quantitative and qualitative methods in library research

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QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE METHODS IN LIBRARY RESEARCH Amy Catalano, Ed.D., MLS, MALS Associate Professor of Library Services, Hofstra University

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Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research. Amy Catalano, Ed.D ., MLS, MALS Associate Professor of Library Services, Hofstra University. Library Research. Library research tends to be rather poor. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

QUANTITATIVE AND

QUALITATIVE METHODS IN

LIBRARY RESEARCH

Amy Catalano, Ed.D., MLS, MALSAssociate Professor of Library

Services, Hofstra University

Page 2: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

LIBRARY RESEARCH Library research tends to be rather poor. Generally, studies are related to

immediate practices and situations and are not generalizable.

Non-cumulative Many academic librarians have not been

trained to do empirical research

Page 3: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

WHICH METHODS TO CHOOSE? Many new researchers make the

mistake of choosing a method before they have a research question.

The research question will define the method

But, can you do the study well with the resources that you have?

Page 4: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

CHOOSING A TOPIC “How I done it good” Solving a problem you or your colleagues have had Explore a theory (e.g., of information-seeking behavior) Test the efficacy of an intervention Exploring use of a library service Explore use of a purchased resource (e.g., a database) Look at reports published by ACRL which identifies areas

of needed research. For example: The Value of Academic Libraries by Megan Oakleaf

Read through TOC/abstracts of recent issues of journals.

http://www.ala.org/acrl/sites/ala.org.acrl/files/content/issues/value/val_report.pdf

Page 5: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

DESIGNING A RESEARCH QUESTION A research question should be focused

enough to be answerable in an article, for example.

“What are the information seeking behaviors of college students?” May be too broad.

“What are in the information seeking behaviors of History graduate students writing a capstone paper?” is more focused.

Page 6: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

SCIENTIFIC METHOD Identify a problem Gather data Develop a hypothesis Empirically test that hypothesis by

analyzing data

Page 7: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

IMPLICATIONS FOR YOUR STUDY Does your study have implications for

others in your field? If not, you should do some rethinking.

You study should: -be replicable -universally be able to be researched by

others -control: have parameters and identify

factors that will affect your results (e.g., SES)

Page 8: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

RESEARCH DESIGN BASICS: PARTICIPANTS AND SAMPLING Population: The larger group from which

you will draw your sample (e.g., 250 undergraduate students registered with the Students with Disabilities Office)

Sample: Should be random, and therefore generalizable to the chosen population

However, convenience sampling is often the norm.

When doing a teaching intervention, for example, entire classes can be randomly assigned to conditions. This is cluster sampling.

Page 9: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

SAMPLE SIZE Qualitative: between 1 and 70 (or even more).

Although more than 20 is rare. More is not always better or useful in qualitative research.

It is better to ask is the sample representative of what you are investigating?

Quantitative: Varies by method: 30 for each group in experimental research. For surveys 10-20% of the population, although this depdents of the size of the population.

The more the merrier!

Page 10: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

RESEARCH DESIGN BASIC: INSTRUMENTS If you are going to use a survey,

interview protocol or test, you should ensure its reliability and validity. (pp. 61-66, Seligpani)

Reliability: How well an instrument consistently measures whatever it is measuring.

Validity: How well the instrument measures what it is supposed to measure. Several types of validity (e.g., content)

Page 11: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

QUALITATIVE RQ Research Questions: How does…, Why does…, (Process

questions: the answer is not a number, more exploratory).

Methods: Interviews, observations, discourse analysisSome results can be quantified

Page 12: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

QUALITATIVE RQ What are the perceptions of history

students on the availability of primary sources electronically?

This question can be answered through different methods:A survey InterviewFocus groupA case study

Page 13: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

QUALITATIVE METHODS Interviews Not meant to be generalizable, so a

small sample is acceptable Diverse views are helpful Structure or unstructured (or semi-

structured) Listen more, talk less. Ask open ended

questions. It is best to record an interview, which

will allow you to take notes.

Page 14: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

OBSERVATIONS Watching participants to examine a

phenomenon. E.g., Observing students navigating a

database without instruction to determine how they instinctively search.

Participant or non-participant Taking notes and having a rubric It is better to have more than one

observer and to calibrate training and check on consistency of observations

Page 15: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

FOCUS GROUPS Like interviews, but includes several

individuals to allow for a collected understanding

All participants must get their say

Recording and transcribing a good practice as the researcher will need to mediate the focus group

A follow-up interview is a good practice.

Page 16: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

EXAMINING RECORDS Archival documents Data-mining: e.g., catalog use, use of

services, via Millenium Can also be quantified

Page 17: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

ANALYZING QUALITATIVE DATA Coding: with transcripts of interviews, you

may want to code particular words or phrases (with a number, for example) to determine whether a pattern emerges

Grounding results in the current literature

Triangulation and cross-checking: using multiple methods , data collection strategies, and sources to get a clear picture of what is being studied.

Page 18: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

QUANTITATIVE RQ To what extent did the distance

education group perform better on the post-test than the face-to-face instruction group?

The question calls for a number as an answer.

Page 19: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH Most rigorous Treatment/control group Manipulation of an independent variable Random Assignment Removal of the influence of any other variable

(can do this with some stats tests) All factors, except for the independent variable,

should be the same Use of pre-post test (often, but not always)

Ex. Do students who receive instruction via social media perform better on a digital literacy test than students who do not?

Page 20: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

QUANTITATIVE METHODS: SURVEYS When selecting an instrument search the

literature first for one you can use or adapt Check the reliability and validity Administration in paper/person gives you a

higher return. Online distribution is easier, but there is a lower rate of return (usually 10%) and responses tend to be biased.

Some survey types: tests of information literacy, service satisfaction and use, user-perceptions

Question phrasing is important to validity! Sampling: convenience, random, snowball

Page 21: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

QUANTITATIVE METHODS: BIBLIOMETRICS Citation analysis: An examination of

patterns or frequency of citations, authors, topics, methods etc.

May be used to link scholarly works to other authors

May be used to indicate the impact of a journal

Page 22: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

META-ANALYSIS Not many opportunities in librarianship Statistical compilation of the results of

many studies on one topic. The results are generally the effect of an intervention.

Page 23: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

SYSTEMATIC REVIEW/META-SYNTHESIS This is a systematic literature review Often some systematic evaluation of

existing studies is a part of the review Appealing to librarians because it draws

on their data mining A common method in the health

sciences an among health sciences librarians

Page 24: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

RESEARCH DESIGN BASICS: DATA ANALYSIS Nominal: number stands in for a word,

e.g., 1=female, 2=male

Ordinal: order 1st, 2nd, 3rd

Continuous: numbers from 0-?

Page 25: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

INFERENTIAL STATISTICS Allows the researcher to generalize to a

population

SPSS, SAS, or Excel allows a researcher to perform inferential statistics.

Page 26: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

INFERENTIAL STATISTIC TESTS Chi-Square: Nominal Data, tests a

hypothesis ANOVA/T-test: compares groups on an

independent variable Regression: Determines the weight of a

predictor variable. Also determines which of several variables predicts an outcome

Page 27: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

MIXED METHODS You can combine quant with qual to get

a better picture of your inquiry. For example, you can interview a

selection of participants from those you have surveyed to determine why they answered in a particular manner.

Page 28: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

METHODS Once you select a method, be sure to

read further on best practices.

Other methods: Case study Ethnography Causal/Comparative

Page 29: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

INSTITUTIONAL REVIEW BOARD If you are going to be interacting with

human beings in some way, you generally need to send a proposal to the IRB.

These humans include: students/faculty/staff at your institution, people at another institution (and you will need to work with the IRB at the institution as well), or anyone you plan to interact with via the telephone, survey, or test, for example.

Page 30: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

IRB You should be familiar with the Belmont

report and basic Human Research principles.

A tutorial, quiz and certificate are available here:http://phrp.nihtraining.com/users/login.php

Page 31: Quantitative and Qualitative methods in Library Research

RESOURCES Connaway, L. S. (2010). Basic research

methods for librarians (5th ed.). Santa Barbara, Calif: Libraries Unlimited.

Academic library research: perspectives and current trends. (2008). Chicago: Association of College and Research Libraries.

SPSS for Psychologists