration later.
• Due to the nature of case study research, the researcher will generate
large amounts of data from multiple sources. Time taken to plan prior
to the research will allow one to organize multiple databases and set
categories for sorting and managing the data.
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Step 4: Collect data in the field
• Data collection is emergent.
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Step 4: Collect data in the field (continued)
• Criteria for determining when it is appropriate to end data collection:
a. Exhaustion of sources: Data sources (e.g., key informants, document analysis)
can be recycled and tapped many times, but at some point, it should become
clear that little more information or relevance will be gained from further
engagement with them.
b. Saturation of categories: Eventually, the categories used to code data appear to
be definitively established. When continuing data collection produces only tiny
increments of new information about categories in comparison to the effort
expended to get them, the researcher can feel confident about ending data
collection.
c. Overextension: Even if new information is still coming in, the researcher might
develop a sense that the new information is far removed from the central core
of viable categories that have emerged and does not contribute usefully to the
emergence of additional viable categories
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Step 5: Evaluate and Analyse the data
• Triangulation.
• When multiple cases are chosen, a typical format is to first provide a detailed
description of each case and themes within the case, called a within-case analysis
followed by a thematic analysis across the cases, called a cross-case analysis.
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Step 6: Prepare the report
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Limitations of case study
• The large quantity of data, combined with the limited timeframe available for
some researches may impact on the depth of analysis of the data within the
available time and resources.
• Large quantity of data may veer away from the research focus.
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Ethnography
• Ethno: people or folk; Graphy: describe something.
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Ethnography ( Please watch the video)
https://youtu.be/6lIzz3DlEWQ
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Ethnography (Definition)
• Ethnography is the study of social interactions, behaviours, and perceptions
that occur within groups, teams, organisations, and communities.
• Typically, the studied group in ethnography is one that has been together for
an extended period of time, so that their shared language, patterns of
behaviour, and attitudes have merged into a discernible pattern.
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Ethnography ( continued)
• Through the collection of observations, interviews and documentary
data, which are triangulated (i.e. compared and contrasted with one
another).
• Through its use of in situ observations ethnographers can ‘immerse’
themselves in a social setting, thereby generating a rich understanding
of social action.
• Participant observation also provides ethnographers an opportunity to
gather empirical insights into social practices which are normally
‘hidden’ from the public gaze.
• Ethnographer not only observes a social group, setting or subject
matter, but engages in the participation actively with a general
commitment to observing everyday social life.
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Ethnography ( continued)
• Ethnographic research is exploratory in nature. This approach means that the
ethnographer goes into the field to explore a cultural group and/or explore
certain social interactions.
• The unpredictability of everyday life often means that data collection activities
can be disrupted or access withdrawn depending on ever-changing local
circumstances and politics.
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Steps of Ethnographic research
1. Planning
2. Sampling
3. Data collection
4. Data analysis
5. Write up
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Step 1: Planning
• Access and ethics
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Step 1: Planning (continued)
• Establish rapport.
• Gatekeepers.
• Ethical approvals
• Ethical issues:
- Avoidance of harm.
- Informed consent.
- Privacy and confidentiality.
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Step 2: Sampling
• Sampling of the research setting is an important component of data
collection.
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Step 3: Data collection
• Gather information where the group works and lives (Fieldwork).
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Step 3: Data collection (continued)
• Participant observation
- A field strategy that simultaneously combines document analysis, interviewing of
respondents and informants, direct participation and observation, and introspection
(reflection).
- Ethnographic fieldwork typically involves the development of close connections
between the fieldworker and subjects and situations being studied
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Step 3: Data collection (continued)
• Triangulation: An analytical technique that incorporates and compares
multiple methods with the intent of providing a more in-depth and
holistic understanding of a phenomenon.
• Types of Triangulation:
- Data triangulation
- Methods triangulation.
- Investigator triangulation.
- Theory triangulation.
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Step 4: Data Analysis
• Three aspects:
1. Description: recounting and describing of data.
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Step 5: write up
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Advantages
• “ Real- world data”
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Challenges
• The time to collect data is extensive, involving prolonged time in the field.
• There is a possibility that the researcher will "go native" and be unable to
complete the study or be compromised in the study.
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Reading Material
• Power point presentation
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References
• Creswell, J. W., & Poth, C. N. (2007). Qualitative inquiry and research design:
Choosing among five approaches: Sage publications.
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Thank you !
Comments
Questions
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