These threats are often conceptualized as alternative explanations, interpretations or “rival hypotheses”:
What is validity threat?
What is the most common practice in qualitative sociology today?
In-depth, open-ended interviews
This research technique “involves identifying and recording passages of data that exemplify the same theoretical or descriptive idea.”
What is coding?
This diagnosis is the health topic of “Whispering on the Water”
What is psychosis?
Asians account for this percentage of the American population?
what is 6.8%?
________ purports to control an infinite number of “rival hypotheses” without specifying what any of them are:
What is randomization?
________is what the analyst does to understand the case: the analyst investigates society at large to determine its impacts on the case at hand.
extending
Gibbs recommends this data format as the easiest to code.
What is a transcript? (Or text)
This program, designed to offer holistic support options for people experiencing psychosis, stands for early intervention services.
What is EISes?
Immigration from the Indian Subcontinent to the United States started in this century.
What is the 1700s.
The two examples of validity threat
What are bias and reactivity?
Refers to the principles of selection associated with standard survey research
Sampling logic
This tool, recommended by Gibbs, helps researchers apply coded in a consistent way and share codes across teams.
What is a memo?
This data collection method was used by “Whispering on the Water” researchers to learn about care services for people experiencing psychosis.
What are in-depth interviews?
This term was coined in 1966 to describe the apparent socioeconomic success of Japanese Americans, despite being a marginalized minority group, and later evolved to all Asian Americans.
What is the model minority?
Presenting abstract strategies such as bracketing, member checks, and triangulation that will supposedly protect their studies from
What is invalidity?
What is the objective of case study logic?
saturation
When reading through a chunk of text, Gibbs recommends this skill to “pay attention to all the things we can see, even the commonplace and ordinary.”
What is “intensive reading?”
This is one of the three main subordinate themes that researchers discovered.
What is “a story of loss” OR “a social problem” OR “divergent points on the path to change.”
This term highlights the centrality of racism in the US society and emphasis the need to be conscious of racism and its mecahnims in the pursuit of equity.
What is critical race theory?
refers to the generalizability of a conclusion within the case, setting, or group studied, to persons, events, times, and settings that were not directly observed, interviewed, or otherwise represented in the data collected.
What is internal generalizability?
What does Small conclude about the "representative" single neighborhood?
It does not exist
This technique helps researchers compare the extremes on a dimension in question.
What is flip-flop technique?
This coding method was used by researchers to examine patterns of meaning within participant’s accounts
What is IPA (Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis)?
The three main pathways that emerged from Misra’s literature reviews.
What is formal racialization, informal racialization, and intersections with economic exploitation and disinvestment?