Event details

The challenges of analysing qualitative data

Wednesday, 29 May 2013

Professor Sue Clegg and Dr Jacqueline Stevenson

There is no text book way of analysing qualitative data and in this workshop we will try to share insights about how we make interpretations based on prior theoretical framings and from within different theoretical traditions.

Dr Stevenson will explore looking at data through a Bourdieusian lens. She will introduce some key ideas and then involve participants in working on transcript material from interviews she has undertaken. Professor Clegg will introduce some ideas from phenomenological approaches to data and invite participants to read some of their own data using this approach.

The workshop will draw together insights and debate the difficulties of representing qualitative analysis in writing about our research. 

Participants are asked to bring some copies of parts of transcripts that they would be willing to work with in small groups as part of the workshop. 

Sue Clegg is Professor of Higher Educational Research and Heads the Centre for Research into Higher Education, and is Director of Research Students. Her personal research includes close-to-practice research, often in collaboration with practitioners, and theoretical work for example in her work on the social and pedagogical significance of the gendering of information technology, her analyses of information technologies in learning and teaching, and her critique of the debate about the nature of ‘evidence-based’ practice. She is Editor of Teaching in Higher Education and serves on the Boards of Studies in Higher Education and Higher Education Quarterly.

Jacqueline Stevenson is a Reader in Widening Participation at Leeds Metropolitan University. Her research is centred on issues around race, ethnicity, age and social class in relation to access to higher education and educational achievement, and on ethical practice in higher education. Recent work has focussed on the first year experience of religious students, the degree attainment of students from Black and minority ethnic groups, and research into both resilience and students’ future ‘possible selves’. Her research is primarily qualitative in focus and she has a particular interest in narrative research including story-telling and narrative inquiry.
 
This workshop is now fully booked. If you would like to be added to the waiting list please e-mail nmanches@srhe.ac.uk
 

Network: Newer Researchers
Date(s): Wednesday, 29 May 2013
Times: 11.00 -16.00
Signup Deadline: Friday, 24 May 2013
Location: SRHE, 73 Collier St, London N1 9BE
Lunch Provided: Yes
Spaces Left: No Spaces Left
Prices: Members: Free, Guests: £45.00
There are no spaces left for this event
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