Qualitative Research: Studying How Things Work

Qualitative Research: Studying How Things Work

by Robert E. Stake PhD
Qualitative Research: Studying How Things Work

Qualitative Research: Studying How Things Work

by Robert E. Stake PhD

eBook

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Overview

This book provides invaluable guidance for thinking through and planning a qualitative study. Rather than offering recipes for specific techniques, master storyteller Robert Stake stimulates readers to discover "how things work" in organizations, programs, communities, and other systems. Topics range from identifying a research question to selecting methods, gathering data, interpreting and analyzing the results, and producing a well-thought-through written report. In-depth examples from actual studies emphasize the role of the researcher as instrument and interpreter, while boxed vignettes and learning projects encourage self-reflection and critical thinking. Other useful pedagogical features include quick-reference tables and charts, sample project management forms, and an end-of-book glossary. After reading this book, doctoral students and novice qualitative researchers will be able to plan a study from beginning to end.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781606235478
Publisher: Guilford Publications, Inc.
Publication date: 03/03/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 244
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

 

Robert E. Stake is Director of the Center for Instructional Research and Curriculum Evaluation at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is one of several educational researchers who created theory and practice for educational program evaluation in the 1960s. His responsive evaluation approach emphasizes the study of classroom experience, personal interaction, and institutional processes and contexts, often in the form of case studies. Among the evaluative studies he has directed are studies in science and arts education; model programs; and conventional teaching, including higher education, special education and, with Bernadine Evans Stake, gender equity. He is a recipient of the Special Career Award in Qualitative Inquiry from the International Congress for Qualitative Inquiry, the Lazarsfeld Award from the American Evaluation Association, and the Presidential Citation from the American Educational Research Association, and holds honorary doctorates from the University of Uppsala, Sweden, and the University of Valladolid, Spain. For many years, Dr. Stake has been a prominent voice in a transatlantic "invisible college" of like-minded evaluators questioning contexts and conventions for educational evaluation and infusing evaluation with fairness and a valuing of experience.

 

Table of Contents

Introduction: Make Yourself Comfortable

1. Qualitative Research: How Things Work

2. Interpretation: The Person as Instrument

3. Experiential Understanding: Most Qualitative Study Is Experiential

4. Stating the Problem: Questioning How This Thing Works

5. Methods: Gathering Data

6. Review of Literature: Zooming to See the Problem

7. Evidence: Bolstering Judgment and Reconnoitering

8. Analysis and Synthesis: How Things Work

9. Action Research and Self-Evaluation: Finding on Your Own How Your Place Works

10: Storytelling: Illustrating How Things Work

11. Writing the Final Report: An Iterative Convergence

12. Advocacy and Ethics: Making Things Work Better

Interviews

Graduate students in education, psychology, sociology, social work, management, and nursing; qualitative researchers and evaluators. Will serve as a core book in doctoral-level courses such as Qualitative Methods and Qualitative Dissertation/Proposal Writing, and as a supplemental text in graduate-level Research Design courses.

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