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Grounded theory

Grounded theory is a systematic methodology that has been largely applied to qualitative research conducted by social scientists. The methodology involves the construction of hypotheses and theories through the collecting and analysis of data.[1][2][3] Grounded theory involves the application of inductive reasoning. The methodology contrasts with the hypothetico-deductive model used in traditional scientific research.

A study based on grounded theory is likely to begin with a question, or even just with the collection of qualitative data. As researchers review the data collected, ideas or concepts become apparent to the researchers. These ideas/concepts are said to "emerge" from the data. The researchers tag those ideas/concepts with codes that succinctly summarize the ideas/concepts. As more data are collected and re-reviewed, codes can be grouped into higher-level concepts and then into categories. These categories become the basis of a hypothesis or a new theory. Thus, grounded theory is quite different from the traditional scientific model of research, where the researcher chooses an existing theoretical framework, develops one or more hypotheses derived from that framework, and only then collects data for the purpose of assessing the validity of the hypotheses.[4]

Background edit

Grounded theory is a general research methodology, a way of thinking about and conceptualizing data. It is used in studies of diverse populations from areas like remarriage after divorce[5] and professional socialization.[6] Grounded theory methods were developed by two sociologists, Barney Glaser and Anselm Strauss.[7]

While collaborating on research on dying hospital patients, Glaser and Strauss developed the constant comparative method which later became known as the grounded theory method. They summarized their research in the book Awareness of Dying, which was published in 1965. Glaser and Strauss went on to describe their method in more detail in their 1967 book, The Discovery of Grounded Theory.[7] The three aims of the book were to:

  1. Provide a rationale to justify the idea that the gap between a social science theory and empirical data should be narrowed by firmly grounding a theory in empirical research;
  2. Provide a logic for grounded theory;
  3. Legitimize careful qualitative research, the most important goal, because, by the 1960s, quantitative research methods had gained so much prestige that qualitative research had come to be seen as inadequate.[3]

A turning point in the acceptance of the theory came after the publication of Awareness of Dying. Their work on dying helped establish the influence of grounded theory in medical sociology, psychology, and psychiatry.[3][7] From its beginnings, grounded theory methods have become more prominent in fields as diverse as drama, management, manufacturing, and education.[8]

Philosophical underpinnings edit

Grounded theory combines traditions in positivist philosophy, general sociology, and, particularly, the symbolic interactionist branch of sociology. According to Ralph, Birks and Chapman,[9] grounded theory is "methodologically dynamic"[7] in the sense that, rather than being a complete methodology, grounded theory provides a means of constructing methods to better understand situations humans find themselves in.

Glaser had a background in positivism, which helped him develop a system of labeling for the purpose of coding study participants' qualitative responses. He recognized the importance of systematic analysis for qualitative research. He thus helped ensure that grounded theory require the generation of codes, categories, and properties.[10]

Strauss had a background in symbolic interactionism, a theory that aims to understand how people interact with each other in creating symbolic worlds and how an individual's symbolic world helps to shape a person's behavior. He viewed individuals as "active" participants in forming their own understanding of the world. Stauss underlined the richness of qualitative research in shedding light on social processes and the complexity of social life.[10]

According to Glaser, the strategy of grounded theory is to interpret personal meaning in the context of social interaction.[11] The grounded theory system studies "the interrelationship between meaning in the perception of the subjects and their action".[12]

Grounded theory constructs symbolic codes based on categories emerging from recorded qualitative data. The idea is to allow grounded theory methods to help us better understand the phenomenal world of individuals.[10] According to Milliken and Schreiber, another of the grounded theorist's tasks is to understand the socially-shared meanings that underlie individuals' behaviors and the reality of the participants being studied.[10]

Premise edit

Grounded theory provides methods for generating hypotheses from qualitative data. After hypotheses are generated, it is up to other researchers to attempt to sustain or reject those hypotheses. Questions asked by the qualitative researcher employing grounded theory include "What is going on?" and "What is the main problem of the participants, and how are they trying to solve it?"

Researchers using grounded theory methods do not aim for the "truth." Rather, those researchers try to conceptualize what has been taking place in the lives of study participants. When applying grounded theory methods, the researcher does not formulate hypotheses in advance of data collection as is often the case in traditional research, otherwise the hypotheses would be ungrounded in the data. Hypotheses are supposed to emerge from the data.[13]

A goal of the researcher employing grounded theory methods is that of generating concepts that explain the way people resolve their central concerns regardless of time and place. These concepts organize the ground-level data. The concepts become the building blocks of hypotheses. The hypotheses become the constituents of a theory.

In most behavioral research endeavors, persons or patients are units of analysis, whereas in grounded theory the unit of analysis is the incident.[13] Typically several hundred incidents are analyzed in a grounded theory study because every participant usually reports many incidents. When comparing many incidents in a certain area of study, the emerging concepts and their inter-relationships are paramount. Consequently, grounded theory is a general method that can use any kind of data although grounded theory is most commonly applied to qualitative data.[14][15]

Most researchers oriented toward grounded theory do not apply statistical methods to the qualitative data they collect. The results of grounded theory research are not reported in terms of statistically significant findings although there may be probability statements about the relationship between concepts.[16] Internal validity in its traditional research sense is not an issue in grounded theory. Rather, questions of fit, relevance, workability, and modifiability are more important in grounded theory.[7][17][16] In addition, adherents of grounded theory emphasize a theoretical validity rather than traditional ideas of internal validity or measurement-related validity.[18] Grounded theory adherents are "less charitable when discussing [psychometric] reliability, calling a single method of observation continually yielding an unvarying measurement a quixotic reliability."[18]

A theory that is fitting has concepts that are closely connected to the incidents the theory purports to represent; fit depends on how thoroughly the constant comparison of incidents to concepts has been conducted. A qualitative study driven by grounded theory examines the genuine concerns of study participants; those concerns are not only of academic interest. Grounded theory works when it explains how study participants address the problem at hand and related problems. A theory is modifiable and can be altered when new relevant data are compared to existing data.

Methodology edit

Stage Purpose
Codes Identifying anchors that allow the key points of the data to be gathered
Concepts Collections of codes of similar content that allows the data to be grouped
Categories Broad groups of similar concepts that are used to generate a theory
Theory A collection of categories that detail the subject of the research

Once the data are collected, grounded theory analysis involves the following basic steps:

  1. Coding text and theorizing: In grounded theory research, the search for a theory starts with the very first line of the very first interview that one codes. Small chunks of the text are coded line-by-line. Useful concepts are identified where key phrases are marked. The concepts are named. Another chunk of text is then taken and the above-mentioned steps are continued. According to Strauss and Corbin,[19] this process is called open coding. The process involves analyzing data such that conceptual components emerge. The next step involves theorizing, which partly includes pulling concepts together and thinking through how each concept can be related to a larger more inclusive concept. The constant comparative method plays an important role here.
  2. Memoing and theorizing: Memoing is the process by which a researcher writes running notes bearing on each of the concepts being identified. The running notes constitute an intermediate step between coding and the first draft of the completed analysis. Memos are field notes about the concepts and insights that emerge from the observations. Memoing starts with the first concept identified and continues right through the processing of all the concepts. Memoing contributes to theory building.
  3. Integrating, refining and writing up theories: Once coding categories emerge, the next step is to link them together in a theoretical model constructed around a central category that holds the concepts together. The constant comparative method comes into play, along with negative case analysis. Negative case analysis refers to the researcher looking for cases that are inconsistent with the theoretical model.

Theorizing is involved in all these steps. One is required to build and test theory all the way through till the end of a project.[20]

The idea that all is data is a fundamental property of grounded theory. The idea means that everything that the researcher encounters when studying a certain area is data, including not only interviews or observations but anything that helps the researcher generate concepts for the emerging theory. According to Ralph, Birks, and Chapman field notes can come from informal interviews, lectures, seminars, expert group meetings, newspaper articles, Internet mail lists, even television shows, conversations with friends etc.[21]

Coding edit

Coding places incidents into categories and then creates one or more hierarchies out of these categories in terms of categories and subcategories or properties of a categories. A property might be on a continuum such as from low to high, this may be referred to as a dimension.[a] Constant comparison where categories are continually compared to one another is used to create both subcategories and properties.[b] There is some variation in the meanings of the terms code, concept and category with some authors viewing a code as identical to category while others consider a concept to be more abstract than a code, which a code being more like a substantive code.[c] Different researchers have identified different types of codes and encourage different methods of coding, with Strauss and Glaser both going on to extend their work with different forms of coding.

The core variable explains most of the participants' main concern with as much variation as possible. It has the most powerful properties to picture what's going on, but with as few properties as possible needed to do so. A popular type of core variable can be theoretically modeled as a basic social process that accounts for most of the variation in change over time, context, and behavior in the studied area. "grounded theory is multivariate. It happens sequentially, subsequently, simultaneously, serendipitously, and scheduled" (Glaser, 1998).

Open coding or substantive coding is conceptualizing on the first level of abstraction. Written data from field notes or transcripts are conceptualized line by line. In the beginning of a study everything is coded in order to find out about the problem and how it is being resolved. The coding is often done in the margin of the field notes. This phase is often tedious since it involves conceptualizing all the incidents in the data, which yields many concepts. These are compared as more data is coded, merged into new concepts, and eventually renamed and modified. The grounded theory researcher goes back and forth while comparing data, constantly modifying, and sharpening the growing theory at the same time they follow the build-up schedule of grounded theory's different steps.

Strauss and Corbin proposed axial coding and defined it in 1990 as "a set of procedures whereby data are put back together in new ways after open coding, by making connections between categories."[19] Glaser proposed a similar concept called theoretical coding. Theoretical codes help to develop an integrated theory by weaving fractured concepts into hypotheses that work together. The theory, of which the just-mentioned hypotheses are constituents, explains the main concern of the participants. It is, however, important that the theory is not forced on the data beforehand but is allowed to emerge during the comparative process of grounded theory. Theoretical codes, like substantive codes, should emerge from the process of constantly comparing the data in field notes and memos.

Selective coding is conducted after the researcher has found the core variable or what is thought to be the tentative core. The core explains the behavior of the participants in addressing their main concern. The tentative core is never wrong. It just more or less fits with the data. After the core variable is chosen, researchers selectively code data with the core guiding their coding, not bothering about concepts of little relevance to the core and its sub-cores. In addition, the researcher now selectively samples new data with the core in mind, a process that is called theoretical sampling – a deductive component of grounded theory. Selective coding delimits the scope of the study (Glaser, 1998). Grounded theory is less concerned with data accuracy than with generating concepts that are abstract and general. Selective coding could be conducted by reviewing old field notes and/or memos that have already been coded once at an earlier stage or by coding newly gathered data.

Strauss and Corbin proposed a "coding paradigm" that involved "conditions, context, action/interactional strategies and consequences."[19]

Memoing edit

Theoretical memoing is "the core stage of grounded theory methodology" (Glaser 1998). "Memos are the theorizing write-up of ideas about substantive codes and their theoretically coded relationships as they emerge during coding, collecting and analyzing data, and during memoing" (Glaser 1998).

Memoing is also important in the early phase of a grounded theory study (e.g., during open coding). In memoing, the researcher conceptualizes incidents, helping the process along. Theoretical memos can be anything written or drawn in the context of the constant comparative method, an important component of grounded theory.[23] Memos are important tools to both refine and keep track of ideas that develop when researchers compare incidents to incidents and then concepts to concepts in the evolving theory. In memos, investigators develop ideas about naming concepts and relating them to each other. They examine relationships between concepts with the help of fourfold tables, diagrams, figures, or other means generating comparative power.

Without memoing, the theory is superficial and the concepts generated are not very original. Memoing works as an accumulation of written ideas into a bank of ideas about concepts and how they relate to each other. This bank contains rich parts of what will later be the written theory. Memoing is total creative freedom without rules of writing, grammar or style (Glaser 1998). The writing must be an instrument for outflow of ideas, and nothing else. When people write memos, the ideas become more realistic, being converted from thoughts into words, and thus ideas communicable to the afterworld.

In grounded theory the preconscious processing that occurs when coding and comparing is recognized. The researcher is encouraged to register ideas about the ongoing study that eventually pop up in everyday situations, and awareness of the serendipity of the method is also necessary to achieve good results.

Serendipity pattern edit

Building on the work of sociologist Robert K. Merton,[24] his idea of serendipity patterns has come to be applied in grounded theory research. Serendipity patterns refer to fairly common experiences when observing the world. Serendipity patterns include unanticipated and anomalous events. These patterns can become the impetus for the development of a new theory or the extension of an existing theory. Merton also coauthored (with Elinor Barber) The Travels and Adventures of Serendipity,[25] which traces the origins and uses of the word "serendipity" since it was coined. The book is "a study in sociological semantics and the sociology of science," as the subtitle declares. Merton and Barber further develop the idea of serendipity as scientific "method," as contrasted with purposeful discovery by experiment or retrospective prophecy.

Sorting edit

In the next step memos are sorted, which is the key to formulating a theory that could be clearly presented to others. Sorting puts fractured data back together. During sorting new ideas can emerge. The new ideas can, in turn, be recorded in new memos, giving rise to the memo-on-memos phenomenon. Sorting memos can help generate theory that explains the main action in the studied area. A theory written from unsorted memos may be rich in ideas but the connections among concepts are likely to be weak.

Writing edit

Writing up the sorted memos follows the sorting process. At this stage, a written theory takes shape. The different categories are now related to each other and the core variable. The theory should encompass the important emergent concepts and their careful description. The researcher may also construct tables and/or figures to optimize readability.

In a later rewriting stage, the relevant scholarly literature is woven into the theory. Finally, the theory is edited for style and language. Eventually, the researcher submits the resulting scholarly paper for publication. Most books on grounded theory do not explain what methodological details should be included in a scholarly article; however, some guidelines have been suggested.[26]

No pre-research literature review and no talk edit

Grounded theory gives the researcher freedom to generate new concepts in explaining human behavior.[7] Research based on grounded theory, however, follows a number of rules. These rules make grounded theory different from most other methods employed in qualitative research.

No pre-research literature review. Reviewing the literature of the area under study is thought to generate preconceptions about what to find. The researcher is said to become sensitized to concepts in the extant literature. According to grounded theory, theoretical concepts should emerge from the data unsullied by what has come before. The literature should only be read at the sorting stage and be treated as more data to code and compared with what has already been coded and generated.

No talk. Talking about the theory before it is written up drains the researcher of motivational energy. Talking can either render praise or criticism. Both can diminish the motivational drive to write memos that develop and refine the concepts and the theory.[16] Positive feedback, according to Glaser, can make researchers content with what they have and negative feedback hampers their self-confidence. Talking about the grounded theory should be restricted to persons capable of helping the researcher without influencing their final judgments.[16]

The use of preexisting theory edit

Different approaches to grounded theory reflect different views on how preexisting theory should be used in research. In The Discovery of Grounded Theory, Glaser and Strauss[7] advanced the view that, prior to conducting research, investigators should come to an area of study without any preconceived ideas regarding relevant concepts and hypotheses. In this way, the investigator, according to Glaser and Strauss, avoids imposing preconceived categories upon the research endeavor.

Glaser later attempted to address the tension between not reading and reading the literature before a qualitative study begins.[17] Glaser raised the issue of the use of a literature review to enhance the researchers' "theoretical sensitivity," i.e., their ability to identify a grounded theory that is a good fit to the data. He suggested that novice researchers might delay reading the literature to avoid undue influence on their handling of the qualitative data they collect. Glaser believed that reading the relevant research literature (substantive literature) could lead investigators to apply preexisting concepts to the data, rather than interpret concepts emerging from the data. He, however, encouraged a broad reading of the literature to develop theoretical sensitivity. Strauss felt that reading relevant material could enhance the researcher's theoretical sensitivity.[27]

Split in methodology and methods edit

There has been some divergence in the methodology of grounded theory. Over time, Glaser and Strauss came to disagree about methodology and other qualitative researchers have also modified ideas linked to grounded theory.[9] This divergence occurred most obviously after Strauss published Qualitative Analysis for Social Scientists (1987).[28] In 1990, Strauss, together with Juliet Corbin, published Basics of Qualitative Research: Grounded Theory Procedures and Techniques.[19] The publication of the book was followed by a rebuke by Glaser (1992), who set out, chapter by chapter, to highlight the differences in what he argued was the original grounded theory and why what Strauss and Corbin had written was not grounded theory in its "intended form."[11] This divergence in methodology is a subject of much academic debate, which Glaser (1998) calls a "rhetorical wrestle".[16] Glaser continues to write about and teach the original grounded theory method.

Grounded theory methods, according to Glaser, emphasize induction or emergence, and the individual researcher's creativity within a clear stagelike framework. By contrast, Strauss has been more interested in validation criteria and a systematic approach.[29] According to Kelle (2005), "the controversy between Glaser and Strauss boils down to the question of whether the researcher uses a well-defined "coding paradigm" and always looks systematically for "causal conditions," "phenomena/context, intervening conditions, action strategies," and "consequences" in the data (Straussian), or whether theoretical codes are employed as they emerge in the same way as substantive codes emerge, but drawing on a huge fund of "coding families" (Glaserian).[29]

Constructivist grounded theory edit

A later version of grounded theory called constructivist grounded theory, which is rooted in pragmatism and constructivist epistemology, assumes that neither data nor theories are discovered, but are constructed by researchers as a result of their interactions with the field and study participants.[30] Proponents of this approach include Charmaz[31][32][33][34] and Bryant.[35]

In an interview, Charmaz justified her approach as follows: "Grounded theory methodology had been under attack. The postmodern critique of qualitative research had weakened its legitimacy and narrative analysts criticized grounded theory methodology for fragmenting participants' stories. Hence, grounded theory methodology was beginning to be seen as a dated methodology and some researchers advocated abandoning it. I agreed with much of the epistemological critique of the early versions of grounded theory methodology by people like Kenneth Gergen. However, I had long thought that the strategies of grounded theory methodology, including coding, memo writing, and theoretical sampling were excellent methodological tools. I saw no reason to discard these tools and every reason to shift the epistemological grounds on which researchers used them."[36]

Data are co-constructed by the researcher and study participants, and colored by the researcher's perspectives, values, privileges, positions, interactions, and geographical locations.[citation needed] This position takes a middle ground between the realist and postmodernist positions by assuming an "obdurate reality" at the same time as it assumes multiple perspectives on that reality. Within the framework of this approach, a literature review prior to data collection is used in a productive and data-sensitive way without forcing the conclusions contained in the review on the collected data.[37][38]

Critical realist edit

More recently, a critical realist version of grounded theory has been developed and applied in research devoted to developing mechanism-based explanations for social phenomena.[39][40][41][42] Critical realism (CR) is a philosophical approach associated with Roy Bhaskar, who argued for a structured and differentiated account of reality in which difference, stratification, and change are central.[citation needed] A critical realist grounded theory produces an explanation through an examination of the three domains of social reality: the "real," as the domain of structures and mechanisms; the "actual," as the domain of events; and the "empirical," as the domain of experiences and perceptions.[citation needed]

Use in various disciplines edit

Grounded theory has been "shaped by the desire to discover social and psychological processes."[43] Grounded theory, however, is not restricted to these two areas study. As Gibbs points out, the process of grounded theory can be and has been applied to a number of different disciplines, including medicine, law, and economics. The reach of grounded theory has extended to nursing, business, and education.[citation needed]

Grounded theory focuses more on procedures than on the discipline to which grounded theory is applied. Rather than being limited to a particular discipline or form of data collection, grounded theory has been found useful across multiple research areas.[44] Here are some examples:

  1. In psychology, grounded theory is used to understand the role of therapeutic distance for adult clients with attachment anxiety.[citation needed]
  2. In sociology, grounded theory is used to discover the meaning of spirituality in cancer patients, and how their beliefs influence their attitude towards cancer treatments.[citation needed]
  3. Public health researchers have used grounded theory to examine nursing home preparedness needs in relation to Hurricane Katrina refugees sheltered in nursing homes.[citation needed]
  4. In business, grounded theory is used by managers to explain the ways in which organizational characteristics explain co-worker support.
  5. In software engineering, grounded theory has been used to study daily stand-up meetings.[45]
  6. Grounded theory has also helped researchers in the field of information technology to study the use of computer technology in older adults.[46][47]
  7. In nursing, grounded theory has been used to examine how change-of-shift reports can be used to keep patients safe.[48] It was further developed in relation to students learning and working by Kath M. Melia.[49]

Benefits edit

The benefits of using grounded theory include ecological validity, the discovery of novel phenomena, and parsimony.[citation needed].

Ecological validity refers to the extent to which research findings accurately represent real-world settings. Research based on grounded theories are often thought to be ecologically valid because the research is especially close to the real-world participants. Although the constructs in a grounded theory are appropriately abstract (since their goal is to explain other similar phenomenon), they are context-specific, detailed, and tightly connected to the data.[citation needed]

Because grounded theories are not tied to any preexisting theory, grounded theories are often fresh and new and have the potential for novel discoveries in science and other areas.[citation needed]

Parsimony refers to a heuristic often used in science that suggests that when there are competing hypotheses that make the same prediction, the hypothesis that relies on the fewest assumptions is preferable. Grounded theories aim to provide practical and simple explanations of complex phenomena by attempting to link those phenomena to abstract constructs and hypothesizing relationships among those constructs.[citation needed]

Grounded theory has further significance because:

  • It provides explicit, sequential guidelines for conducting qualitative research.
  • It offers specific strategies for handling the analytic phases of inquiry.
  • It provides ways to streamline and integrate data collection and analysis and
  • It legitimizes qualitative research as scientific inquiry.[citation needed]

Grounded theory methods have earned their place as a standard social research methodology and have influenced researchers from varied disciplines and professions.[50]

Criticisms edit

Grounded theory has been criticized based on the scientific idea of what a theory is. Thomas and James,[51] for example, distinguish the ideas of generalization, overgeneralization, and theory, noting that some scientific theories explain a broad range of phenomena succinctly, which grounded theory does not. Thomas and James observed that "The problems come when too much is claimed for [for a theory], simply because it is empirical; problems come in distinguishing generalization from over-generalization, narrative from induction." They also write that grounded theory advocates sometimes claim to find causal implications when in truth they only find an association.

There has been criticism of grounded theory on the grounds that it opens the door to letting too much researcher subjectivity enter.[51][52] The authors just cited suggest that it is impossible to free oneself of preconceptions in the collection and analysis of data in the way that Glaser and Strauss assert is necessary. Popper also undermines grounded theory's idea that hypotheses arise from data unaffected by prior expectations.[53] Popper wrote that "objects can be classified and can become similar or dissimilar, only in this way--by being related to needs and interests." Observation is always selective, based on past research and the investigators' goals and motives, and that preconceptionless research is impossible. Critics also note that grounded theory fails to mitigate participant reactivity and has the potential for an investigator steeped in grounded theory to over-identify with one or more study participants.[52]

Although they suggest that one element of grounded theory worth keeping is the constant comparative method, Thomas and James point to the formulaic nature of grounded theory methods and the lack of congruence of those methods with open and creative interpretation, which ought to be the hallmark of qualitative inquiry.[51]

The grounded theory approach can be criticized as being too empiricist, i.e., that it relies too heavily on the empirical data. Grounded theory considers fieldwork data as the source of theory. Thus the theories that emerge from a new fieldwork are set against the theories that preceded the fieldwork.[54]

Strauss's version of grounded theory has been criticized in several other ways:[55]

  • Grounded theory researchers sometimes have a quasi-objective focus, emphasizing hypotheses, variables, reliability, and replicability. This multi-faceted focus leads to contradictory findings.
  • It is inappropriate to ignore the existing theories by not paying attention to the literature.
  • Grounded theory offers a complex methodology and confusing terminology rather than providing a practical orientation to research and data analysis. Also see Tolhurst.[56]
  • Some grounded theory researchers have produced poorly explained theories; concept generation rather than the generation of formal theory may be a more practical goal for grounded theory researchers.

Grounded theory was developed during an era when qualitative methods were often considered unscientific. But as the academic rigor of qualitative research became known, this type of research approach achieved wide acceptance. In American academia, qualitative research is often equated with grounded theory methods. Such equating of most qualitative methods with grounded theory has sometimes been criticized by qualitative researchers[who?] who take different approaches to methodology (for example, in traditional ethnography, narratology, and storytelling).

One alternative to grounded theory is engaged theory. Engaged theory equally emphasizes the conducting of on-the-ground empirical research but linking that research to analytical processes of empirical generalization. Unlike grounded theory, engaged theory derives from the tradition of critical theory. Engaged theory locates analytical processes within a larger theoretical framework that specifies different levels of abstraction, allowing investigators to make claims about the wider world.[57]

Braun and Clarke[58] regard thematic analysis as having fewer theoretical assumptions than grounded theory, and can be used within several theoretical frameworks. They write that in comparison to grounded theory, thematic analysis is freer because it is not linked to any preexisting framework for making sense of qualitative data. Braun and Clarke, however, concede that there is a degree of similarity between grounded theory and thematic analysis but prefer thematic analysis.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ See the section: "The emergence of categories and their properties from the data" in:[22]: p. 193  "It becomes possible to differentiate incidents in the data or text passages classified as dealing with social loss according to the subcategory ‘degree of social loss’ by forming further subcategories ‘high social loss,’ ‘medium social loss,’ and ‘low social loss.’ The whole range or set of these three subcategories then represents a theoretical property of the category social loss."
  2. ^ "The purpose of constant comparison is to see if the data support and continue to support merging categories. At the same time, the process further builds and substantiates the emerging categories by defining their properties and dimensions" [22] : 277 
  3. ^ See the section "Codes, categories, concepts" of [22]

References edit

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  4. ^ G. Allan, "A Critique of Using Grounded Theory as a Research Method," Electronic Journal of Business Research Methods, vol. 2, no. 1 (2003) pp. 1-10.
  5. ^ Cauhapé, E. (1983). Fresh starts: Men and women after divorce. New York: Basic Books.
  6. ^ Broadhead, R.S. (1983). The private lives and professional identity of medical students. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction
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  8. ^ Fletcher-Watson, B (2013). "Toward a Grounded Dramaturgy: Using Grounded Theory to Interrogate Performance Practices in Theatre for Early Years". Youth Theatre Journal. 27 (2): 134. doi:10.1080/08929092.2013.837706. S2CID 144813527.
  9. ^ a b Ralph, N.; Birks, M.; Chapman, Y. (2015). "The methodological dynamism of grounded theory" (PDF). International Journal of Qualitative Methods. 14 (4): 160940691561157. doi:10.1177/1609406915611576. S2CID 31136971.
  10. ^ a b c d Aldiabat, Khaldoun; Navenec, Carole-Lynne (4 July 2011). "Philosophical Roots of Classical Grounded Theory: Its Foundations in Symbolic Interactionism" (PDF). The Qualitative Report. 16: 1063–80. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  11. ^ a b Glaser, B. (1992). Basics of grounded theory analysis. Mill Valley, CA: Sociology Press.
  12. ^ "Clarification of the Blurred Boundaries between Grounded Theory and Ethnography: Differences and Similarities" (PDF). Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry. 2. July 2011. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  13. ^ a b Glaser & Strauss 1967
  14. ^ Glaser, B.G. (2001). The grounded theory perspective I: Conceptualization contrasted with description. Mill Valley, CA: Sociology Press.
  15. ^ Glaser, B.G. (2003). The grounded theory perspective II: Description's remodeling of grounded theory. Mill Valley, CA: Sociology Press.
  16. ^ a b c d e Glaser, B.G. (1998). Doing grounded theory – Issues and discussions. Mill Valley, CA: Sociology Press.
  17. ^ a b Glaser, B.G. (1978). Theoretical sensitivity: Advances in the methodology of grounded theory. Mill Valley, CA: Sociology Press.
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  20. ^ Bernard, H. R., & Ryan, G. W. (2010). Analyzing Qualitative Data: Systematic Approaches. California, CA: Sage Publication.
  21. ^ Ralph, N.; Birks, M.; Chapman, Y. (29 September 2014). "Contextual Positioning: Using Documents as Extant Data in Grounded Theory Research". SAGE Open. 4 (3): 215824401455242. doi:10.1177/2158244014552425.
  22. ^ a b c Antony Bryant; Kathy Charmaz (23 August 2007). The SAGE Handbook of Grounded Theory. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-1-4462-7572-6.
  23. ^ Savin-Baden, M.; Major, C. (2013). Qualitative Research: The Essential Guide to Theory and Practice. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-67478-2.
  24. ^ Merton, R.K. (1949). Social theory and social structure. Glencoe, IL: The Free Press.
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  • Grbich, C. (2007). Qualitative data analysis and introduction. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
  • Charmaz K. (2000) 'Grounded Theory: Objectivist and Constructivist Methods', in Denzin N.K. and Y. S. Lincoln (eds) Handbook of Qualitative Research, second edition, London, Sage Publications.
  • Strauss A. and J. Corbin (1998) Basics of Qualitative Research – Techniques and Procedures for Developing Grounded Theory, second edition, London, Sage Publications
  • Groves, P. S., Manges, K. A., & Scott-Cawiezell, J. (2016). Handing Off Safety at the Bedside. Clinical nursing research, 1054773816630535.

Further reading edit

  • Bryant, A. & Charmaz, K. (Eds.) (2007) The SAGE Handbook of Grounded Theory. Los Angeles: Sage.
  • Birks, M. & Mills, J. (2015) Grounded Theory: A practical Guide. London: SAGE Publications.
  • Charmaz, K. (2000). Constructing Grounded Theory: A Practical Guide Through Qualitative Analysis. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
  • Chun Tie, Ylona, Birks, Melanie, and Francis, Karen (2019) Grounded theory research: a design framework for novice researchers. SAGE Open Medicine, 7. pp. 1–8.
  • Clarke, A. (2005). Situational Analysis: Grounded Theory After the Postmodern Turn. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
  • Glaser, B. (1992). Basics of grounded theory analysis. Mill Valley, CA: Sociology Press.
  • Goulding, C. (2002). Grounded Theory: A Practical Guide for Management, Business and Market Researchers. London: Sage.
  • Kelle, Udo (2005). "Emergence" vs. "Forcing" of Empirical Data? A Crucial Problem of "Grounded Theory" Reconsidered. Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research [On-line Journal], 6(2), Art. 27, paragraphs 49 & 50. [2]
  • Morse, J. M., Stern, P. N., Corbin, J., Bowers, B., Charmaz, K. & Clarke, A. E. (Eds.) (2009). Developing Grounded Theory: The Second Generation. Walnut Creek: Left Coast Press.
  • Mey, G. & Mruck, K. (Eds.) (2007). Grounded Theory Reader. Historical Social Research, Suppl. 19. 337 pages.
  • Oktay, J. S. (2012) Grounded Theory. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
  • Stebbins, Robert A. (2001) Exploratory Research in the Social Sciences. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
  • Strauss, A. (1987). Qualitative analysis for social scientists. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
  • Thomas, G.; James, D. (2006). "Re-inventing grounded theory: some questions about theory, ground and discovery" (PDF). British Educational Research Journal. 32 (6): 767–795. doi:10.1080/01411920600989412. S2CID 44250223.
Glaser
  • Glaser BG, The Constant Comparative Method of Qualitative Analysis. Social Problems, 12(4), 445, 1965.
  • Glaser BG, Strauss A. Discovery of Grounded Theory. Strategies for Qualitative Research. Sociology Press, 1967
  • Glaser BG. Theoretical Sensitivity: Advances in the methodology of Grounded Theory. Sociology Press, 1978.
  • Glaser BG (ed). More Grounded Theory Methodology: A Reader. Sociology Press, 1994.
  • Glaser BG (ed). Grounded Theory 1984–1994. A Reader (two volumes). Sociology Press, 1995.
  • Glaser BG (ed). Gerund Grounded Theory: The Basic Social Process Dissertation. Sociology Press, 1996.
  • Glaser BG. Doing Grounded Theory – Issues and Discussions. Sociology Press, 1998.
  • Glaser BG. The Grounded Theory Perspective I: Conceptualization Contrasted with Description. Sociology Press, 2001.
  • Glaser BG. The Grounded Theory Perspective II: Description's Remodeling of Grounded Theory. Sociology Press, 2003.
  • Glaser BG. The Grounded Theory Perspective III: Theoretical coding. Sociology Press, 2005.
Strauss and Corbin
  • Anselm L. Strauss; Leonard Schatzman; Rue Bucher; Danuta Ehrlich & Melvin Sabshin: Psychiatric ideologies and institutions (1964)
  • Barney G. Glaser; Anselm L. Strauss: The Discovery of Grounded Theory. Strategies for Qualitative Research (1967)
  • Anselm L. Strauss: Qualitative Analysis for Social Scientists (1987)
  • Anselm L. Strauss; Juliet Corbin: Basics of Qualitative Research: Grounded Theory Procedures and Techniques, Sage (1990)
  • Anselm L. Strauss; Juliet Corbin: "Grounded Theory Research: Procedures, Canons and Evaluative Criteria", in: Zeitschrift für Soziologie, 19. Jg, S. 418 ff. (1990)
  • Anselm L. Strauss: Continual Permutations of Action (1993)
  • Anselm L. Strauss; Juliet Corbin: "Grounded Theory in Practice", Sage (1997)
  • Anselm L. Strauss; Juliet Corbin: "Basics of Qualitative Research: Grounded Theory Procedures and Techniques". 2nd edition. Sage, 1998.
  • Juliet Corbin; Anselm L. Strauss: "Basics of Qualitative Research: Grounded Theory Procedures and Techniques". 3rd edition. Sage, 2008.
Constructivist grounded theory
  • Bryant, Antony (2002) 'Re-grounding grounded theory', Journal of Information Technology Theory and Application, 4(1): 25–42.
  • Bryant, Antony and Charmaz, Kathy (2007) 'Grounded theory in historical perspective: An epistemological account', in Bryant, A. and Charmaz, K. (eds.), The SAGE Handbook of Grounded Theory. Los Angeles: Sage. pp. 31–57.
  • Charmaz, Kathy (2000) 'Grounded theory: Objectivist and constructivist methods', in Denzin, N.K. and Lincoln, Y.S. (eds.), Handbook of Qualitative Research. 2nd edn. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. pp. 509–535.
  • Charmaz, Kathy (2003) 'Grounded theory', in Smith, J.A. (ed.), Qualitative Psychology: A Practical Guide to Research Methods. London: Sage. pp. 81–110.
  • Charmaz, Kathy (2006) Constructing Grounded Theory. London: Sage.
  • Charmaz, Kathy (2008) 'Constructionism and the grounded theory method', in Holstein, J.A. and Gubrium, J.F. (eds.), Handbook of Constructionist Research. New York: The Guilford Press. pp. 397–412.
  • Charmaz, Kathy (2009) 'Shifting the grounds: Constructivist grounded theory methods', in J. M. Morse, P. N. Stern, J. Corbin, B. Bowers, K. Charmaz and A. E. Clarke (eds.), Developing Grounded Theory: The Second Generation. Walnut Creek: Left Coast Press. pp. 127–154.
  • Charmaz, Kathy (forthcoming) Constructing Grounded Theory 2nd ed. London: Sage.
  • Mills, Jane, Bonner, Ann, & Francis, Karen (2006) 'Adopting a constructivist approach to grounded theory: Implications for research design' International Journal of Nursing Practice, 12(1): 8–13.
  • Mills, Jane, Bonner, Ann, & Francis, Karen (2006) 'The development of constructivist grounded theory', International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 5 (1): 25–35.
  • Thornberg, Robert (2012) 'Informed grounded theory', Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 56: 243–259.
  • Thornberg, Robert and Charmaz, Kathy (2011) 'Grounded theory', in Lapan, S.D., Quartaroli M.T. and Reimer F.J. (eds.), Qualitative Research: An Introduction to Methods and Designs. San Francisco, CA: John Wiley/Jossey–Bass. pp. 41–67.
  • Thornberg, Robert & Charmaz, K. (forthcoming) 'Grounded theory and theoretical coding', in Flick, U. (ed.), The SAGE handbook of qualitative analysis. London: Sage.

External links edit

  • The Grounded Theory Institute (Glaser tradition)
  • Grounded Theory Online (Supporting grounded theory researchers)
  • Grounded Theory Review
  • Sociology Press
  • Grounded Theory Research Tutorial

grounded, theory, systematic, methodology, that, been, largely, applied, qualitative, research, conducted, social, scientists, methodology, involves, construction, hypotheses, theories, through, collecting, analysis, data, involves, application, inductive, rea. Grounded theory is a systematic methodology that has been largely applied to qualitative research conducted by social scientists The methodology involves the construction of hypotheses and theories through the collecting and analysis of data 1 2 3 Grounded theory involves the application of inductive reasoning The methodology contrasts with the hypothetico deductive model used in traditional scientific research A study based on grounded theory is likely to begin with a question or even just with the collection of qualitative data As researchers review the data collected ideas or concepts become apparent to the researchers These ideas concepts are said to emerge from the data The researchers tag those ideas concepts with codes that succinctly summarize the ideas concepts As more data are collected and re reviewed codes can be grouped into higher level concepts and then into categories These categories become the basis of a hypothesis or a new theory Thus grounded theory is quite different from the traditional scientific model of research where the researcher chooses an existing theoretical framework develops one or more hypotheses derived from that framework and only then collects data for the purpose of assessing the validity of the hypotheses 4 Contents 1 Background 2 Philosophical underpinnings 3 Premise 4 Methodology 4 1 Coding 4 2 Memoing 4 3 Serendipity pattern 4 4 Sorting 4 5 Writing 4 6 No pre research literature review and no talk 5 The use of preexisting theory 6 Split in methodology and methods 6 1 Constructivist grounded theory 6 2 Critical realist 7 Use in various disciplines 8 Benefits 9 Criticisms 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksBackground editGrounded theory is a general research methodology a way of thinking about and conceptualizing data It is used in studies of diverse populations from areas like remarriage after divorce 5 and professional socialization 6 Grounded theory methods were developed by two sociologists Barney Glaser and Anselm Strauss 7 While collaborating on research on dying hospital patients Glaser and Strauss developed the constant comparative method which later became known as the grounded theory method They summarized their research in the book Awareness of Dying which was published in 1965 Glaser and Strauss went on to describe their method in more detail in their 1967 book The Discovery of Grounded Theory 7 The three aims of the book were to Provide a rationale to justify the idea that the gap between a social science theory and empirical data should be narrowed by firmly grounding a theory in empirical research Provide a logic for grounded theory Legitimize careful qualitative research the most important goal because by the 1960s quantitative research methods had gained so much prestige that qualitative research had come to be seen as inadequate 3 A turning point in the acceptance of the theory came after the publication of Awareness of Dying Their work on dying helped establish the influence of grounded theory in medical sociology psychology and psychiatry 3 7 From its beginnings grounded theory methods have become more prominent in fields as diverse as drama management manufacturing and education 8 Philosophical underpinnings editGrounded theory combines traditions in positivist philosophy general sociology and particularly the symbolic interactionist branch of sociology According to Ralph Birks and Chapman 9 grounded theory is methodologically dynamic 7 in the sense that rather than being a complete methodology grounded theory provides a means of constructing methods to better understand situations humans find themselves in Glaser had a background in positivism which helped him develop a system of labeling for the purpose of coding study participants qualitative responses He recognized the importance of systematic analysis for qualitative research He thus helped ensure that grounded theory require the generation of codes categories and properties 10 Strauss had a background in symbolic interactionism a theory that aims to understand how people interact with each other in creating symbolic worlds and how an individual s symbolic world helps to shape a person s behavior He viewed individuals as active participants in forming their own understanding of the world Stauss underlined the richness of qualitative research in shedding light on social processes and the complexity of social life 10 According to Glaser the strategy of grounded theory is to interpret personal meaning in the context of social interaction 11 The grounded theory system studies the interrelationship between meaning in the perception of the subjects and their action 12 Grounded theory constructs symbolic codes based on categories emerging from recorded qualitative data The idea is to allow grounded theory methods to help us better understand the phenomenal world of individuals 10 According to Milliken and Schreiber another of the grounded theorist s tasks is to understand the socially shared meanings that underlie individuals behaviors and the reality of the participants being studied 10 Premise editGrounded theory provides methods for generating hypotheses from qualitative data After hypotheses are generated it is up to other researchers to attempt to sustain or reject those hypotheses Questions asked by the qualitative researcher employing grounded theory include What is going on and What is the main problem of the participants and how are they trying to solve it Researchers using grounded theory methods do not aim for the truth Rather those researchers try to conceptualize what has been taking place in the lives of study participants When applying grounded theory methods the researcher does not formulate hypotheses in advance of data collection as is often the case in traditional research otherwise the hypotheses would be ungrounded in the data Hypotheses are supposed to emerge from the data 13 A goal of the researcher employing grounded theory methods is that of generating concepts that explain the way people resolve their central concerns regardless of time and place These concepts organize the ground level data The concepts become the building blocks of hypotheses The hypotheses become the constituents of a theory In most behavioral research endeavors persons or patients are units of analysis whereas in grounded theory the unit of analysis is the incident 13 Typically several hundred incidents are analyzed in a grounded theory study because every participant usually reports many incidents When comparing many incidents in a certain area of study the emerging concepts and their inter relationships are paramount Consequently grounded theory is a general method that can use any kind of data although grounded theory is most commonly applied to qualitative data 14 15 Most researchers oriented toward grounded theory do not apply statistical methods to the qualitative data they collect The results of grounded theory research are not reported in terms of statistically significant findings although there may be probability statements about the relationship between concepts 16 Internal validity in its traditional research sense is not an issue in grounded theory Rather questions of fit relevance workability and modifiability are more important in grounded theory 7 17 16 In addition adherents of grounded theory emphasize a theoretical validity rather than traditional ideas of internal validity or measurement related validity 18 Grounded theory adherents are less charitable when discussing psychometric reliability calling a single method of observation continually yielding an unvarying measurement a quixotic reliability 18 A theory that is fitting has concepts that are closely connected to the incidents the theory purports to represent fit depends on how thoroughly the constant comparison of incidents to concepts has been conducted A qualitative study driven by grounded theory examines the genuine concerns of study participants those concerns are not only of academic interest Grounded theory works when it explains how study participants address the problem at hand and related problems A theory is modifiable and can be altered when new relevant data are compared to existing data Methodology editStage Purpose Codes Identifying anchors that allow the key points of the data to be gathered Concepts Collections of codes of similar content that allows the data to be grouped Categories Broad groups of similar concepts that are used to generate a theory Theory A collection of categories that detail the subject of the research Once the data are collected grounded theory analysis involves the following basic steps Coding text and theorizing In grounded theory research the search for a theory starts with the very first line of the very first interview that one codes Small chunks of the text are coded line by line Useful concepts are identified where key phrases are marked The concepts are named Another chunk of text is then taken and the above mentioned steps are continued According to Strauss and Corbin 19 this process is called open coding The process involves analyzing data such that conceptual components emerge The next step involves theorizing which partly includes pulling concepts together and thinking through how each concept can be related to a larger more inclusive concept The constant comparative method plays an important role here Memoing and theorizing Memoing is the process by which a researcher writes running notes bearing on each of the concepts being identified The running notes constitute an intermediate step between coding and the first draft of the completed analysis Memos are field notes about the concepts and insights that emerge from the observations Memoing starts with the first concept identified and continues right through the processing of all the concepts Memoing contributes to theory building Integrating refining and writing up theories Once coding categories emerge the next step is to link them together in a theoretical model constructed around a central category that holds the concepts together The constant comparative method comes into play along with negative case analysis Negative case analysis refers to the researcher looking for cases that are inconsistent with the theoretical model Theorizing is involved in all these steps One is required to build and test theory all the way through till the end of a project 20 The idea that all is data is a fundamental property of grounded theory The idea means that everything that the researcher encounters when studying a certain area is data including not only interviews or observations but anything that helps the researcher generate concepts for the emerging theory According to Ralph Birks and Chapman field notes can come from informal interviews lectures seminars expert group meetings newspaper articles Internet mail lists even television shows conversations with friends etc 21 Coding edit Coding places incidents into categories and then creates one or more hierarchies out of these categories in terms of categories and subcategories or properties of a categories A property might be on a continuum such as from low to high this may be referred to as a dimension a Constant comparison where categories are continually compared to one another is used to create both subcategories and properties b There is some variation in the meanings of the terms code concept and category with some authors viewing a code as identical to category while others consider a concept to be more abstract than a code which a code being more like a substantive code c Different researchers have identified different types of codes and encourage different methods of coding with Strauss and Glaser both going on to extend their work with different forms of coding The core variable explains most of the participants main concern with as much variation as possible It has the most powerful properties to picture what s going on but with as few properties as possible needed to do so A popular type of core variable can be theoretically modeled as a basic social process that accounts for most of the variation in change over time context and behavior in the studied area grounded theory is multivariate It happens sequentially subsequently simultaneously serendipitously and scheduled Glaser 1998 Open coding or substantive coding is conceptualizing on the first level of abstraction Written data from field notes or transcripts are conceptualized line by line In the beginning of a study everything is coded in order to find out about the problem and how it is being resolved The coding is often done in the margin of the field notes This phase is often tedious since it involves conceptualizing all the incidents in the data which yields many concepts These are compared as more data is coded merged into new concepts and eventually renamed and modified The grounded theory researcher goes back and forth while comparing data constantly modifying and sharpening the growing theory at the same time they follow the build up schedule of grounded theory s different steps Strauss and Corbin proposed axial coding and defined it in 1990 as a set of procedures whereby data are put back together in new ways after open coding by making connections between categories 19 Glaser proposed a similar concept called theoretical coding Theoretical codes help to develop an integrated theory by weaving fractured concepts into hypotheses that work together The theory of which the just mentioned hypotheses are constituents explains the main concern of the participants It is however important that the theory is not forced on the data beforehand but is allowed to emerge during the comparative process of grounded theory Theoretical codes like substantive codes should emerge from the process of constantly comparing the data in field notes and memos Selective coding is conducted after the researcher has found the core variable or what is thought to be the tentative core The core explains the behavior of the participants in addressing their main concern The tentative core is never wrong It just more or less fits with the data After the core variable is chosen researchers selectively code data with the core guiding their coding not bothering about concepts of little relevance to the core and its sub cores In addition the researcher now selectively samples new data with the core in mind a process that is called theoretical sampling a deductive component of grounded theory Selective coding delimits the scope of the study Glaser 1998 Grounded theory is less concerned with data accuracy than with generating concepts that are abstract and general Selective coding could be conducted by reviewing old field notes and or memos that have already been coded once at an earlier stage or by coding newly gathered data Strauss and Corbin proposed a coding paradigm that involved conditions context action interactional strategies and consequences 19 Memoing edit Theoretical memoing is the core stage of grounded theory methodology Glaser 1998 Memos are the theorizing write up of ideas about substantive codes and their theoretically coded relationships as they emerge during coding collecting and analyzing data and during memoing Glaser 1998 Memoing is also important in the early phase of a grounded theory study e g during open coding In memoing the researcher conceptualizes incidents helping the process along Theoretical memos can be anything written or drawn in the context of the constant comparative method an important component of grounded theory 23 Memos are important tools to both refine and keep track of ideas that develop when researchers compare incidents to incidents and then concepts to concepts in the evolving theory In memos investigators develop ideas about naming concepts and relating them to each other They examine relationships between concepts with the help of fourfold tables diagrams figures or other means generating comparative power Without memoing the theory is superficial and the concepts generated are not very original Memoing works as an accumulation of written ideas into a bank of ideas about concepts and how they relate to each other This bank contains rich parts of what will later be the written theory Memoing is total creative freedom without rules of writing grammar or style Glaser 1998 The writing must be an instrument for outflow of ideas and nothing else When people write memos the ideas become more realistic being converted from thoughts into words and thus ideas communicable to the afterworld In grounded theory the preconscious processing that occurs when coding and comparing is recognized The researcher is encouraged to register ideas about the ongoing study that eventually pop up in everyday situations and awareness of the serendipity of the method is also necessary to achieve good results Serendipity pattern edit Building on the work of sociologist Robert K Merton 24 his idea of serendipity patterns has come to be applied in grounded theory research Serendipity patterns refer to fairly common experiences when observing the world Serendipity patterns include unanticipated and anomalous events These patterns can become the impetus for the development of a new theory or the extension of an existing theory Merton also coauthored with Elinor Barber The Travels and Adventures of Serendipity 25 which traces the origins and uses of the word serendipity since it was coined The book is a study in sociological semantics and the sociology of science as the subtitle declares Merton and Barber further develop the idea of serendipity as scientific method as contrasted with purposeful discovery by experiment or retrospective prophecy Sorting edit In the next step memos are sorted which is the key to formulating a theory that could be clearly presented to others Sorting puts fractured data back together During sorting new ideas can emerge The new ideas can in turn be recorded in new memos giving rise to the memo on memos phenomenon Sorting memos can help generate theory that explains the main action in the studied area A theory written from unsorted memos may be rich in ideas but the connections among concepts are likely to be weak Writing edit Writing up the sorted memos follows the sorting process At this stage a written theory takes shape The different categories are now related to each other and the core variable The theory should encompass the important emergent concepts and their careful description The researcher may also construct tables and or figures to optimize readability In a later rewriting stage the relevant scholarly literature is woven into the theory Finally the theory is edited for style and language Eventually the researcher submits the resulting scholarly paper for publication Most books on grounded theory do not explain what methodological details should be included in a scholarly article however some guidelines have been suggested 26 No pre research literature review and no talk edit Grounded theory gives the researcher freedom to generate new concepts in explaining human behavior 7 Research based on grounded theory however follows a number of rules These rules make grounded theory different from most other methods employed in qualitative research No pre research literature review Reviewing the literature of the area under study is thought to generate preconceptions about what to find The researcher is said to become sensitized to concepts in the extant literature According to grounded theory theoretical concepts should emerge from the data unsullied by what has come before The literature should only be read at the sorting stage and be treated as more data to code and compared with what has already been coded and generated No talk Talking about the theory before it is written up drains the researcher of motivational energy Talking can either render praise or criticism Both can diminish the motivational drive to write memos that develop and refine the concepts and the theory 16 Positive feedback according to Glaser can make researchers content with what they have and negative feedback hampers their self confidence Talking about the grounded theory should be restricted to persons capable of helping the researcher without influencing their final judgments 16 The use of preexisting theory editDifferent approaches to grounded theory reflect different views on how preexisting theory should be used in research In The Discovery of Grounded Theory Glaser and Strauss 7 advanced the view that prior to conducting research investigators should come to an area of study without any preconceived ideas regarding relevant concepts and hypotheses In this way the investigator according to Glaser and Strauss avoids imposing preconceived categories upon the research endeavor Glaser later attempted to address the tension between not reading and reading the literature before a qualitative study begins 17 Glaser raised the issue of the use of a literature review to enhance the researchers theoretical sensitivity i e their ability to identify a grounded theory that is a good fit to the data He suggested that novice researchers might delay reading the literature to avoid undue influence on their handling of the qualitative data they collect Glaser believed that reading the relevant research literature substantive literature could lead investigators to apply preexisting concepts to the data rather than interpret concepts emerging from the data He however encouraged a broad reading of the literature to develop theoretical sensitivity Strauss felt that reading relevant material could enhance the researcher s theoretical sensitivity 27 Split in methodology and methods editThere has been some divergence in the methodology of grounded theory Over time Glaser and Strauss came to disagree about methodology and other qualitative researchers have also modified ideas linked to grounded theory 9 This divergence occurred most obviously after Strauss published Qualitative Analysis for Social Scientists 1987 28 In 1990 Strauss together with Juliet Corbin published Basics of Qualitative Research Grounded Theory Procedures and Techniques 19 The publication of the book was followed by a rebuke by Glaser 1992 who set out chapter by chapter to highlight the differences in what he argued was the original grounded theory and why what Strauss and Corbin had written was not grounded theory in its intended form 11 This divergence in methodology is a subject of much academic debate which Glaser 1998 calls a rhetorical wrestle 16 Glaser continues to write about and teach the original grounded theory method Grounded theory methods according to Glaser emphasize induction or emergence and the individual researcher s creativity within a clear stagelike framework By contrast Strauss has been more interested in validation criteria and a systematic approach 29 According to Kelle 2005 the controversy between Glaser and Strauss boils down to the question of whether the researcher uses a well defined coding paradigm and always looks systematically for causal conditions phenomena context intervening conditions action strategies and consequences in the data Straussian or whether theoretical codes are employed as they emerge in the same way as substantive codes emerge but drawing on a huge fund of coding families Glaserian 29 Constructivist grounded theory edit A later version of grounded theory called constructivist grounded theory which is rooted in pragmatism and constructivist epistemology assumes that neither data nor theories are discovered but are constructed by researchers as a result of their interactions with the field and study participants 30 Proponents of this approach include Charmaz 31 32 33 34 and Bryant 35 In an interview Charmaz justified her approach as follows Grounded theory methodology had been under attack The postmodern critique of qualitative research had weakened its legitimacy and narrative analysts criticized grounded theory methodology for fragmenting participants stories Hence grounded theory methodology was beginning to be seen as a dated methodology and some researchers advocated abandoning it I agreed with much of the epistemological critique of the early versions of grounded theory methodology by people like Kenneth Gergen However I had long thought that the strategies of grounded theory methodology including coding memo writing and theoretical sampling were excellent methodological tools I saw no reason to discard these tools and every reason to shift the epistemological grounds on which researchers used them 36 Data are co constructed by the researcher and study participants and colored by the researcher s perspectives values privileges positions interactions and geographical locations citation needed This position takes a middle ground between the realist and postmodernist positions by assuming an obdurate reality at the same time as it assumes multiple perspectives on that reality Within the framework of this approach a literature review prior to data collection is used in a productive and data sensitive way without forcing the conclusions contained in the review on the collected data 37 38 Critical realist edit More recently a critical realist version of grounded theory has been developed and applied in research devoted to developing mechanism based explanations for social phenomena 39 40 41 42 Critical realism CR is a philosophical approach associated with Roy Bhaskar who argued for a structured and differentiated account of reality in which difference stratification and change are central citation needed A critical realist grounded theory produces an explanation through an examination of the three domains of social reality the real as the domain of structures and mechanisms the actual as the domain of events and the empirical as the domain of experiences and perceptions citation needed Use in various disciplines editGrounded theory has been shaped by the desire to discover social and psychological processes 43 Grounded theory however is not restricted to these two areas study As Gibbs points out the process of grounded theory can be and has been applied to a number of different disciplines including medicine law and economics The reach of grounded theory has extended to nursing business and education citation needed Grounded theory focuses more on procedures than on the discipline to which grounded theory is applied Rather than being limited to a particular discipline or form of data collection grounded theory has been found useful across multiple research areas 44 Here are some examples In psychology grounded theory is used to understand the role of therapeutic distance for adult clients with attachment anxiety citation needed In sociology grounded theory is used to discover the meaning of spirituality in cancer patients and how their beliefs influence their attitude towards cancer treatments citation needed Public health researchers have used grounded theory to examine nursing home preparedness needs in relation to Hurricane Katrina refugees sheltered in nursing homes citation needed In business grounded theory is used by managers to explain the ways in which organizational characteristics explain co worker support In software engineering grounded theory has been used to study daily stand up meetings 45 Grounded theory has also helped researchers in the field of information technology to study the use of computer technology in older adults 46 47 In nursing grounded theory has been used to examine how change of shift reports can be used to keep patients safe 48 It was further developed in relation to students learning and working by Kath M Melia 49 Benefits editThe benefits of using grounded theory include ecological validity the discovery of novel phenomena and parsimony citation needed Ecological validity refers to the extent to which research findings accurately represent real world settings Research based on grounded theories are often thought to be ecologically valid because the research is especially close to the real world participants Although the constructs in a grounded theory are appropriately abstract since their goal is to explain other similar phenomenon they are context specific detailed and tightly connected to the data citation needed Because grounded theories are not tied to any preexisting theory grounded theories are often fresh and new and have the potential for novel discoveries in science and other areas citation needed Parsimony refers to a heuristic often used in science that suggests that when there are competing hypotheses that make the same prediction the hypothesis that relies on the fewest assumptions is preferable Grounded theories aim to provide practical and simple explanations of complex phenomena by attempting to link those phenomena to abstract constructs and hypothesizing relationships among those constructs citation needed Grounded theory has further significance because It provides explicit sequential guidelines for conducting qualitative research It offers specific strategies for handling the analytic phases of inquiry It provides ways to streamline and integrate data collection and analysis and It legitimizes qualitative research as scientific inquiry citation needed Grounded theory methods have earned their place as a standard social research methodology and have influenced researchers from varied disciplines and professions 50 Criticisms editSee also Grounded theory The use of preexisting theory Grounded theory has been criticized based on the scientific idea of what a theory is Thomas and James 51 for example distinguish the ideas of generalization overgeneralization and theory noting that some scientific theories explain a broad range of phenomena succinctly which grounded theory does not Thomas and James observed that The problems come when too much is claimed for for a theory simply because it is empirical problems come in distinguishing generalization from over generalization narrative from induction They also write that grounded theory advocates sometimes claim to find causal implications when in truth they only find an association There has been criticism of grounded theory on the grounds that it opens the door to letting too much researcher subjectivity enter 51 52 The authors just cited suggest that it is impossible to free oneself of preconceptions in the collection and analysis of data in the way that Glaser and Strauss assert is necessary Popper also undermines grounded theory s idea that hypotheses arise from data unaffected by prior expectations 53 Popper wrote that objects can be classified and can become similar or dissimilar only in this way by being related to needs and interests Observation is always selective based on past research and the investigators goals and motives and that preconceptionless research is impossible Critics also note that grounded theory fails to mitigate participant reactivity and has the potential for an investigator steeped in grounded theory to over identify with one or more study participants 52 Although they suggest that one element of grounded theory worth keeping is the constant comparative method Thomas and James point to the formulaic nature of grounded theory methods and the lack of congruence of those methods with open and creative interpretation which ought to be the hallmark of qualitative inquiry 51 The grounded theory approach can be criticized as being too empiricist i e that it relies too heavily on the empirical data Grounded theory considers fieldwork data as the source of theory Thus the theories that emerge from a new fieldwork are set against the theories that preceded the fieldwork 54 Strauss s version of grounded theory has been criticized in several other ways 55 Grounded theory researchers sometimes have a quasi objective focus emphasizing hypotheses variables reliability and replicability This multi faceted focus leads to contradictory findings It is inappropriate to ignore the existing theories by not paying attention to the literature Grounded theory offers a complex methodology and confusing terminology rather than providing a practical orientation to research and data analysis Also see Tolhurst 56 Some grounded theory researchers have produced poorly explained theories concept generation rather than the generation of formal theory may be a more practical goal for grounded theory researchers Grounded theory was developed during an era when qualitative methods were often considered unscientific But as the academic rigor of qualitative research became known this type of research approach achieved wide acceptance In American academia qualitative research is often equated with grounded theory methods Such equating of most qualitative methods with grounded theory has sometimes been criticized by qualitative researchers who who take different approaches to methodology for example in traditional ethnography narratology and storytelling One alternative to grounded theory is engaged theory Engaged theory equally emphasizes the conducting of on the ground empirical research but linking that research to analytical processes of empirical generalization Unlike grounded theory engaged theory derives from the tradition of critical theory Engaged theory locates analytical processes within a larger theoretical framework that specifies different levels of abstraction allowing investigators to make claims about the wider world 57 Braun and Clarke 58 regard thematic analysis as having fewer theoretical assumptions than grounded theory and can be used within several theoretical frameworks They write that in comparison to grounded theory thematic analysis is freer because it is not linked to any preexisting framework for making sense of qualitative data Braun and Clarke however concede that there is a degree of similarity between grounded theory and thematic analysis but prefer thematic analysis See also editAntipositivism Engaged theory Formal concept analysis Grounded practical theory Qualitative research Postpositivism Social research Content analysisNotes edit See the section The emergence of categories and their properties from the data in 22 p 193 It becomes possible to differentiate incidents in the data or text passages classified as dealing with social loss according to the subcategory degree of social loss by forming further subcategories high social loss medium social loss and low social loss The whole range or set of these three subcategories then represents a theoretical property of the category social loss The purpose of constant comparison is to see if the data support and continue to support merging categories At the same time the process further builds and substantiates the emerging categories by defining their properties and dimensions 22 277 See the section Codes categories concepts of 22 References edit Patricia Yancey Martin amp Barry A Turner Grounded Theory and Organizational Research The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science vol 22 no 2 1986 141 Faggiolani C 2011 Perceived Identity Applying Grounded Theory in Libraries JLIS it 2 1 University of Florence doi 10 4403 jlis it 4592 Retrieved 29 June 2013 a b c Strauss A amp Corbin J 1994 Grounded Theory Methodology An Overview In N Denzin amp Y Lincoln Handbook of Qualitative Research 1st ed pp 273 284 G Allan A Critique of Using Grounded Theory as a Research Method Electronic Journal of Business Research Methods vol 2 no 1 2003 pp 1 10 Cauhape E 1983 Fresh starts Men and women after divorce New York Basic Books Broadhead R S 1983 The private lives and professional identity of medical students New Brunswick NJ Transaction a b c d e f g Glaser B amp Strauss A 1967 The discovery of grounded theory Strategies for qualitative research Chicago Aldine Fletcher Watson B 2013 Toward a Grounded Dramaturgy Using Grounded Theory to Interrogate Performance Practices in Theatre for Early Years Youth Theatre Journal 27 2 134 doi 10 1080 08929092 2013 837706 S2CID 144813527 a b Ralph N Birks M Chapman Y 2015 The methodological dynamism of grounded theory PDF International Journal of Qualitative Methods 14 4 160940691561157 doi 10 1177 1609406915611576 S2CID 31136971 a b c d Aldiabat Khaldoun Navenec Carole Lynne 4 July 2011 Philosophical Roots of Classical Grounded Theory Its Foundations in Symbolic Interactionism PDF The Qualitative Report 16 1063 80 Retrieved 5 December 2014 a b Glaser B 1992 Basics of grounded theory analysis Mill Valley CA Sociology Press Clarification of the Blurred Boundaries between Grounded Theory and Ethnography Differences and Similarities PDF Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry 2 July 2011 Retrieved 5 December 2014 a b Glaser amp Strauss 1967 Glaser B G 2001 The grounded theory perspective I Conceptualization contrasted with description Mill Valley CA Sociology Press Glaser B G 2003 The grounded theory perspective II Description s remodeling of grounded theory Mill Valley CA Sociology Press a b c d e Glaser B G 1998 Doing grounded theory Issues and discussions Mill Valley CA Sociology Press a b Glaser B G 1978 Theoretical sensitivity Advances in the methodology of grounded theory Mill Valley CA Sociology Press a b Schonfeld I S amp Farrell E 2010 Qualitative methods can enrich quantitative research on occupational stress An example from one occupational group In D C Ganster amp P L Perrewe Eds Research in occupational stress and wellbeing series Vol 8 New developments in theoretical and conceptual approaches to job stress pp 137 197 Bingley UK Emerald doi 10 1108 S1479 3555 2010 0000008007 a b c d Strauss A L amp Corbin J 1990 Basics of qualitative research Grounded theory procedures and techniques Thousand Oaks CA Sage Bernard H R amp Ryan G W 2010 Analyzing Qualitative Data Systematic Approaches California CA Sage Publication Ralph N Birks M Chapman Y 29 September 2014 Contextual Positioning Using Documents as Extant Data in Grounded Theory Research SAGE Open 4 3 215824401455242 doi 10 1177 2158244014552425 a b c Antony Bryant Kathy Charmaz 23 August 2007 The SAGE Handbook of Grounded Theory SAGE Publications ISBN 978 1 4462 7572 6 Savin Baden M Major C 2013 Qualitative Research The Essential Guide to Theory and Practice London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 67478 2 Merton R K 1949 Social theory and social structure Glencoe IL The Free Press Merton R K amp Barber E 2003 The travels and adventures of serendipity A study in sociological semantics and the sociology of science Princeton Princeton University Press Stol K Ralph P amp Fitzgerald B 2016 Grounded Theory Research in Software Engineering A Critical Review and Guidelines Proceedings of the International Conference on Software Engineering Austin Texas ACM May Thistoll Tony Hooper Val Pauleen David J 2015 02 03 Acquiring and developing theoretical sensitivity through undertaking a grounded preliminary literature review Quality amp Quantity 50 2 Springer Science and Business Media LLC 619 636 doi 10 1007 s11135 015 0167 3 ISSN 0033 5177 S2CID 254985492 Strauss A 1987 Qualitative analysis for social scientists Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press a b Kelle U 2005 Emergence vs Forcing of Empirical Data A Crucial Problem of Grounded Theory Reconsidered Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung Forum Qualitative Social Research On line Journal 6 2 Art 27 paragraphs 49 amp 50 1 Mills J Bonner A Francis K 2006 The development of constructivist grounded theory International Journal of Qualitative Methods 5 25 35 doi 10 1177 160940690600500103 Charmaz K 2000 Grounded theory Objectivist and constructivist methods In N K Denzin amp Y S Lincoln Eds Handbook of qualitative research 2nd ed pp 509 535 Thousand Oaks CA Sage Charmaz K 2006 Constructing grounded theory London Sage Charmaz K 2008 Constructionism and the grounded theory method In J A Holstein amp J F Gubrium Eds Handbook of constructionist research pp 397 412 New York The Guilford Press Thornberg R amp Charmaz K 2012 Grounded theory In S D Lapan M Quartaroli amp F Reimer Eds Qualitative research An introduction to methods and designs pp 41 67 San Francisco CA John Wiley Jossey Bass Bryant A 2002 Re grounding grounded theory Journal of Information Technology Theory and Application 4 25 42 A Personal Journey with Grounded Theory Methodology Kathy Charmaz in Conversation With Reiner Keller FQS Volume 17 No 1 Art 16 January 2016 https www qualitative research net index php fqs article view 2541 3936 g4 Thornberg R 2012 Informed grounded theory Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research 56 3 243 259 doi 10 1080 00313831 2011 581686 S2CID 39486623 Ramalho Rodrigo Adams Peter Huggard Peter Hoare Karen 2015 Literature Review and Constructivist Grounded Theory Methodology Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung Forum Qualitative Social Research 16 3 doi 10 17169 fqs 16 3 2313 Kemf pster Parry Parry Ken 2011 Grounded theory and leadership research A critical realist perspective PDF The Leadership Quarterly 22 106 120 doi 10 1016 j leaqua 2010 12 010 Oliver Carolyn 2012 Critical Realist Grounded Theory A New Approach for Social Work Research The British Journal of Social Work 42 2 371 387 doi 10 1093 bjsw bcr064 Bunt Sarah 2016 Critical realism and grounded theory Analysing the adoption outcomes for disabled children using the retroduction framework Qualitative Social Work 17 2 176 194 doi 10 1177 1473325016664572 S2CID 151878799 Hoddy Eric 2018 Critical realism in empirical research employing techniques from Grounded theory methodology PDF International Journal of Social Research Methodology 22 111 124 doi 10 1080 13645579 2018 1503400 S2CID 149952268 Gibbs Core Emlements Part 2 Grounded Theory YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 Pettigrew Simone F 2000 Ethnography and Grounded Theory A Happy Marriage Acr North American Advances NA 27 Stray Viktoria Sjoberg Dag Dyba Tore 2016 01 11 The daily stand up meeting A grounded theory study Journal of Systems and Software 114 101 124 doi 10 1016 j jss 2016 01 004 hdl 11250 2478996 S2CID 206539494 Grounded Theory Research PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 December 2014 White Jo Weatherall Ann 2000 A grounded theory analysis of older adults and information technology Educational Gerontology 26 4 371 386 doi 10 1080 036012700407857 S2CID 145187791 Groves Patricia S Manges Kirstin A Scott Cawiezell Jill 2016 02 08 Handing Off Safety at the Bedside Clinical Nursing Research 25 5 473 493 doi 10 1177 1054773816630535 ISSN 1054 7738 PMID 26858262 S2CID 11356718 Melia Kath M 1987 Learning and working the occupational socialization of nurses London Tavistock ISBN 0 422 60130 6 OCLC 16473186 Charmaz Kathy Grounded Theory The SAGE Encyclopedia of Social Science Research Methods 2003 SAGE Publications 24 May 2009 a b c Thomas G and James D 2006 Reinventing grounded theory some questions about theory ground and discovery British Educational Research Journal 32 6 767 795 a b Schonfeld I S amp Mazzola J J 2013 Strengths and limitations of qualitative approaches to research in occupational health psychology In R Sinclair M Wang amp L Tetrick Eds Research methods in occupational health psychology State of the art in measurement design and data analysis pp 268 289 New York Routledge Popper K 1963 Science Conjectures and refutations In K R Popper Ed Conjectures and refutations The growth of scientific knowledge New York Basic Books Parker L D and Roffey B H 1997 Methodological themes Back to the drawing board Revisiting grounded theory and the everyday accountant s and manager s reality Accounting Auditing amp Accountability Journal 10 212 247 doi 10 1108 09513579710166730 Grbich C 2007 Qualitative data analysis and introduction Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications Tolhurst E 2012 Grounded Theory Method Sociology s quest for exclusive items of inquiry Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung Forum Qualitative Social Research 13 3 Art 26 See P James Globalism Nationalism Tribalism Bringing theory Back In Sage Publications London 2006 and P James Y Nadarajah K Haive and V Stead Sustainable Communities Sustainable Development Other Paths for Papua New Guinea Honolulu University of Hawaii Press 2012 Braun V amp Clarke V 2006 Using thematic analysis in psychology Qualitative Research in Psychology 3 77 101 doi 10 1191 1478088706qp063oa Aldmouz R s 2009 Grounded theory as a methodology for theory generation in information systems research European journal of economics finance and administrative sciences 15 Grbich C 2007 Qualitative data analysis and introduction Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications Charmaz K 2000 Grounded Theory Objectivist and Constructivist Methods in Denzin N K and Y S Lincoln eds Handbook of Qualitative Research second edition London Sage Publications Strauss A and J Corbin 1998 Basics of Qualitative Research Techniques and Procedures for Developing Grounded Theory second edition London Sage Publications Groves P S Manges K A amp Scott Cawiezell J 2016 Handing Off Safety at the Bedside Clinical nursing research 1054773816630535 Further reading editBryant A amp Charmaz K Eds 2007 The SAGE Handbook of Grounded Theory Los Angeles Sage Birks M amp Mills J 2015 Grounded Theory A practical Guide London SAGE Publications Charmaz K 2000 Constructing Grounded Theory A Practical Guide Through Qualitative Analysis Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications Chun Tie Ylona Birks Melanie and Francis Karen 2019 Grounded theory research a design framework for novice researchers SAGE Open Medicine 7 pp 1 8 Clarke A 2005 Situational Analysis Grounded Theory After the Postmodern Turn Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications Glaser B 1992 Basics of grounded theory analysis Mill Valley CA Sociology Press Goulding C 2002 Grounded Theory A Practical Guide for Management Business and Market Researchers London Sage Kelle Udo 2005 Emergence vs Forcing of Empirical Data A Crucial Problem of Grounded Theory Reconsidered Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung Forum Qualitative Social Research On line Journal 6 2 Art 27 paragraphs 49 amp 50 2 Morse J M Stern P N Corbin J Bowers B Charmaz K amp Clarke A E Eds 2009 Developing Grounded Theory The Second Generation Walnut Creek Left Coast Press Mey G amp Mruck K Eds 2007 Grounded Theory Reader Historical Social Research Suppl 19 337 pages Oktay J S 2012 Grounded Theory New York NY Oxford University Press Stebbins Robert A 2001 Exploratory Research in the Social Sciences Thousand Oaks CA Sage Strauss A 1987 Qualitative analysis for social scientists Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press Thomas G James D 2006 Re inventing grounded theory some questions about theory ground and discovery PDF British Educational Research Journal 32 6 767 795 doi 10 1080 01411920600989412 S2CID 44250223 Glaser Glaser BG The Constant Comparative Method of Qualitative Analysis Social Problems 12 4 445 1965 Glaser BG Strauss A Discovery of Grounded Theory Strategies for Qualitative Research Sociology Press 1967 Glaser BG Theoretical Sensitivity Advances in the methodology of Grounded Theory Sociology Press 1978 Glaser BG ed More Grounded Theory Methodology A Reader Sociology Press 1994 Glaser BG ed Grounded Theory 1984 1994 A Reader two volumes Sociology Press 1995 Glaser BG ed Gerund Grounded Theory The Basic Social Process Dissertation Sociology Press 1996 Glaser BG Doing Grounded Theory Issues and Discussions Sociology Press 1998 Glaser BG The Grounded Theory Perspective I Conceptualization Contrasted with Description Sociology Press 2001 Glaser BG The Grounded Theory Perspective II Description s Remodeling of Grounded Theory Sociology Press 2003 Glaser BG The Grounded Theory Perspective III Theoretical coding Sociology Press 2005 Strauss and Corbin Anselm L Strauss Leonard Schatzman Rue Bucher Danuta Ehrlich amp Melvin Sabshin Psychiatric ideologies and institutions 1964 Barney G Glaser Anselm L Strauss The Discovery of Grounded Theory Strategies for Qualitative Research 1967 Anselm L Strauss Qualitative Analysis for Social Scientists 1987 Anselm L Strauss Juliet Corbin Basics of Qualitative Research Grounded Theory Procedures and Techniques Sage 1990 Anselm L Strauss Juliet Corbin Grounded Theory Research Procedures Canons and Evaluative Criteria in Zeitschrift fur Soziologie 19 Jg S 418 ff 1990 Anselm L Strauss Continual Permutations of Action 1993 Anselm L Strauss Juliet Corbin Grounded Theory in Practice Sage 1997 Anselm L Strauss Juliet Corbin Basics of Qualitative Research Grounded Theory Procedures and Techniques 2nd edition Sage 1998 Juliet Corbin Anselm L Strauss Basics of Qualitative Research Grounded Theory Procedures and Techniques 3rd edition Sage 2008 Constructivist grounded theory Bryant Antony 2002 Re grounding grounded theory Journal of Information Technology Theory and Application 4 1 25 42 Bryant Antony and Charmaz Kathy 2007 Grounded theory in historical perspective An epistemological account in Bryant A and Charmaz K eds The SAGE Handbook of Grounded Theory Los Angeles Sage pp 31 57 Charmaz Kathy 2000 Grounded theory Objectivist and constructivist methods in Denzin N K and Lincoln Y S eds Handbook of Qualitative Research 2nd edn Thousand Oaks CA Sage pp 509 535 Charmaz Kathy 2003 Grounded theory in Smith J A ed Qualitative Psychology A Practical Guide to Research Methods London Sage pp 81 110 Charmaz Kathy 2006 Constructing Grounded Theory London Sage Charmaz Kathy 2008 Constructionism and the grounded theory method in Holstein J A and Gubrium J F eds Handbook of Constructionist Research New York The Guilford Press pp 397 412 Charmaz Kathy 2009 Shifting the grounds Constructivist grounded theory methods in J M Morse P N Stern J Corbin B Bowers K Charmaz and A E Clarke eds Developing Grounded Theory The Second Generation Walnut Creek Left Coast Press pp 127 154 Charmaz Kathy forthcoming Constructing Grounded Theory 2nd ed London Sage Mills Jane Bonner Ann amp Francis Karen 2006 Adopting a constructivist approach to grounded theory Implications for research design International Journal of Nursing Practice 12 1 8 13 Mills Jane Bonner Ann amp Francis Karen 2006 The development of constructivist grounded theory International Journal of Qualitative Methods 5 1 25 35 Thornberg Robert 2012 Informed grounded theory Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research 56 243 259 Thornberg Robert and Charmaz Kathy 2011 Grounded theory in Lapan S D Quartaroli M T and Reimer F J eds Qualitative Research An Introduction to Methods and Designs San Francisco CA John Wiley Jossey Bass pp 41 67 Thornberg Robert amp Charmaz K forthcoming Grounded theory and theoretical coding in Flick U ed The SAGE handbook of qualitative analysis London Sage External links editThe Grounded Theory Institute Glaser tradition Grounded Theory Online Supporting grounded theory researchers Grounded Theory Review Sociology Press Grounded Theory Research Tutorial Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grounded theory amp oldid 1201516739, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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