Qualitative Flashcards
Epistemology
Is concerned with the nature of reality/knowledge and how knowledge can be produced
Similarities between interpretive and critical constructionist
- Concerned with meaning
- Interested in how people make sense of the world
- Interested in individual experience
- Meanings attributed to events or experiences
- AIMS TO: Describe, possibly explain but never predict.
- Thick descriptions
- Often study people within natural occurring settings
“What it’s like to” - Not interested in cause-effect, making generalizations to broader populations
- Rather we try to make analytic generalizable claims
Interpretive
-Focus in on people’s subjective experiences
-Focuses on the individual
“taking people’s subjective experiences seriously”
-Accepts what people say at face value
-People’s words = their truth
-People’s words= direct reflection of their thoughts and experiences
-Relatively uncritical
-Does not focus on social forces or hidden meanings
-Language = Truth
rigour
validity
Social Constructionist
- Multiple realities
- Reality and knowledge is ever-changing
- Reality is subjective
- Knowledge is socially constructed
- Knowledge seen as social, cultural, moral, ideological and political
- People’s words are not treated as direct reflection of fact, but as one socially constructed version of the truth
- Language is not neutral -it “does” something, it is always political
Not very interested in individual agency
Rather the focus is on systemic and structural processes and its impact on the individual
Quantitative -positivism
- there is only one truth, one reality
- only one correct view or answer
- cause and effect relationship
- direct correspondence between thing and our perception of them
Homosexuality according to DSM 1952-1973
- pathologised, sexual deviation, neurosis, diseased
- 1974 removed from DSM
Has the physical act of homosexual sex changed since 1973?
No, only how it has been constructed has changed.
Interpretive:
Interested in the subjective understandings and experiences of individuals/groups
Social Constructionist:
Interested in how these understandings and experiences are derived from (and reproduce) larger social discourses
Interpretive: People = origin of their experiences, feelings and perceptions
Social Constructionist:
People’s experiences, feelings thoughts are a product of a broader system of meaning
Interpretive: Individual
Social Constructionist:
Social forces
Language according to positivist
treat language neutrally, as a mere vehicle for getting facts
Interpretivism: Language
Language as window to access facts/experiences/reality
Social Constructionism: Language
- language constructs reality
- language must therefore be the object of the study
- concerned with broader patterns of social meaning encoded in language
SC is Also interested in symbols or objects (One word or object may have multiple systems of meaning)
Guess the approach: How do homeless people in London experience their daily lives?
Interpretive
Guess the approach: What barriers to healthy eating are constructed in the ways men talk about food?
Critical/Constructionist