Analysing Qualitative Data in Psychology

Analysing Qualitative Data in Psychology

by Dr Evanthia Lyons (Editor), Dr Adrian Coyle (Editor)

Synopsis

Analysing Qualitative Data in Psychology equips students and researchers in psychology and the social sciences to carry out qualitative data analysis, focusing on four major methods (grounded theory, interpretative phenomenological analysis, discourse analysis and narrative analysis).

Assuming no prior knowledge of qualitative research, chapters on the nature, assumptions and practicalities of each method are written by acknowledged experts. To help students and researchers make informed methodological choices about their own research the book addresses data collection and the writing up of research using each method, while providing a sustained comparison of the four methods, backed up with authoritative analyses using the different methods.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 296
Edition: New Ed
Publisher: Sage Publications Ltd
Published: 25 Oct 2007

ISBN 10: 1412907837
ISBN 13: 9781412907835

Media Reviews
'This is a good read for all potential qualitative researchers, and for quantitative researchers who want to learn what qualitative research is really about!...This is an unusual book, providing all the necessary skills for developing qualitative research skills, and I would recommend it highly for introductory method courses'
Marion Kloep
Psychology: Learning & Teaching

Author Bio
Evanthia Lyons is Head of the School of Psychology, Criminology and Sociology at Kingston University, London. Her research interests include identity and social representational processes in contexts of intergroup conflict and multi-cultural societies. Adrian Coyle: My engagement with higher education began with my degree in Psychology (with Philosophy), completed at University College Dublin in 1986. In 1987 I moved to London and worked as a research assistant at what was then South Bank Polytechnic until 1989 before transferring to the NHS to work as an HIV Training Officer and Counsellor. After completing my PhD at the University of Surrey in 1991, I took up a lectureship there and have remained at Surrey ever since, fulfilling various roles, principally in relation to the Practitioner Doctorate in Psychotherapeutic and Counselling Psychology (as Research Tutor) and currently the MSc in Social Psychology (as Course Director). In recent years, I returned to academic study at the University of London, obtaining qualifications in Theology (at Birkbeck) and in the Psychology of Religion (at Heythrop College).