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CASE STUDY © LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION & KEITH MORRISON

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Research Methods in Education 6th Edition

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Page 1: Chapter14

CASE STUDY

© LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION &

KEITH MORRISON

Page 2: Chapter14

STRUCTURE OF THE CHAPTER

• What is a case study?• Generalization in case study• Reliability and validity in case studies• What makes a good case study researcher?• Examples of kinds of case study• Why participant observation?• Planning a case study• Data in case studies• Recording observations • Writing up a case study

Page 3: Chapter14

WHAT IS A CASE STUDY?

• A case study is a specific, holistic, often unique instance that is frequently designed to illustrate a more general principle;

• The study of an instance in action;• The study of an evolving situation;• Case studies portray ‘what it is like’ to be in a

particular situation;• Case studies often include direct observations

(participant and non-participant) and interviews.

Page 4: Chapter14

WHAT IS A CASE?

• A person;• A group;• An organization; • An event;

Page 5: Chapter14

ELEMENTS OF CASE STUDY

• Rich, vivid and holistic description (‘thick description’) and portrayal of events, contexts and situations through the eyes of participants (including the researcher);

• Contexts are temporal, physical, organizational, institutional, interpersonal;

• Chronological narrative;• Combination of description, analysis and

interpretation;• Focus on actors and participants;• Let the data speak for themselves (don’t over-

interpret).

Page 6: Chapter14

TYPES OF CASE STUDY

• Exploratory (pilot);• Descriptive (e.g. narrative);• Explanatory.

Stake:• Intrinsic case studies: (to understand the case in

question);• Instrumental case studies (examining a particular

case to gain insight into an issue or theory);• Collective case studies (groups of individual

studies to gain a fuller picture).

Page 7: Chapter14

DESIGNS IN CASE STUDY

• Single-case design – a critical case, an extreme case, a unique case, a representative or

typical case, a revelatory case (an opportunity to research a case heretofore unresearched.

• Embedded, single-case design – more than one ‘unit of analysis’ is incorporated into the design, e.g.

a case study of a whole school might also use sub-units of classes, teachers, students, parents, and each of these might require different data collection instruments.

• Multiple-case design – comparative case studies within an overall piece of research, or

replication case studies.

• Embedded multiple-case design – different sub-units may be involved in each of the different cases,

and a range of instruments used for each sub-unit, and each is kept separate to each case.

Page 8: Chapter14

KEY QUESTIONS IN CASE STUDY• What exactly is the case(s)?• How are cases identified and selected?• What kind of case study is this (what is its

purpose)?• What is reliable evidence?• What is objective evidence?• What is an appropriate selection to include from

the wealth of generated data?• What is a fair and accurate account?• Under what circumstances is it fair to take an

exceptional case or a critical event?• What kind of sampling is most appropriate?

Page 9: Chapter14

KEY QUESTIONS IN CASE STUDY• To what extent is triangulation required and how

will this be addressed?• What is the nature of the validation process in the

case study?• How will the balance be struck between

uniqueness and generalization?• What is the most appropriate form of writing up

and reporting the case study?• What ethical issues are exposed in undertaking

the case study?

Page 10: Chapter14

DATA IN CASE STUDIES

• Observations (structured to unstructured);• Field notes;• Interviews (structured to unstructured);• Documents;• Numbers.

Page 11: Chapter14

TRIANGULATION

• Time;• Place;• Methodologies;• Instrumentation;• Researchers;• Participants;• Theory (interpretive paradigms/lenses).

Page 12: Chapter14

ROLE OF RESEARCHER(Stake, 1995)

TEACHER

ADVOCATE

EVALUATOR

BIOGRAPHER

INTERPRETER

Page 13: Chapter14

STRENGTHS OF CASE STUDIES

• Can establish cause and effect;• Rooted in real contexts;• Regard context as determinant of behaviour;• The whole is more than the sum of the parts

(holism);• Strong on reality;• Recognize and accept complexity,uniqueness and

unpredictability;

Page 14: Chapter14

STRENGTHS OF CASE STUDIES

• Lead to action (link to action research);• Can focus on critical incidents;• Written in accessible style and are immediately

intelligible;• Practicable (can be done by a single researcher);• Can permit generalizations and application to

similar situations;

Page 15: Chapter14

GENERALIZATION IN CASE STUDY

• From the single instance to the class of instances;

• From features of the single case to classes with the same features;

• From the single features of part of the case to the whole of the case;

• From a single case to a theoretical extension or theoretical generalization.

Page 16: Chapter14

RELIABILITY AND VALIDITY IN CASE STUDIES

• Construct validity• Internal validity • External validity • Concurrent validity • Convergent validity • Ecological validity • Reliability • Avoidance of bias

THE NEED FOR A CHAIN OF EVIDENCE

Page 17: Chapter14

A GOOD CASE STUDY RESEARCHER MUST BE . . .

• An effective questioner, listener and prober• An effective observer• Able to make informed inferences • Adaptable to changing and emerging

situations• Versed in research methods• Able to collate and synthesize data• Able to maintain confidences and to act with

discretion and confidentiality• Versed in relevant subject knowledge

Page 18: Chapter14

WHY PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION?

• Observation studies are superior to experiments and surveys when data are being collected on non-verbal behaviour.

• Investigators can discern ongoing behaviour as it occurs and are able to make appropriate notes about its salient features.

• Researchers can develop more intimate and informal relationships with those they are observing, and in natural environments.

• Case study observations are less reactive than other types of data-gathering methods.

• Direct observation is faithful to the real-life, in situ and holistic nature of a case study.

Page 19: Chapter14

PLANNING A CASE STUDY

CONSIDER: • The particular circumstances of the case:

– The possible disruption to individual participants that participation might entail;

– Negotiating access to people; – Negotiating ownership of the data; – Negotiating release of the data.

Page 20: Chapter14

PLANNING A CASE STUDYCONSIDER: • The conduct of the study including:

– The use of primary and secondary sources; – The opportunities to check data; – Triangulation;– Peer and respondent validation;– Reflexivity; – Data collection methods; – Data analysis and interpretation; – Theory generation; – Writing the report

• Consequences of the research (and for whom).

Page 21: Chapter14

STAGES IN CASE STUDY

• Start with a wide field of focus;• Progressive focusing;• Draft interpretation/report (avoid generalizing

too early).

Page 22: Chapter14

CONTINUA OF DATA IN CASE STUDIES

NATURAL ARTIFICIAL

UNSTRUCTURED STRUCTURED

NARRATIVE NUMERIC

JOURNALISTIC STATISTICAL

QUALITATIVE QUANTITATIVE

Page 23: Chapter14

DATA TYPES IN CASE STUDY

• Documents• Archival records • Interviews • Direct observation • Participant observation • Physical artifacts • Actual data gathered, recorded and

organized by entry, and the researcher’s ongoing analysis/report/comments/narrative on the data.

Page 24: Chapter14

RECORDING OBSERVATIONS

• Record the notes as quickly as possible after observation.

• Discipline yourself to write notes quickly.• Dictating rather than writing is acceptable.• Word-processing field notes is vastly preferable

to handwriting.• Keep backup copies of field notes.• The notes ought to be full enough adequately

to summon up for one again, months later, a reasonably vivid picture of any described event.

Page 25: Chapter14

WRITING UP A CASE STUDY

• Executive summary followed by detail.• A prose account is provided, interspersed with

relevant figures, tables, emergent issues, analysis and conclusion.

• Examine the same case through two or more lenses (e.g. explanatory, descriptive, theoretical).

• Follow a simple sequence or chronology, interspersed with commentaries, interpretations and explanations.

• Have a structure that follows theoretical constructs or a case that is being made.

• Order by main issues.• Consider rival explanations.

Page 26: Chapter14

PROBLEMS WITH CASE STUDIES

• Difficult to organize;• Limited generalizability;• Problems of cross-checking;• Risk of bias, selectivity and subjectivity;

Page 27: Chapter14

AN EXAMPLE OF A CASE STUDY:LEARNING TO LABOUR

Willis, P. (1977)Purpose: to find out how working class kids get working class jobs and others let them

Considerations:• the need to link macro and micro sociology;• The need to analyze schooling in terms of

macro-constraints and human agency• The need to see schools as sites of contestation,

resistance and struggle in both a micro and macro sense.

Page 28: Chapter14

PROCEDURE

(a) Ethnographic study of a group of males ini their final year of school and then in their first year beyond school, working in factories and other short-term, manual employment

(b) Study of their behaviour in school and how it feeds into their choice of post-school occupations

Page 29: Chapter14

ELEMENTS OF LADS’ CULTURE

• Opposition to authority and rejection of conformity: clothing; smoking and lying; drinking;

• Celebration of the informal group;• Excitement is out of school;• Rejection of the literary tradition;• Sexism;• Racism.

Page 30: Chapter14

SHOP-FLOOR CULTURE• Masculine chauvinism – sexism;• Attempt to gain informal control of the work

process;• Rejection of the conformists in the factory;• Rejection of ‘theory’ and certification;• Rejection of the coercion which underlines the

teaching paradigm;• Shirking work/absenteeism/taking time off;• No break on the taboo of informing;• Speaking up for yourself;• Present oriented;• Rejection of mental labour and celebration of

manual labour.

Page 31: Chapter14

MAIN FINDINGS

• The behaviours and values which the lads sought and practised in school lead them into choosing deliberately and positively those post-school occupations that reinforce and let them practise these behaviours and values;

• There is a continuity between the lads’ life styles at school and their life styles out of school and post-school;

• The need for immediate cash, immediate gratification, anti-authority behaviour, chauvinism, rejection of mental labour, and celebration of the informal group find expression in school and post-school.

Page 32: Chapter14

CONCLUSION

Working class kids get working class jobs because that is what they choose and what they are driven to choose by the values that they hold.