T2W3 Grounded Theory STUDENT 2024
T2W3 Grounded Theory STUDENT 2024
T2W3 Grounded Theory STUDENT 2024
THEORY
Week 3 Lecture
Required Reading: Holloway & Galvin
(2017), Chapter 11
Outline
• Explore the history of grounded theory
• Who are Barney Glaser and Anselm Strauss and Julie
Corbin
• Discuss symbolic interactionism
• Data sources
• Explore the main features of grounded theory
• Theoretical sensitivity
• Theoretical sampling
• Data analysis: coding and categorizing
• Discovering the core category
• Constant comparison
• Use of the literature
• Integrating theory
• Theoretical memos and field notes
Selecting a Qualitative Method
If you are interested in …
What is the human How does this social How does this cultural
experience of …? group interact to …? group express its
pattern of …?
3
History of Grounded Theory (GT)
• In the 1960’s Barney Glaser and Anslem Strauss (sociologists from the University of California, San Francisco)
conducted a research study on the interactions between health professionals and those who were dying.
• It was from this study that they developed what is referred to as ‘grounded theory’—the generation of a theory,
coming from data that researchers collect—the theory is ‘grounded’ in the data.
• Their seminal book in 1967 was titled “The Discovery of Grounded Theory”.
• Over the years Glaser & Strauss had differing viewpoints on the nature of method.
• It is thought that Glaser stayed faithful to the original ideas of GT
• Strauss began working with Julie Corbin (a nurse researcher), and together developed new ideas about the ‘how to’
develop grounded theory, writing several books together.
Different types of grounded theory
Grounded Theory
Grounded Theory (Glasser & Strauss 1967)
Constructing a
Developed GT Develop well
Focus that accounts for
all data
organized and
detailed GT
theoretical
understanding of
people
– Research Questions
– Address basic social processes that shape
human behaviours
– Statement or a board question that allow for
explanation of the phenomenon
– Researcher selects a focus on an area of
interest
The purpose of this research was to explore the process used by mental health nurses working with adolescents to
ameliorate the experience of moral distress. Using grounded theory methodology, a substantive theory was
developed to explain the process. All the incidents that led to the experience of moral distress were related to safety
and resulted in the nurses asking themselves the question, “Is this the best I can do?” Engaging in dialogue was the
primary means nurses used to work through the experience of moral distress. Engaging in dialogue was an ongoing
process, and nurses sought out dialogue with a variety of people as they tried to make sense of their experience.
Participants identified qualities of dialogue that were helpful or unhelpful as they sought to resolve their moral
distress. Participants who had a positive experience of dialogue were able to answer the “Is this the best I can do”
question satisfactorily and continue working with adolescents with a renewed focus on the therapeutic relationship.
Participants who had a negative experience of dialogue are unable to answer the question and either left the unit or
agency or talked about leaving.
GT Example #2:
Knaak S, Patten S. (2016). A grounded theory model for reducing stigma in health professionals in Canada.
Objective: The Mental Health Commission of Canada was formed as a national catalyst for improving the mental health system.
One of its initiatives is Opening Minds (OM), whose mandate is to reduce mental health-related stigma. This article reports
findings from a qualitative study on anti stigma interventions for healthcare providers, which includes a process model
articulating key stages and strategies for implementing successful anti stigma programmes.
Method: The study employed a grounded theory methodology. Data collection involved in-depth interviews with programme
stakeholders, direct observation of programmes, a review of programme documents, and qualitative feedback from programme
participants. Analysis proceeded via the constant comparison method. A model was generated to visually present key findings.
Results: Twenty-three in-depth interviews were conducted representing 18 different programmes. Eight programmes were
observed directly, 48 programme documents were reviewed, and data from 1812 programme participants were reviewed. The
analysis led to a four-stage process model for implementing successful anti stigma programmes targeting healthcare providers,
informed by the basic social process ‘targeting the roots of healthcare provider stigma’.
Conclusion: The process model developed through this research may function as a tool to help guide the development and
implementation of anti stigma programmes in healthcare contexts.
What is the difference between Glaser
and Strauss’s approaches?
Stern (1994) summarizes the differences between
both approaches as…
“I think that Strauss, as he examines the data,
stops at each word to ask, ‘what if?’ Glaser keeps
his attention focused on the data and asks, ‘what
have we here?’ Strauss brings to bear every
possible contingency that could relate to the
data, whether it appears in the data or not.
Glaser focuses his attention on the data to allow
the data to tell their own story” (as cited in
McCann & Clark, 2003, p. 26)
• Researchers write notes in the field, memos with
specific words, sentences or thoughts that were
expressed either through interview or observations.
• They are great memory aides and can be used to help
Data sources, with analysis, interpretations, questions to follow up
theoretical with or directions for where to move to next.
• As the researcher becomes more active in the data
memos and collection and analysis the memos become more
field notes theoretical in nature.
• Grounded theorists use several different methods to
collect data.
• Field Observations
• Participant Interviews
• Documents (journals, papers, diaries, incident reports,
newspaper clippings, researchers’ experiences, etc.)
• According to Glaser (1978), ”everything is data”….
• Grounded theory is intended to explain rather than
Important describe
aspects of GT • The theory generated must apply to similar settings and
contexts.
• New perspectives are welcomed to help explain social
actions and the meanings that come from them.
• Data is coded and categorized (in tandem), then major
concepts and constructs are formed.
• Researcher searches for major themes that connect
ideas, searching for that ‘core category’ which links all
other categories, and when uncovered is described as
discovering the essence of the study.
Sample and data collection
Consider…. “I’m really not sure how to explain it. I just knew when I
walked into the room, that something didn’t feel right. I
knew that something was going to happen. Maybe it was
how the child looked, or perhaps it was my gut telling me
not to go to far away, and within an hour my patient was
in SVT…his heart racing at 257 beats a minute”.
• Sampling that is guided by significant ideas for the theory that is emerging.
• Through the process of collecting data and analyzing it, concepts (ideas) begin to emerge.
• The researcher must continuously decide what data to collect next, and from whom to advance
the theory.
• Time and continuance are unique nuances specific to GT which means that theoretical sampling
continues throughout the study rather than being pre-determined.
• ‘Theoretical sampling continues until data and theoretical saturation’.
Data analysis: coding and categorizing
`
Types of coding: Open coding
– The process of breaking down or attempting to figure out/think about what concepts (abstract ideas)
are in the data.
– All data are coded and researchers during open coding tend to go through the interview transcription
or field notes/memos/field observations etc. line by line trying to locate the concepts within.
– Through the process of open coding the researcher limits the chance of being influenced by
preconceived ideas.
– Level One Coding (Concepts)
– Level Two Coding-Developing Constructs
– Level Three Constructs –Major Categories
Discovering the core category
Objectives: This paper provides a theoretical account of nurses’ collaboration with patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease during non-
invasive ventilation treatment in hospital.
Background: Despite strong evidence for the effect of non-invasive ventilation treatment, success remains a huge challenge. Nurse–patient
collaboration may be vital for treatment tolerance and success. A better understanding of how nurses and patients collaborate during non-invasive
ventilation may therefore contribute to improvement in treatment success.
Design: A constant comparative classical grounded theory.
Method: The data comprised sessions of qualitative participant observation during the treatment of 21 patients with non-invasive ventilation that
included informal conversations with the nurses and semi-structured interviews with 11 patients after treatment completion. Data were collected at
three intensive care units and one general respiratory ward in Denmark.
Results: Succeeding emerged as the nurses’ main concern in the nurse–patient collaboration during non-invasive ventilation treatment. Four
collaborative typologies emerged as processing their main concern: (1) twofold oriented collaboration; (2) well-being-oriented collaboration; (3)
outcome-oriented collaboration; and (4) absent collaboration.
Conclusions: This study offers a theoretical account of nurses’ main concern and how they activate different ways of collaboration to achieve
successful treatment. We offer a theoretical basis for developing complex interventions.
–
Integrating • Substantive Theory: theory that emerges from a
particular context or setting, such as a particular
theory hospital unit or patient population.
• Findings should be
presented using
• Descriptive Language
• Diagrams of the process
• Goal: Generate a Theory
based on the reported
findings that is connected
to the data