How Qualitative Data Analysis Happens
Moving Beyond "Themes Emerged"
Herausgeber: Humble, Áine M; Radina, M. Elise
How Qualitative Data Analysis Happens
Moving Beyond "Themes Emerged"
Herausgeber: Humble, Áine M; Radina, M. Elise
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The book offers an in-depth look into how qualitative social science researchers studying a wide range of human experiences and dynamics approach their data analyses. This expanded edition includes 13 new chapters from a broad range of disciplines that document the stories about how qualitative data analysis occurred.
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The book offers an in-depth look into how qualitative social science researchers studying a wide range of human experiences and dynamics approach their data analyses. This expanded edition includes 13 new chapters from a broad range of disciplines that document the stories about how qualitative data analysis occurred.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- 2 ed
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. August 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 404g
- ISBN-13: 9781032183220
- ISBN-10: 1032183225
- Artikelnr.: 70148015
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- 2 ed
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. August 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 404g
- ISBN-13: 9781032183220
- ISBN-10: 1032183225
- Artikelnr.: 70148015
Áine M. Humble is Professor of Family Studies and Gerontology at Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. M. Elise Radina is Professor of Family Science at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, USA.
Introduction: How This Second (and Expanded) Volume HappenedM. Elise Radina
and Áine M. Humble. Chapter 1: How Autoethnography Begins and Never Ends: A
Tracing of the "Self" in Relation to #MeToo and Higher Education Angela
Underhill. Chapter 2: Using Institutional Ethnography to Trace the Ruling
of Weight Surveillance Work Alexa Ferdinands and Kim Raine. Chapter 3:
Writing a New Materialist Ethnography on Polyamorous Parents Cornelia
Schadler. Chapter 4: Reading Between the Lines of After Death Communication
Stories: Using Narrative Analysis to Make the Implicit Explicit Sara
Hackett and Kate de Medeiros. Chapter 5: Data Analytic Strategies Used in a
Remote Photovoice Project of Filipino Single Mothers during the COVID-19
Pandemic Dennis S. Erasga, Jerome V. Cleofas, Mary Rose Jean Andrada-Poa,
and Ronaldo F. Jabal. Chapter 6: Phenomenological Analysis and Racial
Socialization Interpretation of Interviews with African American Parents of
Toddlers Sons Sheresa Boone Blanchard, Stephanie Irby Coard, and Mariana
Mereoiu. Chapter 7: Black Feminist Theory and Thematic Analysis: Analyzing
the Motherwork of Black Women Nursing Professionals During the COVID-19
Pandemic Adrienne L. Edwards-Bianchi. Chapter 8: Visualizing Relationships
to Explore Opportunities for Family Engagement in Diabetes and Hypertension
Management Meredith P. Fort, Cornelia J. Santos, Maria de los Angeles
Villaverde, and Kelly R. Moore. Chapter 9: Voices from Inside Prison:
Centering People Through Intentional Sampling, Coding, and Analysis Within
Large Research Teams Danielle S. Rudes, Shannon Magnuson, and Sydney N.
Ingel. Chapter 10: Triangulating Partners' Views Over Time: Analyzing
Multiple Perspective Qualitative Longitudinal Interviews on Non-Normative
Work-Care Arrangements in the Transition to Parenthood in Practice Susanne
Vogl, Eva-Maria Schmidt, and Ulrike Zartler. Chapter 11: Media Priming and
Racialized Production Decisions in College Football Broadcasts:
Extrapolating Strategies for Analyzing Video Data Sara E. Grummert and
Siduri J. Haslerig. Chapter 12: Reflections on Conducting Team-Based
Qualitatively Oriented Mixed Methods Research about Students with
Disabilities in STEM Clubs Peggy Shannon-Baker, Karin Fisher, and Kania
Greer. Chapter 13: Mixing Methods to Advance our Understanding of Parental
Stress and Coping in Youth Sport Sam N. Thrower, Travis E. Dorsch, Camilla
J. Knight, and Chris G. Harwood. Chapter 14: Final Reflections Áine M.
Humble and M. Elise Radina.
and Áine M. Humble. Chapter 1: How Autoethnography Begins and Never Ends: A
Tracing of the "Self" in Relation to #MeToo and Higher Education Angela
Underhill. Chapter 2: Using Institutional Ethnography to Trace the Ruling
of Weight Surveillance Work Alexa Ferdinands and Kim Raine. Chapter 3:
Writing a New Materialist Ethnography on Polyamorous Parents Cornelia
Schadler. Chapter 4: Reading Between the Lines of After Death Communication
Stories: Using Narrative Analysis to Make the Implicit Explicit Sara
Hackett and Kate de Medeiros. Chapter 5: Data Analytic Strategies Used in a
Remote Photovoice Project of Filipino Single Mothers during the COVID-19
Pandemic Dennis S. Erasga, Jerome V. Cleofas, Mary Rose Jean Andrada-Poa,
and Ronaldo F. Jabal. Chapter 6: Phenomenological Analysis and Racial
Socialization Interpretation of Interviews with African American Parents of
Toddlers Sons Sheresa Boone Blanchard, Stephanie Irby Coard, and Mariana
Mereoiu. Chapter 7: Black Feminist Theory and Thematic Analysis: Analyzing
the Motherwork of Black Women Nursing Professionals During the COVID-19
Pandemic Adrienne L. Edwards-Bianchi. Chapter 8: Visualizing Relationships
to Explore Opportunities for Family Engagement in Diabetes and Hypertension
Management Meredith P. Fort, Cornelia J. Santos, Maria de los Angeles
Villaverde, and Kelly R. Moore. Chapter 9: Voices from Inside Prison:
Centering People Through Intentional Sampling, Coding, and Analysis Within
Large Research Teams Danielle S. Rudes, Shannon Magnuson, and Sydney N.
Ingel. Chapter 10: Triangulating Partners' Views Over Time: Analyzing
Multiple Perspective Qualitative Longitudinal Interviews on Non-Normative
Work-Care Arrangements in the Transition to Parenthood in Practice Susanne
Vogl, Eva-Maria Schmidt, and Ulrike Zartler. Chapter 11: Media Priming and
Racialized Production Decisions in College Football Broadcasts:
Extrapolating Strategies for Analyzing Video Data Sara E. Grummert and
Siduri J. Haslerig. Chapter 12: Reflections on Conducting Team-Based
Qualitatively Oriented Mixed Methods Research about Students with
Disabilities in STEM Clubs Peggy Shannon-Baker, Karin Fisher, and Kania
Greer. Chapter 13: Mixing Methods to Advance our Understanding of Parental
Stress and Coping in Youth Sport Sam N. Thrower, Travis E. Dorsch, Camilla
J. Knight, and Chris G. Harwood. Chapter 14: Final Reflections Áine M.
Humble and M. Elise Radina.
Introduction: How This Second (and Expanded) Volume HappenedM. Elise Radina
and Áine M. Humble. Chapter 1: How Autoethnography Begins and Never Ends: A
Tracing of the "Self" in Relation to #MeToo and Higher Education Angela
Underhill. Chapter 2: Using Institutional Ethnography to Trace the Ruling
of Weight Surveillance Work Alexa Ferdinands and Kim Raine. Chapter 3:
Writing a New Materialist Ethnography on Polyamorous Parents Cornelia
Schadler. Chapter 4: Reading Between the Lines of After Death Communication
Stories: Using Narrative Analysis to Make the Implicit Explicit Sara
Hackett and Kate de Medeiros. Chapter 5: Data Analytic Strategies Used in a
Remote Photovoice Project of Filipino Single Mothers during the COVID-19
Pandemic Dennis S. Erasga, Jerome V. Cleofas, Mary Rose Jean Andrada-Poa,
and Ronaldo F. Jabal. Chapter 6: Phenomenological Analysis and Racial
Socialization Interpretation of Interviews with African American Parents of
Toddlers Sons Sheresa Boone Blanchard, Stephanie Irby Coard, and Mariana
Mereoiu. Chapter 7: Black Feminist Theory and Thematic Analysis: Analyzing
the Motherwork of Black Women Nursing Professionals During the COVID-19
Pandemic Adrienne L. Edwards-Bianchi. Chapter 8: Visualizing Relationships
to Explore Opportunities for Family Engagement in Diabetes and Hypertension
Management Meredith P. Fort, Cornelia J. Santos, Maria de los Angeles
Villaverde, and Kelly R. Moore. Chapter 9: Voices from Inside Prison:
Centering People Through Intentional Sampling, Coding, and Analysis Within
Large Research Teams Danielle S. Rudes, Shannon Magnuson, and Sydney N.
Ingel. Chapter 10: Triangulating Partners' Views Over Time: Analyzing
Multiple Perspective Qualitative Longitudinal Interviews on Non-Normative
Work-Care Arrangements in the Transition to Parenthood in Practice Susanne
Vogl, Eva-Maria Schmidt, and Ulrike Zartler. Chapter 11: Media Priming and
Racialized Production Decisions in College Football Broadcasts:
Extrapolating Strategies for Analyzing Video Data Sara E. Grummert and
Siduri J. Haslerig. Chapter 12: Reflections on Conducting Team-Based
Qualitatively Oriented Mixed Methods Research about Students with
Disabilities in STEM Clubs Peggy Shannon-Baker, Karin Fisher, and Kania
Greer. Chapter 13: Mixing Methods to Advance our Understanding of Parental
Stress and Coping in Youth Sport Sam N. Thrower, Travis E. Dorsch, Camilla
J. Knight, and Chris G. Harwood. Chapter 14: Final Reflections Áine M.
Humble and M. Elise Radina.
and Áine M. Humble. Chapter 1: How Autoethnography Begins and Never Ends: A
Tracing of the "Self" in Relation to #MeToo and Higher Education Angela
Underhill. Chapter 2: Using Institutional Ethnography to Trace the Ruling
of Weight Surveillance Work Alexa Ferdinands and Kim Raine. Chapter 3:
Writing a New Materialist Ethnography on Polyamorous Parents Cornelia
Schadler. Chapter 4: Reading Between the Lines of After Death Communication
Stories: Using Narrative Analysis to Make the Implicit Explicit Sara
Hackett and Kate de Medeiros. Chapter 5: Data Analytic Strategies Used in a
Remote Photovoice Project of Filipino Single Mothers during the COVID-19
Pandemic Dennis S. Erasga, Jerome V. Cleofas, Mary Rose Jean Andrada-Poa,
and Ronaldo F. Jabal. Chapter 6: Phenomenological Analysis and Racial
Socialization Interpretation of Interviews with African American Parents of
Toddlers Sons Sheresa Boone Blanchard, Stephanie Irby Coard, and Mariana
Mereoiu. Chapter 7: Black Feminist Theory and Thematic Analysis: Analyzing
the Motherwork of Black Women Nursing Professionals During the COVID-19
Pandemic Adrienne L. Edwards-Bianchi. Chapter 8: Visualizing Relationships
to Explore Opportunities for Family Engagement in Diabetes and Hypertension
Management Meredith P. Fort, Cornelia J. Santos, Maria de los Angeles
Villaverde, and Kelly R. Moore. Chapter 9: Voices from Inside Prison:
Centering People Through Intentional Sampling, Coding, and Analysis Within
Large Research Teams Danielle S. Rudes, Shannon Magnuson, and Sydney N.
Ingel. Chapter 10: Triangulating Partners' Views Over Time: Analyzing
Multiple Perspective Qualitative Longitudinal Interviews on Non-Normative
Work-Care Arrangements in the Transition to Parenthood in Practice Susanne
Vogl, Eva-Maria Schmidt, and Ulrike Zartler. Chapter 11: Media Priming and
Racialized Production Decisions in College Football Broadcasts:
Extrapolating Strategies for Analyzing Video Data Sara E. Grummert and
Siduri J. Haslerig. Chapter 12: Reflections on Conducting Team-Based
Qualitatively Oriented Mixed Methods Research about Students with
Disabilities in STEM Clubs Peggy Shannon-Baker, Karin Fisher, and Kania
Greer. Chapter 13: Mixing Methods to Advance our Understanding of Parental
Stress and Coping in Youth Sport Sam N. Thrower, Travis E. Dorsch, Camilla
J. Knight, and Chris G. Harwood. Chapter 14: Final Reflections Áine M.
Humble and M. Elise Radina.