paradigms
theories
general definitions
random
100

Scientific paradigm

A way of understanding the world that relies on evidence and testing, Knowledge is only accepted if it meets a high standard of proof, claims must hold up over time

100

Functions of a theory

explanation and prediction

100

paradigm

a worldview, or framework of beliefs, values and methods, this affects how we interpret and understand data from research

100

data saturation

occurs when no new information is obtained fro interviews and/or observations

200

interpretive/constructivist

A way of understanding the world that focuses on meaning and interpretation, not just hard data, people understand the world differently based on their experiences, reality is socially constructed

200

broad range theories

theories that say one main cause explains a social problem, Boudon thinks they're bad because society is complex, this ignores other factors and its based on assumption (not enough evidence)

200

two types of sampling

random and non-random

200

justification

-happens in every step
-authors of qualitative studies must convince the reader that the sample was appropriate and sufficient to justify the findings

300

Critical paradigm

A way of studying society by focusing on power, inequality, and control, looks at language and comm and how that shapes what counts as knowledge, language is not neutral it can reinforce power or cause harm

300

middle range theory

Trying to explain everything with one theory is pointless, we must find patterns and focus on testable explanations

300

convenience (volunteer) sampling method

-potential participants volunteer to participate in the research study
-pros: easy, efficient, economical
-cons: may not provide participants who can supply the best information

300

when we conduct research we are most likely

Testing a theory, expanding a theory, or writing a theory

400

Post-structuralist

multiple competing views of science and many truths

400

Reference Group Theory (example of middle range theory)

People form their beliefs and attitudes by looking to certain people or groups as examples, we are influenced by people we look up to or compare ourselves to

400

snowball (chain) sampling method

-current participants recommend persons who might be willing to participate in the study
-pros: practical, cost-efficient, persons appropriate for study, less time to gain trust
-cons: quality of referrals may be problematic and/or limited

400

Goal in qualitative research

understand social processes and life (not predicting how society works)

500

name the four paradigms

scientific, interpretive/constructivist, critical, post-structuralist

500

purposive/purposeful/judgemental/selective sampling method

-researcher intentionally selects participants who are knowledgeable about the phenomenon being studied
-pros: ability to select participants most beneficial to the study, cost efficient, variety off strategies
-cons: may be challenging to locate information-rich participants