Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byTheresa Hilder Modified over 10 years ago
1
Sally Thorne, RN, PhD, FCAHS Sally Thorne, RN, PhD, FCAHS Professor and Director UBC School of Nursing Vancouver, BC Sally Thorne, RN, PhD, FCAHS Sally Thorne, RN, PhD, FCAHS Professor and Director UBC School of Nursing Vancouver, BC Centre for Critical Qualitative Health Research Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing University of Toronto Sept 27, 2010 Centre for Critical Qualitative Health Research Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing University of Toronto Sept 27, 2010 Methodological Conventions in Transition: Shifting the Balance between Theorizing and Application
2
Location Discipline Discipline Training Training Conceptual Orientation Conceptual Orientation
3
Nursing
4
Methodological Affinities PhenomenologyPhilosophy/Psychology EthnographyAnthropology Grounded Theory Sociology
5
Confronting Resistance Health science community Health science community Social scientist colleagues Social scientist colleagues Grant reviewers/Journal editors Grant reviewers/Journal editors Paradigm thinking Paradigm thinking
6
Methodolatry “slavish attachment and devotion to method” “a preoccupation with selecting and defending methods to the exclusion of the actual substance of the story being told.” Janesick, V. J. (1994). The dance of qualitative research design: Metaphor, methodolatry, and meaning. In N. K. Denzin & Y. S. Lincoln (Eds.), Handbook of qualitative research (pp. 209–219). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
7
Rule-Alignment
8
The Entrée: Tabula Rasa “Nothing is known…”
9
Researcher Role Abdication “The data speak for themselves….”
10
The Convenient Exit “Saturation was achieved…”
11
The Primacy of Abstraction “ The overarching metaphor….”
12
Narrative Imperative “My study participants speak their truth…” “My study participants speak their truth…”
13
The Meaning of Meaning “My journey…..”
14
Truth Claim Grandiosities Lachrymal validity Adulatory credibility Adulatory credibility
15
Theory in Qualitative Health Research
16
Epistemological Differences Social Science Health Science
17
What Theory Privileges and What it Obscures
18
The Fallout of Borrowed Theoretical Tradition Losing the disciplinary grip Losing the disciplinary grip Manipulating language signifiers Manipulating language signifiers Discrediting the field with fuzziness and irrelevance Discrediting the field with fuzziness and irrelevance
19
A Necessary but Not Sufficient Schism?
20
Emancipation of Qualitative Health Research
21
Applied Qualitative Methodology The Next Generation
22
Venturing Beyond Description and Theorizing
23
Using Research to Bring a Clinical Angle of Vision into the Evidence- Based Context Limits of conventional scienceLimits of conventional science Experiential phenomena not amenable to measurementExperiential phenomena not amenable to measurement Patterns in experiencePatterns in experience Commonalities and variationsCommonalities and variations Critical reflection on contextCritical reflection on context
24
Applied Qualitative Research as a Corrective to Big Science
26
Illuminator
27
Variance Interpreter
28
Challenger
29
Humanizer
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.