DESIGN
DATA/METHODS
COMMUNITY
ETHICS
PHILOSOPHIES
100

Theoretical sampling is a prominent strategy and goal of this qualitative design

Grounded Theory

100

Collecting this type of qualitative data would involve analyses of a culture-sharing group

Ethnographic data

100

Returning to participants to clarify interpretations and findings

Member checking

100

Includes the research purpose, activities, time required, potential benefits and harm, compensation (if any), information on privacy/confidentiality, contacts, etc.

Informed Consent

100

Concerns researchers' values and value systems relevant to the research

Axiology

200

Focusing on a series of events that account for human experience, with turning points and epiphanies emphasized, this qualitative design can be approached as both a method and a product.

Narrative Research Methods

200

This essential data analysis process involves noting preliminary ideas (e.g., hypotheses), emerging categories, and interpretations of the data

Memoing

200

In this role, the researcher acts as an outsider to the group of focus and takes field notes from 'a distance', without direct involvement with the activity or people

Nonparticipant Observer or Observer as Participant

200

Active consciousness of biases, values, and related experiences as researchers; this process is typically made explicit in some way in the text

Reflexivity

200

The researcher's view of reality (what is real and what is not)

Ontology

300

In this type of research, the study is written and recorded by the individuals who are the subject of the study. This design involves multiple types of consciousness - the vulnerable self, the coherent self, and a critique of self in sociocultural contexts related to the research question

Autoethnography

300

This type of data is collected to produce an in-depth understanding of bounded systems

Case study data

300

A group of people who associate in a digitally-mediated environment over time, typically with shared identities, interests, and/or goals

A virtual community

300

An outsider consultant examines both the process and product of the research to assess their accuracy

External audit

300

Assumptions are often applied in research through the use of theories or ____. Another word for interpretive frameworks.


Paradigms

400

Involves collecting and analyzing data using the five senses (sight, sound, smell, taste, touch)

Observational studies

400

Researchers using the exact word of the interviewee to form the names of codes, categories, themes, etc.

In vivo codes

400

Enables collaborative analysis and data-sharing among research team members

Qualitative data software

400

Masking names, assigning aliases, and creating composite participant profiles are examples of ____

Privacy/confidentiality (OR minimizing risk of participant harm)
400

"What qualifies as knowledge?" and "What are valid ways of knowing" are examples of ___ questions

Epistemological

500

While a __ case study design focuses on a specific issue of focus with one case illustration, a ___ case study design focuses on a specific issue with multiple case illustrations

Instrumental, collective

500

__ __ __ research methods draw on feminist, queer, critical race, disability, and decolonizing frameworks to challenge taken-for-granted processes that reproduce marginalization and disparities

Critical participatory action (must include critical; can include comm-based or reframes)

500

___ ___ models help to inform studies focused on reducing disparities, specifically along dimensions such as language, context, metaphors, persons, content, goals, and methods

Cultural adaptation

500

Researcher(s) setting aside their experiences and assumptions, as much as possible, to 'freshly' examine the phenomenon under study

Epoche (bracketing)

500

This type of interpretive framework adopts an action agenda to address the injustices and marginalization of historically oppressed groups

Transformative frameworks

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