Fair enough! However, I, and other qualitative researchers I meet with at the University, have observed over some time that (at least in Australia) journalists find it easier to ignore or poke fun at qualitative research than at statistically-based material. If there are what they consider 'figures' to hang a story on they seem much more comfortable even if they don't interpret them well. Interesting, they don't seem to see their own backgrounders and feature articles in which they canvass opinion, mash it up and report it, often really well, as qualitative research. M-H On 18/12/07 1:04 AM, "Eszter Hargittai" <info@webuse.org> wrote:
Mary-Helen mentioned earlier that journalists seem to feel more comfortable discussing quantitative results. That comment made me chuckle. If you only knew how much time I (and I suspect others in similar shoes) spend explaining relatively simple statistical findings to journalists only to have the results misrepresented in the end you would not make that assumption. I suspect it's just another case where that comment about journalists' coverage of other areas applies: if it's not your specialty you're more likely to think they cover it well.:-}