case study research by maureann o keefe
TRANSCRIPT
Qualitative research denies positivist claim that there is one objective truth to be uncovered through process of research (Cohen et al)
Meaning is found through engaging with realities in our world (Crotty)
Case studies used in large number of social science research theses/dissertations
(Yin)
Because you want to investigate a certain phenomena (learning situation, technology for learning) with a certain group of people/person
The case = the people/person
Allows for explorationTakes a holistic view of a situationAccessibility/convenience (situations
where sampling can be difficult)Flexible
Watch out.....data can be huge/unwieldy......
Case study is among 5 approaches to qualitative enquiry (Creswell)
Seminal researchers: YIN, STAKECohen et al also present case study
Yin more structured approach to research than Stake
Stake interpretative, brings his own outlook *Slightly different approaches among Yin/Stake to structuring of
case, but all have similarities , find which model fits your research
Case is within bounded environment Multiple forms data collection Validity checking
Single organisation - school: what is happening with a particular tool/strategy
A particular community - rural village ongoing issue/dispute
On a particular group ......... Issue to a group An individual - career criminal - examination
designed to understand motivations of a career criminal
A decision – merging to 2 schools, why was decision taken, how was it implemented , what was outcome
An event – an election campaign
(Henn et al)
“A case study is an empirical study that investigates a contemporary phenomenon in depth and with its real-life context” (Yin, 2009, p18)
Case is a bounded system, i.e. learning situation/group = case (Stake)
Cases are units of investigation ..individuals..communities..groups (Henn et al)
(A case can be a group of students, a group of teachers, 1 teacher, 1 student)
Develop holistic and meaningful characteristics of real life event
Investigate: Small group behaviour Managerial cycles Neighbourhood change School performance
(Yin 2009)
Stake does not see the case study as a method, but suggests that mixed methods inform the case
Case is not the method, It is the object of study (Stake, 1995) (ie the group or the individual)
Read case study examplesWhat is the case?What is the research question? Single or multiple case? How was data collected? ...........................................
No minimum size for case study (can be 1 person to lots of people!)
Sometimes research is small Much of action research is case
study
(Henn et al: research can be small)
Case study is not sampling, can’t understand other cases from it
Often only weak generalisations made (however sometimes generalisations inevitable)
Lack of rigour can be problematic Sometimes too long, massive
unreadable documents!
Qualitative - emphasis on interpretation
All researchers are influenced by their experience (Stake)
For assertions we draw on understandings deep within us
Good case study is reflective , patient, willing to see other views...triangulation
Research comes from looking for a problem Identify a case study Identify an issue in the case study
How can we better understand the case – this needs to overarching approach for the case
What is your suggested case?
(sometimes it is easier to define what your case is not!)
Case – Issue –Data – Analysis – Assertion This could lead to thinking that data
could solve an issue, not really Assertion really initiates further
work
Rigorous methodological approach Thorough literature review Posing research questions Explicit procedures of doing research Acknowledge strengths/ limitations
of case study research (Yin)
6 common sources evidence Documents, archival records, interviews,
direct observation, participant observation, physical artefacts ...photos, video...
Need to master different data collection procedures (Yin)
Main methods Observation Interview Document review
Survey Focus groups (Stake not a fan!
Prefers interviews)
1. Use multiple sources of evidence Triangulation
2. Create a case study database Keep your data organised
3. Maintain chain of evidence Clear line of discovery, time line,
transparent processes to outside reader of case study
(Yin 2009)
What kind of validity are you aiming for?
How can you say something is valid? Case study – no right or wrong
(Cohen et al)Confirmed by multiple
sources/participant evidence Evidence is: trustworthy, credible,
confirmable
How is your interpretation valid? Researchers role is to interpret
events Interpretation is subjective
In methodology acknowledge that a limitation of case study research is that it is Interpretative and subject to researcher
How do you analyse data generated? What does data tell you? Stake, Yin: strategies Read your data Perform categorical aggregation
(Stake) Find instances of themes, subthemes,
major themes Perform constant comparison
Reading your data and trying to find contradictory evidence
Member-checking, Keeps validity Redundancy, question is asked in
various ways Effort to assure that right information
and interpretation obtained Does phenomenon remain the same
at other times? (Case study can be informed from
quantitative or qualitative data alone)
Cases using multiple sources of evidence rated more highly (Yin)
Validity Researcher gains more skills in data
collection techniques
Takes more time (more expense) Greater expertise in data collection
techniques, more work needed
How will you perform triangulation?
Weak generalisations made (however sometimes generalisations inevitable)
Petite generalisations (Stake)
Stake: ‘ethical side of case studies is mainly a privacy business’
Don’t invite over exposure- (falling cup of coffee story!)
Anonymity of participants
Are there other ethical issues?
‘The Quintain’ – issue common across all multiple case studies
Multiple case studies don't have to be comparative
[Stake - example of education (pre-school) case studies across Europe]
Sometimes intent of multiple case study is to seek generalisability – however generalisability is weak with any case study
May/may not be in final reportOnce off unusual event (unplanned
data that occurs from a particular event) Telephone interview... General chat
Stake recommends vignettes A brief description/story Episode to illustrate an aspect of the
case Gives audience a story that they
recognise Dialogic, experiential We should not have too much of
contrast between case study and vignette
Know your audience – who are your audience?
What will audience look for?Multiple types of audience need
multiple types written report (Yin)1st write-up MSc2nd write-up more journal focussed
Design for audience – readers of your proposed journal
MSc – important to know style/formatting of your chosen journal
Word limit, referencing styles, Structure – abstract, introduction, methodology, findings from data, conclusions, further work....
ALT-J (Research in Learning Technology) style: http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/journal.asp?issn=0968-7769&linktype=44
You cannot begin writing early enough
After literature review Draft the bibliography/references Draft the methodology (how data will be
collected)
Writing means rewriting! (Yin)
The case study must Be significant Be complete Consider alternative perspectives Display sufficient evidence Be composed in engaging manner
Cohen, Manion, Morrison (2007) Research methods in education London; New York: Routledge.
Creswell, J.W. (2007) Qualitative inquiry and research design : choosing among five approaches. Thousand Oaks : Sage Publications, 2007.
Crotty, M (1998) The foundations of social research : meaning and perspective in the research process London: SAGE.
Henn, M; Foard, N; Weinstein, M (2010) A Critical Introduction to Social Research 2nd Ed SAGE Publications Ltd.
Stake, R.E. (1995) The art of case study research, Thousand Oaks, Calif.; London: Sage.
Yin, R.K. (2009) Case study research : design and methods, Thousand Oaks, Calif. Sage Publications.