Name a Qualitative methodology used to gather data
What is:
Interview, Observations, Field Notes
Starting with quant (e.g. survey) and then follow up with qualitative (e.g. interview). So, the quantitative results are explained in more detail through the interview data
What is Explanatory
Making up or changing data to get better results
What is Fabrication and Falsification
These types of harm are associated with the Stanford Prison experiment
What is Physical and Psychological harm
This analytical methodology was used in the Moving boarders paper to gather data
What is case study.
Ethnographic fieldwork
Once an interview is complete, this step of the Thematic Analysis process allows the researcher to identify important features of the data that might be relevant to answering our research question.
What is Coding
Being honest and ethically mature about research asking; How are you personally involved in the research process
What is Reflexivity
Your beliefs may cause you to overlook key data or to misperceive what you are seeing.
What is selective attendance
This landmark study changed the face of research and was the bases of the Belmont Report
What is the Tuskegee Syphilis Study
The tendency to interpret new evidence as confirmation of one's existing beliefs or theories.
What is Confirmation bias
Qual research uses this mode of analysis in order to build theories and answer research questions.
What is inductive approach
This mixed methods approach allows for the researcher to gather both Qual and Qant data at the same time.
What is convergent
Failing to give credit where credit is due, using their words as if they were your own.
What is Plagiarism
Obligation to ensure the well-being of participants, to do no harm.
What is Beneficence or Hippocratic oath
The tendency for study participants to change their behavior simply as a result of being observed.
What is the Hawthorne effect
Name at least one of the six steps of the thematic analysis process and give and example
Familiarization with data
Coding
Generating initial themes
Reviewing themes
Defining and naming themes
Writing up
A characteristic of Rigor that allows for data triangulation across data collection techniques.
What is credibility
Describes the services that a qualified health professional is deemed competent to perform, and permitted to undertake – in keeping with the terms of their professional license.
What is scope of practice
Subjects are made fully aware of the nature and purpose of the research project and all its benefits and risks, including issues of comprehension, language, and culture need to considered
What is informed consent
A qualitative research technique that involves relating data together in order to reveal codes, categories, and subcategories ground within participants' voices within one's collected data.
What is Thematic analysis
Define a characteristic of rigor and differentiate it from the Quant definition
Dependability, credibility, transferability, confirmability
Pro: Multidimensional approach, triangulation
Con: Expensive, need multiple professional working together, takes a long time
Explain how you will use cultural competence within your field of choice after you receive your degree
Must answer with 1 profession and relate cultural competence to it
Refers to linking information to a person’s identity.
Researcher knows – but reader will not know (weaker than anonymity)
What is confidentiality
Describe the relationship between the two continuous variables. (show pic)
What is
No significance due to p-value greater than .05
Positive strong correlation = .99 multiple R