Social Research Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches

(Brent) #1
QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE MEASUREMENT

for teachers and ask them about their feelings
toward the dimensions of morale in my definition.
I might go to the school and observe the teachers in
the teachers lounge, interacting with students, and
attending school activities. I might use school per-
sonnel records on teacher behaviors for statements
that indicate morale (e.g., absences, requests for let-
ters of recommendation for other jobs, performance
reports). I might survey students, school adminis-
trators, and others to find out what they think about
teacher morale. Whichever indicator I choose, I fur-
ther refine my conceptual definition as I develop it
(e.g., write specific questionnaire questions).
Conceptualization and operationalization are
necessary for each variable. In the preceding
example, morale is one variable, not a hypothesis.
It could be a dependent variable caused by some-
thing else, or it could be an independent variable
causing something else. It depends on my theoreti-
cal explanation.

Qualitative Conceptualization
and Operationalization
Conceptualization.In qualitative research, instead
of refining abstract ideas into theoretical definitions


early in the research process, we refine rudimentary
“working ideas” during the data collection and
analysis process. Conceptualizationis a process of
forming coherent theoretical definitions as we
struggle to “make sense” or organize the data and
our preliminary ideas about it.
As we gather and analyze qualitative data, we
develop new concepts, formulate definitions for
major constructs, and consider relationships
among them. Eventually, we link concepts and
constructs to create theoretical relationships. We
form and refine constructs while examining data
(e.g., field notes, photos and maps, historical doc-
uments), and we ask theoretical questions about
the data (e.g., Is this a case of class conflict? What
is the sequence of events and could it be different?
Why did this happen here but not somewhere
else?).
We need clear, explicit definitions expressed in
words and descriptions of specific actions that link
to other ideas and are tied to the data. In qualitative
research, conceptualization flows largely from the
data.

Operationalization.In qualitative studies, opera-
tionalization often precedes conceptualization

Conceptualization Conceptualization

Operationalization Operationalization

Hypothetical Causal
Relationship

Tested Empirical
Hypothesis

Theoretical
Level

Operational
Level

Empirical
Level

Independent Variable Dependent Variable

Abstract Construct to Concrete Measure

Abstract Construct

Conceptual Definition

Indicator or Measure

Abstract Construct

Conceptual Definition

Indicator or Measure

FIGURE 1 Conceptualization and Operationalization
Free download pdf