From pryan@politics.ryerson.ca Wed Dec 27 09:54:11 2006 From: Peter Ryan To: air-l@lists.aoir.org Subject: Re: [Air-l] Community "Critical Mass"? (Dr. T. Michael Roberts) / Research Survey Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 12:53:58 -0500 Message-ID: In-Reply-To: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="===============0663976350283216182==" --===============0663976350283216182== Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Dear all, This is my first post to the AoIR listserv, although I=C2=92ve been lurking f= or a few months now.=20 I=C2=92m currently completing by doctorate in an interdisciplinary graduate r= esearch program, and I find this discussion of methodology interesting in tha= t the pedagogy of my university definitely supports the view that methodologi= cal issues should be approached from the perspective of using the "best" meth= ods for addressing and observing a researcher=C2=92s object of study. For ex= ample, if I=C2=92m researching best practices for how people interact with an= d use a particular software, perhaps an ethnographic or qualitative usability= study would better serve my needs, rather than a quantitative study that cap= tures the order of icons that a user selects while using the software (and ot= her such statistically measurable items) -- although the survey would definit= ely add extra elements to the research =C2=93story=C2=94 if it were well desi= gned, as Dr. T. Michael Roberts is describing. =20 Similarly, on-line content analysis and textual analysis tools are now often = helping reduce narrative reports to numbers with ease. In other words, new o= n-line tools and communities like TAPoR, for example, are adding to the ease = with which quantitative analysis can now be conducted. Often it is an issue = of simply adding an automated survey, or other form of reporting, that could = lend itself to later quantitative analysis, for an added perspective to a qua= litative study =C2=93story=C2=94. For example, here=C2=92s a shameless self promotion, if anyone has any free t= ime this holiday break, I=C2=92d greatly appreciate anyone interested in the = topic of how literature affects research and development filling out my quick= little doctoral research survey =C2=96 which can be found at the following l= ink: =20 * https://www.r= unner.ryerson.ca/PRSurvey/survey.cfm * https://www.runner.ryerson.ca/PRSurvey/survey.cfm *Please take the time to fill the survey out, especially if you are either 1)= a published author or 2) employed in the information communication technolog= y sector. The survey should take about 15 minutes of your time, depending on = your level of involvement. I appreciate any and all comments and feedback = =C2=96 the more information recorded here, the better because it will help bo= th my quantitative and qualitative research analysis in the long run. *Also, if you know any other interested networks or listserves that might not= mind this type of research circulating on its servers, I would appreciate th= e survey being forwarded on... More information on my research can be found by following the link above. At this point, I hope that the survey will travel far and wide like a stolen = garden gnome that will one day come back to its owner. *Importance of this Research* I hope that you will take the time to help this research because of its impor= tance in the following listed areas of study. Specifically, this research aim= s to develop: 1) a better understanding of how to improve the potential of networked resear= ch via the use of computers. Computers have been called the =C2=93imagination= machine=C2=94, but are we using our new abundance of information effectively= and imaginatively? 2) an interdisciplinary understanding of how the =C2=93two cultures=C2=94 of = the Arts and Computer Sciences do in fact work together (if they do at all). 3) recommendations for economic policy that is being led by the creative sect= or. In particular, funding for the Arts have been cut in recent years, despit= e the huge economic impact that the cultural industries have on local economi= es; while the funding for ICTs continues to increase without any apparent reg= ard for the environmental problems caused by the development of the infrastru= cture that is required by a technological society =C2=96 how can these two po= licy arcs be realigned in a focused and mutually beneficial way? 4) maps of ICT networks that emphasize and link these two cultures. If we ca= n visualize how research networks overlap with artistic and literary capital,= then perhaps improvements can be made to the systems of communication betwee= n the agents of these two cultures. Such an analysis can also be used as a va= luable case study for other communities. Thank you for your time and consideration of this message, and I hope it help= s add to this conversation of methodological considerations. Sincerely, Peter Malachy Ryan ------------------------------------------------------------------ Peter Malachy Ryan, PhD Candidate Rogers Fellow, Communication and Culture Ryerson University Blog: www.cprobes.com/pr=20 *****************************************************************************= ******* Today's Topics: 1. Re: Community "Critical Mass"? (Dr. T. Michael Roberts) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Mon, 25 Dec 2006 08:08:13 -0800 (PST) From: "Dr. T. Michael Roberts" Subject: Re: [Air-l] Community "Critical Mass"? To: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Message-ID: <701748.35560.qm@web36804.mail.mud.yahoo.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=3Diso-8859-1 Mary-Helen, I am one of those rare birds thoroughly trained in both qualitative and quantitative Research Methodology. I started out with degrees in philosophy and literature and was drawn into the Department of Educational Psychology, Counseling and Special Education by an interest in Transpersonal Psychology. I was told once admitted that I would have to take at least four courses in Statistics and Research Methodology to become a doctor and was a damn fool if I did not take every course offered by the department in number crunching. Qualitative Research Methodology was not mentioned during this conversation or, at the time, in the catalog of courses. The folks over in Psychology looked down on the folks over in the education school but granted us the left-handed compliment of being better statisticians than they were and better trained in Psychology than the average math nerd.=20 I had never taken Algebra. I took business math with Coach Vickers in high school and then majored in Philosophy at a small, liberal arts college which cross-listed logic courses as both PHIL and MATH. So, you can imagine how splendidly self-confident I felt as I stood in Dr. Donald Ary?s office explaining to him that I would be taking his Educational Statistics 1 next term because I really had no choice. I had dropped by to apologize in advance for the ineptitude I was sure I would display and, perhaps, to convince him that I was, when allowed to speak English rather than being forced to express myself through numbers, at least slightly brighter than a turnip. I enjoyed Dr. Ary?s course tremendously and took every course offered by the department in number crunching for the pure joy of it. I realized at some point that much number crunching is done for the pure joy of it and developed a bit of a habit in that direction myself. I spent so long finishing the degree I started while doing another simultaneously that I passed comps and became officially ABD the same term the department?s first semiotican was hired. I did a quantitative dissertation but probably would not have if the semiotican had burst upon the scene a year earlier.=20 Upon graduation, I began teaching Psychology for a community college. My greatest success came teaching Psychology 2317 (Basic Statistics) both online and in the traditional classroom. I never got a single math nerd in that class in all the times I taught it. My classes closed shortly after opening every term after the first, filling up quickly with would-be nurses told by the State of Texas that 3 hours of statistics were required for licensure. These nurses genuinely loved my Education School approach to teaching statistics, an approach that involved dealing with statistics at the level of concept rather than getting bogged down with all those elaborate formulas and tricky computations. You can get away with that if you have them buy SPSS ($80.00) instead of a text-book.=20 Anyway, I now teach English rather than Psychology. I miss my nurses but enjoy working with my composition students even more. I was always a story-teller. My fascination with statistics was an attempt on my part to embrace my opposite. That fascination began during a time in my life when I felt that I was drowning in an ocean of competing stories and desperately needed to feel something solid beneath my feet, something that was there before anyone started interpreting and which refused to be interpreted away. Will that do as a definition of reality? Patterns in numbers that were just numbers standing in abstract relationship without anything being defined except within the web of those relationships felt like solid ground to me.=20 Later, I faced the awful fact that these patterns only come to mean when you turn them into a story by saying that 17i is the length of Jessica?s nose which is why Roger and Jessica eloped to Vegas. The truth is ?out there?, as Fox Moulder used to say, but can only be lived ?in here? in the form of a story that must go beyond the information given in order to become a fit place for human beings to live, love and occasionally try to jump out of the story like cat nipped kitties chasing their own lovely tails.=20 I hope I have made all this perfectly clear. My students tell me that my learned discourse holds together at least as well as jazz and that they do profit in some vague way by exposure. Then again, I tell them that their essays will make fascinating reading if they just capture themselves in a net of words. I try to be kind and, perhaps, they do also in return. T. Michael=20 --- Mary-Helen Ward wrote: > But why? Why reduce people's words, thoughts and > emotional responses =20 > to mathematical coding? Why not use qualitative > methods to capture/=20 > represent/investigate the interactions? I understand > that it's still =20 > a reduction; a distillation from the original, but > it speaks in clear =20 > ways too. >=20 > Theory can be developed from life using many > methods; maths is only =20 > one of them. Maybe when we talk about the 'body of > knowledge' we need =20 > to think about its blood and guts (the messy stuff) > and well as bones =20 > and ligaments. >=20 > M-H >=20 >=20 --===============0663976350283216182==--