Qualitative Methods in Media and Communication (CM2005)
Institution
Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam (EUR)
A summary of the required readings, lecture notes, and tutorial notes from Qualitative Methods in Media and Comm. in Erasmus University Rotterdam with contents from all 8 weeks of the course
Qualitative Methods in Media and Communication (CM2005)
All documents for this subject (20)
1
review
By: daniel-mihaiciurea • 1 year ago
Seller
Follow
carlettameyza
Reviews received
Content preview
Qualitative Methods Summary
Week 1 Overview
Why qualitative research?
• Meaning making
o Social context: how people understand particular things (beyond
data/numbers)
o Cannot be measured: beyond answer set, beyond cause and effect
• Not just cause and effect
Four principles of qualitative research
What characterizes qualitative research?
1. Meaning making, not numbers
2. Complexity, not causal relationships
• Observe phenomenon in natural context
• Comprehensive view, not causal explanation that can be generalized
3. Micro insights, not macro picture
4. Different epistemological, ontological, and methodological positions
• Ontology
o What exists
o View on nature of reality
• Epistemology
o Perceived relationship with knowledge
o Are we part of knowledge? Or external to it
o Episteme: knowledge
o Logos: science
o Epistemology: study of science
• Methodology & methods
o How we go about discovering and creating knowledge
Paradigms in media/communication
Post positivism/positivism
1
,Positivism
• Positivism believes there’s one truth
• Objective knowledge
• Neutral data collection + analysis
Post-positivism
• Still one truth
• Researchers flawed
Quantitative: predictive; hypothesis
A different way of looking
Constructionism
• Believes there are several truths
• Knowledge filtered through shared meanings
Critical tradition
• Reality and truth shaped by factors such as race, gender, culture
• Aim: achieve transformative social change
Participatory and cooperative tradition
• Co-creation
• Empowering participants
Qualitative: researcher part of process; reflexive
Difference between methodology vs. methods
• Methodology: beliefs related to how to study the social world
• Methods: concrete ways of studying the social world
o Method of data collection
o Method of data analysis
• Methodological section in paper/thesis
o First section: methodological literature
o Second section: justify what you have done to collect and analyse the
data
Core features of qualitative research
• Insightful, complex, emancipatory
Week 1 Reading
Chapter 1: Getting Started
Raymond William’s (a cultural materialist) definition of:
• Theory: systematic explanations of real-world everyday practices
• Culture: a way of life
• History: continuous and connected process
Cultural approach to communication
• Communication process: means of production based on the discourse of
individuals and groups produced within a specific cultural, historical, and
political context
o We make meaning and construct our own social realities through our
use of language
• Brennen disagrees that researchers can do qualitative research without using
an explicit theoretical framework/easy to mix qualitative and quantitative
• Brennen agrees with Cliff Christians and James Carey (1989) that the use of
mixed methods should be driven by the RQ and, theoretically and
philosophically grounded
Quantitative vs. Qualitative Research
• Quantitative: systematic, precise, and accurate as it determines validity,
reliability, objectivity, and truth
o Isolate specific elements, and uses numbers to measure causal
relationships between variables
3
, • Qualitative: interdisciplinary, interpretive, political, and theoretical in nature
• According to Steinar Kvale (1996): subject matter of qualitative research is
meaningful relations to be interpreted
o Qualitative consider alternative notions of knowledge and understand
that reality is socially constructed
• When we use symbols to construct our own social realities, those symbols are
using us
• Notion of transparency: researchers being open with their theoretical
foundations and research strategies to be aware of the potential uses and
implications of the research
• Types of textual analysis: discourse analysis, ideological critique, historical
analysis, case studies, open-ended in-depth interviews
o The method (textual analysis) is based on the RQ
• Notion of triangulation: use of multiple methods to develop in-depth
understandings of social experiences
• Qualitative consider the diversity of meanings and values created in media
o Unlike quantitative that measure the effects of different types of
communication (e.g., effects of TV violence on children)
The development of qualitative research
• Hanno Hardt (1992): a critical theorist conceptualized the field of
communication as a behavioral science encouraged an emphasis on
methodological concerns (i.e., sampling, measurement, research design, and
instrumentation)
o overshadow considerations of theoretical issues regarding the role of
media and communication within society
• Neil Postman (1988): suggested that the more insightful media studies stem
from the power of its language, explanations, relevance, and credibility
• By the end of 20th century: qualitative integrated into the realm of
communication and media studies
• In the 21st century: integrated but some researchers see qualitative as an
attack on reason and truth
• Data is envisioned as neutral, objective, authentic (e.g., “data shows…”)
4
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller carlettameyza. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for $9.10. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.