1 / 18

Dr Chih Hoong Sin Head of Information and Research Disability Rights Commission

Using QDAS in the production of policy evidence by non-researchers: strengths, pitfalls and implications for consumers of research. Dr Chih Hoong Sin Head of Information and Research Disability Rights Commission.

leala
Download Presentation

Dr Chih Hoong Sin Head of Information and Research Disability Rights Commission

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Using QDAS in the production of policy evidence by non-researchers: strengths, pitfalls and implications for consumers of research Dr Chih Hoong Sin Head of Information and Research Disability Rights Commission

  2. Presentation from the perspective of research commissioner and of research provider • Three key developments in UK: • evidence-based policy and practice • utilitarian view of research • effective dissemination

  3. Implications: • ‘marketised’ research relationships • increasing heterogeneity of ‘providers’ and ‘clients’ • different skills sets required • ‘quality guarantee’ in doubt or not primary concern? • different ‘normative worlds’ in collision

  4. Example of consultancies: • cross pollinators • reduce ‘silos’, enhance transferability • match makers • more effective partnership working • translators and processors • information usable and relevant • multiple dissemination routes, formative techniques • wider audience, timely

  5. Company X: • SME research and consultancy company • Works solely with public sector clients (i.e. national, regional, local government, public bodies) • Six employees use QDAS

  6. Prior experience: • 4 had general undergrad social research training • 1 did qualitative postgrad research • 1 no background in qualitative research at all • None had used any QDAS before

  7. Training (not mutually exclusive): • 1 had formal external training by specialist • 4 had ‘on the job’ training • 3 had formal internal training by colleague - implication? • 1 asked colleague • 1 read a manual

  8. Type of research QDAS used on: • All were large-scale mixed-method national policy evaluations • Mostly semi-structured interviews, one structured focus group • Volume of data - from around 30 to more than 100 documents • All individuals used QDAS on actual projects immediately after training

  9. Perceived adequacy of training: • All felt training was adequate, irrespective of: • background in qualitative research/data • experience in using QDAS • mode of training • timing of training

  10. Functions used: • All used QDAS for preparing and uploading documents; code; perform matrix node searches • Fewer used it to design coding structure; define codes; generate reports; create memos • 2 used Merge function

  11. Confidence and weakness: • All confident in functions with regular use • Less confident in functions with sporadic use or never used • Awareness of more ‘sophisticated functions’ that they had never used but no indications of knowledge of what these functions actually are

  12. Project management: • All trained in specific project teams • Division of labour - data management, data analysis • ‘Need to know’ and consistency

  13. Data analysis: • ‘Core’ analysis team • Structured coding design • Descriptive or topic codes • Largely descriptive analysis, lack of theorising

  14. Discussion: • Need to engage. Pragmatic rather than idealistic response. Can’t ignore or shun as ‘wrong’ or ‘unorthodox’ • QDAS can offer some tools to help mitigate against the worst of ‘bad practise’, depending on: • type of research • type of team management • type of outputs and hence analysis required

  15. Discussion: • Allows things that can be systematised to be systematised • Easy checking • Not overwhelm individuals, e.g. ‘need to know everything’

  16. What to look for: • Good guidance exist, but tend to target people with some understanding of research • What to look for and what to ask for when it’s not there. Inability to articulate causes frustrations on both sides, fuel continued misunderstanding • QDAS not the only way, but can help. Some risks (e.g. ‘wow’ factor).

  17. What to look for: • Samples of documents • Numbers of documents, all ‘analysed’ • Codes • Use of codes • …and, dare we hope, a theoretical ‘model’?

  18. Thank you for your attention and enjoy the rest of the conference! Dr Chih Hoong Sin Email: chihhoong@hotmail.com, chih.hoongsin@drc-gb.org

More Related