đ§ Analysis, Interpretation, and Reporting in Qualitative ResearchÂ
đ Key terms
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Qualitative Analysis | The process of identifying patterns, themes, and meanings within textual or visual data. |
| Inductive Coding | Deriving codes and themes directly from the data rather than from pre-existing theory. |
| Deductive Coding | Using a pre-established framework or theory to code data. |
| Thematic Analysis | A method for identifying, analyzing, and reporting patterns (themes) across a dataset. |
| Content Analysis | Systematic coding and categorizing of text to quantify patterns of meaning. |
| Grounded Theory | A methodology where theory emerges from the data itself through iterative coding. |
| Reflexivity | Continuous reflection on how the researcherâs own background, assumptions, and position influence the study. |
| Triangulation | Using multiple sources, methods, or investigators to cross-check findings. |
| Member Checking | Returning findings to participants for confirmation of accuracy. |
| Thick Description | Providing detailed contextual information so readers can judge transferability. |
| Audit Trail | A transparent record of research decisions, data, and analysis steps. |
| Interpretivism | The philosophical stance that emphasizes understanding the subjective meanings individuals attach to experiences. |
| Credibility | The extent to which findings are believable and accurately represent participantsâ realities. |
| Transferability | The degree to which findings can apply to other contexts. |
| Dependability | The stability of data over time and conditions (similar to reliability). |
| Confirmability | The extent to which findings are shaped by participants rather than researcher bias. |
đ Notes
Data Analysis in Qualitative Research
- Data (transcripts, notes, recordings) are analyzed iterativelyâcollection and analysis occur simultaneously.
- The goal is meaning-making, not measurement.
- Coding is central: segments of text are labeled with categories or âcodes.â
- Codes are grouped into themes that explain behaviors, attitudes, or processes.
- Methods include:
- Thematic Analysis (Braun & Clarke, 2006)
- Grounded Theory (Glaser & Strauss, 1967)
- Content Analysis (Berelson, 1952)
Approaches to Coding
| Approach | Process | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Inductive | Codes emerge from data without a prior framework. | Interviews with teachers reveal âemotional exhaustionâ â theme arises naturally. |
| Deductive | Uses theoretical constructs to guide coding. | Using Banduraâs SCT categories: attention, retention, reproduction, motivation. |
| Hybrid | Combines inductive and deductive methods for flexibility. | Pre-set codes guide analysis, but new themes also allowed. |
Ensuring Trustworthiness
| Criterion | Meaning | How to Achieve |
|---|---|---|
| Credibility | Confidence in truth of findings. | Triangulation, member checks, peer debriefing. |
| Transferability | Applicability to other contexts. | Provide thick description. |
| Dependability | Stability and consistency. | Keep audit trails, code-recode checks. |
| Confirmability | Objectivity of findings. | Reflexivity, external audits. |
Reporting Qualitative Research
Reports should include:
- Context & participants â who, where, why.
- Data collection methods â interviews, observations.
- Analytic approach â how themes were derived.
- Evidence â quotes supporting themes.
- Researcher reflexivity â awareness of personal bias.
- Ethical considerations â consent, confidentiality, cultural sensitivity.
Good reporting balances narrative clarity, ethical integrity, and analytical transparency.
đTok link
- To what extent can qualitative interpretations claim âtruthâ when they rely on subjective meanings?
TOK explores whether empathy and interpretation can be reliable ways of knowing in the human sciences.
đ Real-World Connection
- Qualitative analysis is essential in clinical psychology, education, and marketing research.
For instance, analyzing patient interviews can inform better mental-health interventions.
â¤ď¸ CAS Link
- Students can practice reflexivity by conducting and reflecting on informal interviews (e.g., about study stress).
Keeping a âreflexive journalâ helps link classroom theory to real-world empathy and ethical understanding.
đ§ IA Guidance
- For the IA, students must analyze quantitative data, but they can apply qualitative insight by writing reflective notes on design limitations and participant perceptionsâstrengthening discussion of validity.
đ§ Examiner Tips
- Always distinguish between thematic, content, and grounded theory analyses.
- Clearly connect each trustworthiness criterion to practical methods.
- Mention reflexivity and triangulation in evaluation questions for higher marks.
- Use key terminology: âcoding,â âthemes,â âaudit trail,â âmember checking,â âtransferability.â