case studies + content analysis

Cards (8)

  • case study
    • in depth investigation, description and analysis of a single individual, group, institution or event
    • usually involves production of qualitative data
    • tend to be longitudinal
    • data may be gathered from family + friends
  • strengths of case studies
    • offer detailed insights into very unusual forms of behaviour
    • may contribute to understanding of 'typical' functioning
    • e.g. HM
    • may generate hypotheses for future studies
  • limitations of case studies
    • cannot generalise findings.
    • information is based on subjective selection and interpretation of the researcher.
    • personal accounts from family + friends may be innacurate.
  • content analysis
    • research technique that allows for indirect study of behaviour by studying communications that people produce.
    • e.g. texts, films, emails, TV and other media
  • coding
    • initial stage of content analysis.
    • some sets of data to are large so they need to be categorised into meaningful units.
    • may involve counting up the number of times a word or phrase appears - quantitative data
  • thematic analysis
    • form of content analysis where the outcome is qualitative
    • process involved identification of themes which is any idea that is recurrent.
    • likely to be more descriptive than coding.
    • once researcher has developed themes, they may collect new data to test validity of themes.
  • strengths of content analysis
    • can get around ethical issues -> material is already public so no issues for getting permission.
    • high external validity
    • flexible as it can produce quantitative + qualitative data
  • limitations of content analysis
    • people are studied indirectly so communications are analysed outside of context - may be misinterpreted
    • may suffer lack of objectivity when more descriptive forms of thematic analysis are used.