[STRAUSS87, pp. 265 - 288]
Here are the questions, find the answers in the book.
See also [GLASER92] for alternate comments :-).
- Is it necessary that the analyst be skilled in interviewing
or doing field observations?
- It is necessary to transcribe all your interviews or fieldnotes?
- In line-by-line analysis: What does this line, word, really mean?
- What is a category, an indicator, a dimension, a code?
How do I recognize one?
- Core categories: How do I know when I have one, or more?
- How many core categories are permissible, advisable?
- I don't understand how to convert psychological language into
sociological language and perspective. How do I do that?
- How do I learn to ask generative questions?
- How do I choose a research topic?
- Now that I've finished my thesis, I have several questions
about theoretical sampling.
- But how is theoretical sampling actually DONE - what are the
specific operations? How does one THINK of the samples?
For instance, if I'm interested in anomalies that appear
in scientific work, ho do I sample using comparative analysis,
since you say that's the basicstrategu?
- How do I rid myself of habits of thinking in terms of quantitative
methods which I learned earlier and which now interfere with
my learning to do qualitative analysis?
- When am I really going to get competent at this kind of
qualitative analysis?
- What do I do when I have done a whole bunch of integrative
diagrams, all rather different?
- After you decide on a core category and are well along in
integration, what do you do with all those other ideas
that don't fit well or not at all -- that seem not to
belong to the main analytic story?
- I still don't quite know how to relate my efforts to the
technical literature. Aside from the point you've made about
sometimes taking off from someone else's grounded theory, can
you say again how one fits the analysis together with
the literature?
- How do I negate received theories, already in my head from
past education and reading, which block me from seeing
a fresh?
- Is there a differences in working as an individual researcher
and with a partner or as a member of a team?
- How much can I do a day? How do I pace myself these analysis?
- Now that the research seminars are finished, and I am alone with
my own research, I have difficulty in grappling with or
making progress with my own analysis: What can be done about that?
- How do I present grounded theory results to quantitatively
trained people? How, for example, do I write an effective
proposal for funding, given that most reviewers are not
trained in qualitative methods and almost certainly not
in grounded theory methodology?
(...)
Insist that science requires a variety of methods!
(...)
(Flipping through the pages of "Awareness of Dying [GLASTRA65]"
one sceptic scornfully threw it down, saying,
"Horse manure, no tables!").
|
|
-
[GLASER92]
Glaser, Barney G.
1992.
Emergence vs. Forcing: Basics of Grounded Theory Analysis.
Sociology Press, pp. 129.
[HM28 Gla CLMS, -]
-
[GLASTRA65]
Glaser, Barney G., and Strauss, Anselm L.
1965.
Awareness of Dying.
Aldine Pub., pp. 302.
[BF789 Dea.G CLCS, -]
-
[STRAUSS87]
Strauss, Anselm L.
1987.
Qualitative Analysis for Social Scientist.
Cambridge University Press, pp. 319.
[H61 Sta CLMS, ISBN 0-5213-2845-4]
|