Literature DB >> 24171635

Data-analysis issues in a phenomenographic investigation of information literacy in nursing.

Marc Forster1.   

Abstract

AIM: To explore two contrasting methods of phenomenographic data analysis.
BACKGROUND: Phenomenography is a still-uncommon but increasingly used methodology based on qualitative interviews that allows experiences to be categorised and put into a descriptive structure for use in developing educational interventions. There are two different approaches in the literature to analysing data: the Marton and Åkerlind methods. DATA SOURCES: A doctoral research project investigating the role of information literacy in evidence-based practice in nursing. REVIEW
METHODS: The phenomenographic study involves open-ended interviews in which participants are asked to describe their 'life-world' where the phenomenon is experienced, covering the contexts in which it is experienced and how it is experienced. The researcher attempts to develop statements from the interview transcripts that describe representative ways of experiencing the phenomenon in the form of 'categories of description'. A category of description represents a qualitatively different way of experiencing a phenomenon. DISCUSSION: This article discusses the reasons for adopting phenomenography, phenomenography's epistemological assumptions, and the strengths and weaknesses of the two different data-analysis methods.
CONCLUSION: Phenomenography's strength is its ability to develop logical structures that give a picture of the experience of a phenomenon while being able to read into the structure as much of the complexity of that experience as is consciously and practically possible. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE/RESEARCH: One method, described as the 'Åkerlind' method, emerged as the appropriate method for phenomenographic studies in nursing.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24171635     DOI: 10.7748/nr2013.11.21.2.30.e329

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nurse Res        ISSN: 1351-5578


  1 in total

1.  Assessing the effect of virtual education on information literacy competency for evidence-based practice among the undergraduate nursing students.

Authors:  Maryam Shamsaee; Parvin Mangolian Shahrbabaki; Leila Ahmadian; Jamileh Farokhzadian; Farhad Fatehi
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2021-02-09       Impact factor: 2.796

  1 in total

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