Qualitative research - sampling Flashcards

1
Q

What is a sample?

A
  • representative section of the wider population
  • aim = to generalise from the sample
  • needs to be large enough to say with some certainty results are accurate
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2
Q

What is the aim of sampling in qualitative research?

A
  • PPs actively pp in generation of the data
  • aim of qual. research is to discover meaning - not to generalise
  • so questions asked - decide on the sample
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3
Q

What is the sample in qualitative research?

A
  • deliberately biased = STRENGTH

- using quantitative approaches would be a weakness

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4
Q

How are the sample selected?

A
  • has person experienced phenomenon/culture?
  • people who are knowledgeable, reflective and able to talk at length
  • practicalities: cost, accessability, ethical issues
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5
Q

What is the sample like in qualitative research?

A

-small
-30-40 in ethnography or GT
-

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6
Q

When does the sample emerge in qualitative studies?

A

-as the study progressess

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7
Q

What are the types of sampling in qualitative research?

A

convenience, snowball, purposive, homogeneous, theoretical

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8
Q

What is convenience sampling?

A
  • often begin with this
  • easy and efficient but not ideal
  • e.g. 20 personal students
  • start this way but then need to sample more purposefully to get as much info as possible from few PPs
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9
Q

What is snowball sampling?

A
  • ask PPs for others with similar experiences e.g. friends of PPs
  • lead to limited sample and ethical issues
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10
Q

What is purposive (purposeful) sampling?

A
  • most studies move on to this
  • selecting people who will be most informative
  • e.g. maximum variation sampling
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11
Q

What is homeogeneous sampling?

A
  • opposite of maximum variation sampling
  • used if want to focus on a particular group and understand them well
  • e.g. male STNs first placement
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12
Q

What is theoretical sampling?

A
  • used in grouded theory
  • finds PPs who will help the researcher to build the theory
  • e.g. socialisation of STNs into ward culture - select certain STNs who have had particular experiences and can offer insight
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13
Q

How do qualitative researchers decide on sample size?

A
  • principle called data saturation guides sample size
  • sampling stops when enough data have been collected to describe/explain the issue + no new ideas are emerging
  • size = not pre-determined
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14
Q

Is it possible to generalise qualitative research?

A
  • NO
  • but many debates
  • evidence based practice fuels debate
  • many researchers argue that if a phenomenon/culture has been described in enough detail, cant be generalised but can be transferred to other settings
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