Syllabus

Doctor of Education (Ed.D.)

EDU 802 Qualitative Research Methods – Fall B 2021

Credits - 3

Description

Qualitative research provides field-focused, interpretative, detailed descriptions of participants and their settings. Students identify and implement research methods, developing a set of skills to critically observe individuals and communities, interview participants, and examine artifacts typically used in qualitative studies. Examination of one’s role within the research setting is informed by engaging in critical reflection. Students evaluate qualitative methods that align with their proposed research study purpose.

Course Objectives

Examine the philosophical underpinnings of qualitative research methods, modes of problem conceptualization, and research design. Conduct initial data collection, data analysis, and presentations of findings. Identify the central tenets of qualitative research, potential research questions, and pertinent scholarship on a variety of qualitative approaches. Use qualitative analysis in the process of transforming your organization and consider the use of qualitative approaches for future research.

Materials

Required

American Psychological Association. (2019). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association (7th ed.). American Psychological Association. (ISBN: 9781433832154, E-text: 9781433832185)

Creswell, J. & Guetterman, T. (2019). Educational research: Planning, conducting, and evaluating quantitative and qualitative research (6th ed). Pearson ISBN 978-0134519364. E-text 978-0134546568 (Optional- Instructor course ID: generic16649)

Weiss, R. S. (1995). Learning from strangers : The art and method of qualitative interview studies. ProQuest Ebook Central https://ebookcentral.proquest.com

Supplemental

Bloomberg, L. & Volpe, M. (2018). Completing Your Qualitative Dissertation: A Road Map from Beginning to End. (4th ed.). Sage Publications. (ISBN 978-1506307695). (An earlier edition may also be used.)

Boote, D. & Beile, P. (2005). Scholars before researchers: On the centrality of the dissertation Literature Review in Research Preparation. Educational Researcher, 34(3), 3-15. (An earlier or later edition may also be used.)

Creswell, J. W. & Creswell, J. D. (2017). Research design: Qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods approaches. (5th ed.). CA: SAGE Publications. ISBN 9781506386706, E-text: 9781506386690. (An earlier edition may also be used.)

Creswell, J. (2017). Qualitative Inquiry and Research Design: Choosing Among Five Approaches. Newbury Park: Sage Publications. ISBN 978-1506330204 E-text 9781506330211. (An earlier edition may also be used.

Pearson supplement for Creswell & Guetterman (2019) text] – MyLab & Mastering (Instructor Course ID: generic16649) – Registration Instructions

Learning Objectives and Outcomes

Student Learning Outcomes

  1. Articulate values and beliefs about qualitative research approaches through systematic inquiry and critical reflection.
  2. Design, justify, and pilot research questions to inform interview and focus group inquiry.
  3. Describe field-based qualitative data collection processes and personal experiences that inform a focused inquiry and leading organizational change.
  4. Use peer review and advice, coaching and critique to improve and refine research skills
  5. Apply critical reflection strategies to explore both the self as researcher and one’s relationship to a site of study.
  6. Critique and select qualitative research methodologies to align with proposed studies.
  7. Define and justify preferred methods of data collection and analyses in relation to a proposed research study.

Assignments

Whole Class and Small Group Discussion Boards

Students will be required to respond to prompts related to course materials and engage with colleagues in the course with responses to classmates’ posts to support understanding and the co-construction of knowledge.

Purpose Statement

Students will write a purpose statement for the upcoming interview. 

Interview Protocol

Students will design an interview questionnaire/guide.

Coding Assignment

Students will code interview transcript data. 

Structured Abstract

In this course, students will be drafting a structured abstract for a Qualitative Study Written Report final assignment. The first part of the Report is the Abstract.

The Structured Abstract should be between 200-400 words and should include all of these components: Background/Context; Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study; Setting; Participants; Research Design; Data Collection and Analysis; Findings; and Conclusions.

Final Report

Students will write the report in 2,000 words or less (including references page, tables, charts, etc.) following APA format and including the following elements:

  • Title
  • Structured Abstract
  • Objective or purposes
  • Research methods, design & techniques
  • Findings and conclusions

Grading Policy

Your grade in this course will be determined by the following criteria:

Grade Breakdown

ASSIGNMENTSPOINTS
Purpose Statement5
Interview Protocol10
Coding Assignment10
Structured Abstract10
Final Report30
Discussions 35
TOTAL100

Grading

The criteria for all courses in the Ed. D. program are described in the modules and/or rubrics. Assignments will include guidelines with rubrics, descriptions of expectations, or examples, and include point values. Coursework will be assessed and graded using individual evaluation protocols that are provided for the three major assignments. Final “grades” will reflect the following schema:

  • High Pass (HP): Work that exceeds all or most of the criteria of the respective assignment. To receive a high pass the work must demonstrate exceptional command and display of all or most required elements (95 – 100);
  • Pass (P): Work that meets all requirements and expectations as specified in assignments, and is fully satisfactory in every respect (80 – 94);
  • Low Pass (LP): Work is deemed unsatisfactory (70 – 79).

Note** The instructor will determine if an assignment may be revised and resubmitted for rescoring. Candidates may proceed to subsequent courses in the curriculum with one LP grade, and although there is no failing grade, a second LP course grade results in termination from the doctoral program.

All assignments are to be completed in a timely manner with appropriate accuracy, detail, thought and reflection fitting of doctoral-level degree candidates. All assignments (done in writing or with other media applications) are graded on the basis of faculty assessment of a student’s ability to accurately apply concepts from readings, organization, and mechanics. Please note: all submitted documents must be saved in Microsoft Word/Excel/PowerPoint in order for them to transmit successfully. All work must be properly identified and include author(s)’ name(s). Submit all written work in APA style.

Schedule

Week 1: Oct 20 – Oct 24
Week 2: Oct 25 – Oct 31
Week 3: Nov 1 – Nov 7
Week 4: Nov 8 – Nov 14
Week 5: Nov 15 – Nov 21
Week 6: Nov 22 – Nov 28
Week 7: Nov 29 – Dec 5
Week 8: Dec 6 – Dec 12

Week and Dates

Topic

Activities & Assignments

Deadlines

Week 1

Course Overview

Defining Qualitative Research

Review Course Syllabus

Readings linked in the course (each week)

Whole-Class Discussion Forum for Week 1

Offline Assignment: Personal Research Journal – Entry #1

Discussion Initial post to prompt is due by 11:59 PM ET FRIDAY 

Discussion responses to peers by 11:59 PM ET Sunday

Week 2

Choosing a Research Design from Qualitative Methodology

 

Whole-Class Discussion – Purpose Statement

Assignment: Complete Purpose Statement Worksheet

Discussion Initial post to prompt is due by 11:59 PM ET Wednesday

Discussion responses to peers by 11:59 PM ET Sunday

Purpose Statement Worksheet submitted by 11:59 PM ET Sunday

Week 3

Research Questions

 

Small Group Discussion – Research Reflection

Discussion Initial post to prompt is due by 11:59 PM ET Wednesday

Discussion responses to peers by 11:59 PM ET Sunday

Week 4

The Semi-Structured Interview and Human Subject Protection

 

Assignment: Interview Protocol and Questions

Discussion Initial post to prompt is due by 11:59 PM ET Wednesday

Discussion responses to peers by 11:59 PM ET Sunday

Interview Protocol and Questions by 11:59 PM ET Sunday

Week 5

Coding Qualitative Data

 

Small Group Discussion

Coding Assignment

Discussion Initial post to prompt is due by 11:59 PM ET Wednesday

Discussion responses to peers by 11:59 PM ET Sunday

Coding Assignment by 11:59 PM ET Sunday

Week 6

Identifying Analytical Themes and Patterns

 

Theme-Building Discussion

Structured Abstract Assignment

Initial post to the discussion by 11:59 PM ET Wednesday 

Responses posted for 2 others by 11:59 PM ET Sunday

Structured Abstract submitted by 11:59 PM ET Sunday

Week 7

Final Report

 

Assignment: Final Research Report

Whole-class discussion

Initial post to the discussion by 11:59 PM ET Wednesday 

Responses posted for 2 others by 11:59 PM ET Sunday

Final Research Report submitted by 11:59 PM ET  Sunday

Week 8

Reflections

 

Whole-Class DB – Final Reflection

Course Evaluation

Discussion post to prompt is due by 11:59 PM ET FRIDAY

There are no response posts this week.

 

Student Resources

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Make sure to cite your sources appropriately as well as use your own words in synthesizing information from published literature. Webinars and workshops, included early in your coursework, will help guide best practices in APA citation and academic writing.

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Late Policy

Assignments: Late assignments will be accepted up to 3 days late; however, there is a 10% grade reduction (from the total points) for the late submission. After three days the assignment will not be accepted.

Discussion posts: If the initial post is submitted late, but still within the discussion board week, there will be a 10% grade reduction from the total discussion grade (e.g., a 3 point discussion will be reduced by 0.3 points). Any posts submitted after the end of the Discussion Board week will not be graded.

Please make every effort ahead of time to contact your instructor and your student support specialist if you are not able to meet an assignment deadline. Arrangements for extenuating circumstances may be considered by faculty.

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UNE Online Student Handbook

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