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SBSF 8427- Foundation Research Seminar 2
Research Design in Education
Instructor: Marilyn K. Simon, Ph.D.
Exercise 4
STEVEN R. VAN HOOK
July 12, 2003
WALDEN UNIVERSITY
Ph.D. in Education Program
Specialization: Transcultural Distance Learning
Steven R. Van Hook
EDUC 8427
Page 2
Exercise 4-A:
Prepare a chart which compares and contrasts these four types of qualitative research designs.
Point of
Comparison
Case Study
Grounded Theory
Phenomenology
 Describe and
interpret a cultural
and/or social group.
 Gain access to
participants through
‘gatekeeper.’
 Develop an in-depth
analysis of a single
case or multiple
cases.
 Bounded in space
and time.
 Develop a theory
grounded in data
gathered from
field.
 Begins with data,
ends with
constructed
theoretical
model.
 Understanding
the essence of
experiential
phenomena.
 Seek
participant’s
perception of an
event’s meaning.
Philosophical
roots
 Social anthropology
and sociology.
 Social sciences
including political
science, sociology,
urban studies, and
so on.
 Sociology.
 Philosophy,
sociology,
psychology.
Sample
 Observations and
interviews,
investigation of
artifacts during
extended field
work.
 Sources including
documents, archival
records, interviews,
observations,
physical artifacts.
 Interviews and
observations in
‘saturated’
categories to
form a detailed
theory.
 In-depth
interviews (with
up to ten
people).
Focus of
research
Ethnography
Analysis
 Description
 Interpretation
 Description
 Themes
 Assertions
 Coding
 Conditional
matrix




Narrative form
 Description of
group and/or
individual cultural
behavior.
 In-depth study and
presentation of a
case.
 Theory or
theoretical
model.
 Description of an
experience’s
‘essence.’
Statements
Meanings
Themes
Descriptions of
experiences
Source
Creswell, J. (1998). Qualitative inquiry and research design: Choosing among five traditions. Thousand
Oaks, CA: Sage. [p. 65]
Leedy, P., & Ormrod, J. (2001). Practical research: Planning and design. Upper Saddle River, NJ:
Prentice-Hall.
Steven R. Van Hook
EDUC 8427
Page 3
Exercise 4-B:
Take the problem that you are investigating and develop research questions that would be asked if you
were to use one of these qualitative methods to solve the problem you have identified.
Problem:
The opportunity for American higher education to meet the demand of and competition for
international students is rapidly expanding. Foreign students contributed $12-billion to the US
economy last academic year (Rooney, 2003), and many US-based online education institutions, for
example MBA programs through Cardean University and others (Pohl, 2003), are expanding their
reach into the global education arena. To be successful in this outreach, institutions and instructors
must be prepared to effectively deal with the demands of a multicultural setting, where “the
educational benefits of including international perspectives and traditions in American classrooms
are vital” (Rooney, 2003). Beyond that, strained international relations call for more effective
learning and communications in multicultural settings, which might enhance mutual understanding
among multicultural students, who may then provide future cross-culturally skilled leadership in a
conflicted global environment. This study, based on a grounded theory consideration of three years’
teaching experience in an international program with a large diversity of multicultural students, will
seek to identify transculturally resonant images, messages, and themes which may be used to prepare
an instructional framework for more effective learning in multicultural classroom settings, whether
online or on-ground.
Questions for a Grounded Theory study of the problem:

Over the period of three years teaching international marketing and advertising courses to a
large diversity of multicultural students, has the instructor observed any images, messages,
themes, and so forth which seem to resonate across cultural variations?

What sorts of themes and images might create resonance and dissonance within a
multicultural classroom?

How might resonant themes and images be applied to prepare course content for
multicultural class settings?
References
Pohl, O. (2003, March 26). Universities exporting MBA programs via the internet. The New York Times.
Retrieved March 26, 2003 from http://www.nytimes.com
Rooney, M. (2003, January 14). Report urges aggressive recruiting of international students at U.S.
colleges. The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved January 14, 2003, from
http://chronicle.com/daily/2003/01/2003011401n.htm