IQRN Webinar Series: Building Rigor to Enhance Reliability and Validity in Qualitative Research

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • RESPONSES FROM THE PRESENTER:
    Here is the reference for our article about fatigue in recreational distance
    runners. It included a pretty good paragraph about rigor:
    Olson, K., Zimka, O., Pasiorowski, A., Iregbu, S., & Boulé, N. (2018).
    Tiredness, fatigue, and exhaustion as perceived by recreational marathon
    runners. Qualitative Health Research 28 (13), 197-210.
    doi.org/10.1177/1049732318785360
    Here are my answers to the questions we didn't get to following the
    webinar:
    To what extent can a researcher add their interpretation or to collected
    and analysed data. And what are implications to generating new
    epistemologies as to quantitative objectivity?
    Thanks for your question. So much depends on the epistemology
    of the research question. If a constructivist epistemology makes
    sense, readers assume that the researcher's perspective is part
    of the interpretation. It is worthwhile, though, to state this
    explicitly and link it to epistemology. The researcher should
    include a few sentences about who they are in relation to the
    research question -- so in my studies of cancer-related fatigue,
    for example, I said I had never had cancer but I had worked in a
    cancer center as a nurse researcher for xx years. For this reason,
    the people I had met with cancer and the kinds of problems I had
    helped to solve provided a context for my interpretation of the
    fatigue data. I think new epistemologies will continue to develop.
    it is important to understand the existing epistemologies first so
    that one doesn't inadvertently claim to have developed
    something new when, in fact, it has existed for many years.
    I also think it is important to distinguish between epistemology
    and axiology (or world view). In my way of thinking, we all have
    been shaped by the core values and experiences of our families
    and the society in which we grew up. As we progressed in our
    education, we read the work of important authors in our field,
    which also helped to shape the way we view the world. As a
    result. we may now say we approached our research from a
    critical theory lens, for example, and as a result certain kinds of
    research questions, such as those rooted in social justice, are at
    the forefront of our thinking about our research topic. Other
    world views (lens) could be feminism, post-colonialism, or
    intersectionality. Or perhaps a combination of several lens. It is
    very important to know what these perspectives are so that you
    can justify your world view (complete with references). A student
    once told me that her world view was post-colonial feminism. I
    asked her how that was different from "regular" feminism -- she
    didn't know. I heard a fascinating talk many years ago by an​
    indigenous scholar from Canada who talked about the indigenous
    lens. We had a good discussion about whether people who were
    not indigenous could claim to use an indigenous lens.
    Thank you for an excellent talk! can you comment on positionality
    statements and there role in enhancing rigor?
    Great question. I haven't thought about this before, but here are
    some initial thoughts. I think the positionality statement is part
    of epistemology and so it fits with methodological coherence (the
    first verification strategy). Epistemology is about how we know
    what is true about the research question/topic and that is partly
    about who we are in relation to the research question/topic. In my
    view, without a positionality statement it is difficult to fully
    discuss epistemology and thus the decision about which
    design/approach to use is compromised.
    How can the researcher's point of view be integrated with the participant's
    point of view in interpretative phenomenology analysis?
    I have limited experience with IPA. Here is a short discussion about it that I
    think is quite good and that fits with other articles by Jonathan Smith, the
    developer of IPA that I have read: delvetool.com/...
    phenomenological-analysis. As noted in the text at this website, while the
    focus of IPA is on the experience of the participant, the researcher who
    uses IPA must also acknowledge their own perspective and any related
    biases that may influence their interpretation.
    Why ATLAS.ti: atlasti.com/wh...
    Website: atlasti.com/
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