scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Shedding the cobra effect: problematising thematic emergence, triangulation, saturation and member checking.

TLDR
Some HPE scholars have begun to use terms in qualitative publications without critically reflecting on: (i) their ontological and epistemological roots; (ii) their definitions, or (iii) their implications.
Abstract
Context Qualitative research is widely accepted as a legitimate approach to inquiry in health professions education (HPE). To secure this status, qualitative researchers have developed a variety of strategies (e.g. reliance on post-positivist qualitative methodologies, use of different rhetorical techniques, etc.) to facilitate the acceptance of their research methodologies and methods by the HPE community. Although these strategies have supported the acceptance of qualitative research in HPE, they have also brought about some unintended consequences. One of these consequences is that some HPE scholars have begun to use terms in qualitative publications without critically reflecting on: (i) their ontological and epistemological roots; (ii) their definitions, or (iii) their implications. Objectives In this paper, we share our critical reflections on four qualitative terms popularly used in the HPE literature: thematic emergence; triangulation; saturation, and member checking. Methods We discuss the methodological origins of these terms and the applications supported by these origins. We reflect critically on how these four terms became expected of qualitative research in HPE, and we reconsider their meanings and use by drawing on the broader qualitative methodology literature. Conclusions Through this examination, we hope to encourage qualitative scholars in HPE to avoid using qualitative terms uncritically and non-reflexively.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Thematic analysis of qualitative data: AMEE Guide No. 131.

TL;DR: Thematic analysis is outlined, positioning it in relation to other methods of qualitative analysis, and described when it is appropriate to use the method under a variety of epistemological frameworks, as this term is often misapplied.
Journal ArticleDOI

Twelve tips for conducting qualitative research interviews

TL;DR: The concept of qualitativeResearch interviews for novice researchers within medical education is introduced, providing 12 tips for conducting qualitative research interviews.
Journal ArticleDOI

What Makes for Effective Feedback: Staff and Student Perspectives.

TL;DR: The literature has shifted to view feedback as a process that students do where they make sense of information about work they have done, and use it to improve the quality of their work as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gender Differences in Attending Physicians' Feedback to Residents: A Qualitative Analysis.

TL;DR: Qualitative differences in the kind of feedback that male and female EM residents received from attending physicians are revealed and suggest that attending physicians should endeavor to providemale and female residents with consistent feedback and guard against gender bias in their perceptions of residents' capabilities.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Language Socialization into Academic Discourse Communities

TL;DR: The authors provide a brief overview of research on language socialization into academic communities and describe, in turn, developments in research on socialisation into oral, written, and online discourse and the social practices associated with each mode.
Journal Article

Re-grounding Grounded Theory

TL;DR: The authors argue that the Grounded theory method is not indelibly stamped with these failings and inconsistencies; although they are indeed failings, despite the views of many users of the method, however, the method is particularly suited to IS research, particularly where it proceeds from an antipositivist orientation that sees truth as socially constructed and sustained, and where representation is viewed as a distributed, systems phenomenon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sampling Richness and Qualitative Integrity: Challenges for Research With Families

TL;DR: The authors frame the problematic of data quality in the selection of units of analysis and observation and consider how to enhance sample richness and outline considerations for data quantity and sample size as well as case- and variable-based approaches.
Journal ArticleDOI

Appraising qualitative research articles in medicine and medical education.

TL;DR: A grid for the critical appraisal of qualitative research articles is described so that clinical teachers are in a better position to evaluate this type of research and to teach the critical appraisals of it.
Journal ArticleDOI

Redefining Qualitative Methods: Believability in the Fifth Moment

TL;DR: The importance of reliability and validity in research findings is traced from the traditional era, where there was only a modest distinction between qualitative and quantitative researchers involving their definitions of research reliability as discussed by the authors.
Related Papers (5)