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- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!uvaarpa!darwin.sura.net!paladin.american.edu!auvm!YFN.YSU.EDU!AA248
- Message-ID: <199301242107.AA11482@yfn.ysu.edu>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.qualrs-l
- Date: Sun, 24 Jan 1993 16:07:27 -0500
- Reply-To: aa248@yfn.ysu.edu
- Sender: Qualitative Research for the Human Sciences <QUALRS-L@UGA.BITNET>
- From: Nicholas Sturm <aa248@YFN.YSU.EDU>
- Subject: Re: Coding in qualitative analysis
- Comments: To: QUALRS-L@UGA.bitnet
- Lines: 66
-
- >
- >In <9301240333.AA11087@titan.ucs.umass.edu> GERALD WEINSTEIN
- ><gerald.weinstein@EDUC.UMASS.EDU> writes:
- >
- >>It seems as though there is some reluctance on your part to trust the
- >>researchers interpretations. You therefore recommend that the *interviewee*
- >>be given the opportunity to *validate* the interpretation. But what if
- >>one had interviewed some convicted sexual molestors in order to find out
- >>how they viewed their behavior and to what extent they could identify the
- >>feelings of the victims. Upon analysis of the responses the researcher
- >>*found* that the molestors (a) attributed most of the causes to the situation
- >>or the victim and that (b) they couldn't assume the perspective of the
- >>victim. How would the research benefit from the interviewee's evaluation
- >>of the researcher's interpretation?
- >
- > First, the interviewee's evaluation would be intrinsically
- >valuable, because there could well be patterns of response which
- >correlate well to patterns in the original data (i.e., the ones with a
- >'good' prognosis from their counsellor could be the ones who *are*
- >able to assume the perspective of the victim, and acknowledge that the
- >researcher is right.) Failure to validate on some points raises a
- >question of a difference in perception, which would then have to be
- >explained.
-
- I'm not at all sure how a concept of validation fits here. If the
- interviewee disagrees, it would seem to invalidate. If this is not the
- perception, then it is just more interviewing.
-
- However, failure to obtain such a difference in perception
- >due to methodological considerations is an error, because we are
- >ignoring the very real possibility that we are wrong.
- > A good theory could lend weight to the researcher's explanation of
- >any failures to validate. An ad-hoc explanation which dismisses the
- >rival hypotheses because they are not generated by researchers is a
- >borderline ad hominem argument not untainted with hubris.
- > Secondly, let's turn that last question around, and ask "how
- >could the interviewee benefit from the researcher's evaluation of the
- >interviewee's perspective."
-
- That may be a morally useful thing to do, but it's not quite the same
- as the original "research goal".
-
- Should we not give our 'subjects' the
- >chance to at least disagree with what is said about them, if not gain
- >some insights about themselves? This is the classic counselling model,
- >and while I hardly suggest that researchers untrained in counselling
- >engage in counselling behaviour, it does appear that under proper
- >supervision, even a child molestor could gain from the hypothetical
- >research described above....particularly if he or she felt burdened
- >with an 'incurable disease' which no one else shared. Knowing that
- >others have the same problem and are working on it can ease the
- >emotional burden that perceived isolation imposes. Sharing some of the
- >findings could be of great benefit in such cases. A fair payback for
- >participation, don't you think?
-
- If the interview is being repaid, perhaps he should just be made
- co-author of the report. Seems rather like what one is desiring by
- requesting the 'validation.'
-
- But pardom my butting in. I should just remain a watcher here.
- >
- >
-
- --
- Nicholas Sturm, 4037 Ward Beecher, 410 Wick Ave., Youngstown, Ohio 44555
- * aa248@yfn.ysu.edu *
-