ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA
FIGURE 3 Data in Field Research(Data 1 = Raw sense data, experiences of researcher;
Data 2 = Recorded data, physical record of experiences; Data 3 = Selected, processed data in a final report)
Source:Adapted from Ellen (1984a:214).
Observe
Listen
Axial
Coding
Selective
Coding
Analyze
Data
Collect
Data
Artifacts
Documents, Maps
Observations of Others
Other
Sources
Data
1
Data
2
Data
3
Jotted
Notes
Memory &
Emotion
Visual
Recording
Sound
Recording
Interview
Field
Notes
Open
Coding
Sort and
Classify
Interpret &
Elaborate
a social process or relationship and then compare
specific cases to it.
In qualitative research, we can use ideal types
in two ways: contrast contexts and analogy.
1.Contrast contexts.Researchers who adopt
a strongly interpretive approach may use ideal types
to interpret data in a way that is sensitive to the con-
text and cultural meanings of members. Rather than
develop hypotheses or create a generalizable the-
ory, they use the ideal type to bring out the specifics
of each case and to emphasize the impact of the
unique context.^9 As they contrast between contexts,
they may choose cases with dramatic contrasts or
distinctive features. For example, in Work and
Authority in Industry,Bendix (1956) compared
management relations in very different contexts,
Czarist Russia and industrialized England. When
comparing contexts, some researchers do not use
the ideal type to illustrate a theory in different cases
or to discover regularities. Instead, they accentuate
the specific and the unique. In contrast, others use
ideal types to show how unique features shape the
operation of general processes. As Skocpol and
Somers (1980:178) explained:
“Above all, contrasts are drawn between or among
individual cases. Usually such contrasts are devel-
oped with the aid of references to broad themes or
orienting questions or ideal type concepts. Themes
and questions may serve as frameworks for pointing
out differences among cases. Ideal types may be used
as sensitized devices—benchmarks against which to
establish the particular features of each case.”
You might use the ideal type to show how spe-
cific circumstances, cultural meanings, and the per-
spectives of specific individuals are central for
understanding a social setting or process. The ideal
type becomes a foil against which you can highlight
unique contextual features.