Name That Method
Trustworthiness
Data Collection
Fix the Design
From the Lim Article
100

A study exploring the lived experiences of people recovering from postpartum depression through in-depth interviews.

phenomenology

100

The qualitative equivalent of internal validity, referring to confidence in the truth of the findings.

Credibility

100

Asking participants open-ended questions one-on-one to explore their experiences in depth.

Interviews

100

A researcher uses a multiple-choice survey to understand lived experiences.

(note: you're answering for an improved data collection method) 

use in-depth interviews

100

Qualitative research prioritizes this over generalizability.

Depth

200

An NAU anthropology professor goes undercover as a college student, moves into a dorm, and lives among students to understand their culture and daily life.

Ethnography

200

This refers to whether findings can be applied or transferred to other contexts

Transferability

200

Facilitating discussion among several participants at once, often to explore shared perspectives or group dynamics.

Focus Group

200

A researcher claims to use grounded theory but begins with a fixed theory and only looks for data to support it.

(note: you're coming up with what they should do instead to be grounded theory) 

 let theory emerge from data

200

Qualitative research seeks to understand this rather than measure frequency or magnitude.

Meaning

300

Developing a theory about how patients adapt to chronic illness using constant comparison and iterative coding.

Grounded Theory

300

This concept refers to the consistency and stability of findings over time

dependability

300

Watching behaviors, interactions, or settings in real time rather than relying only on self-report

Observation

300

Interviews use only yes/no questions with no follow-up.

use open-ended probing

300

A qualitative study begins with predefined codes based on an existing theory and only looks for data that fits those categories.

Deductive approach

400

Detailed stories from individuals about their life journeys with eating disorders, focusing on how they construct meaning over time.

Narrative inquiry

400

This ensures that findings are shaped by participants’ experiences rather than researcher bias, often supported by reflexivity and audit trails.

Confirmability

400

Diaries, meeting notes, social media posts, policy statements, or medical records as a source of qualitative data

Document Analysis

400

A study asks, “What is the prevalence of burnout among nurses?” but uses in-depth interviews as the primary method.

Revise the research question or method

400

A researcher collects interview data and allows patterns and themes to emerge without imposing predefined categories or theories.

Inductive approach

500

To deeply examine a single clinic implementing a new maternal health program, aiming to understand processes within this bounded system.

Case Study

500

A researcher keeps detailed documentation of all decisions made during data collection and analysis, including coding changes, memos, and methodological choices, so others can follow the research process step-by-step.

Audit Trail

500

A researcher spends several weeks embedded in a clinic, helping with daily tasks while observing staff interactions and taking detailed field notes on workflow and communication patterns

Participant Observation

From Lim et al: Method ≠ methodology

500

A researcher interprets all findings without reflecting on how their own perspectives may influence the analysis

Use reflexivity

500

Instead of large samples, qualitative research typically uses this type of sampling strategy.

Purposive Sampling