quarta-feira, 29 de junho de 2016

From Mirroring to the world-Makin: Research and Future Forming


Kenneth J.Gergen -  Swarthmore College, TheInstitut Taos


Biography
The son of John Jay Gergen, President of the Department of Mathematics at Duke University, and Aubigne Munger (née Lermond), Gergen grew up in Durham, North Carolina. He had three brothers, one of whom is David Gergen, the prominent political analyst. After completing public education, he attended Yale University .Graduando up in 1957, he later became a US naval officer. He then returned to graduate school at Duke University, where he received his PhD in psychology in 1963. His dissertation advisor was Edward E. Jones. Gergen went on to become an assistant professor in the Department of Social Relations daUniversidade Harvard, where he also became the Chairman of the tutors and advisers to the department and representative of the Council of the University in Educational Policy.
Gergen in 1967 took a position as Chairman of the Department of Psychology at Swarthmore College, a position he held for ten years. At various intervals he served as visiting professor at the University of Heidelberg, the University of Marburg, the Sorbonne, the University of Rome, Kyoto University, and the University Adolfo Ibáñez. In Swarthmore he spearheaded the development of academic concentration on the theory of interpretation. In an attempt to link their academic work to social practices, he collaborated with colleagues to create the Taos Institute in 1996. He is currently a Research Professor at Swarthmore Senior, President of the Institute Taos Council and assistant professor at the University of Tilburg.
Gergen is married to Mary M. Gergen, professor emeritus at Penn State University, and a major contributor to feminist psychology and desempenho.Ela question is the author of over 50 articles and is the co-author (with Ken Gergen) of "social construction". They publish Aging Newsletter positive with an audience of at least 12,000. [Citation needed ]

Summary
• The condition of the reflective pragmatism and the repetition of old practices of doing research in the wars of traditional and social sciences.
• The underlying predominant metaphor most research across the social sciences continues to be the "mirror".
• Even aware of their prejudices, researchers are still trying to reflect, explore, light, or describe aspects of individual or social life through commonly shared practices.
• The author offers an alternative to the "mirror metaphor", a research orientation in which the great attempt is not used to analyze the world about what it is, but to actively shape the future contours.
• The orientation for the research to be forming the futur is justified because they are faster and faster fluctuations in social life.
• This approach is an alternative to the prevailing tradition and its consequences are unclear to society.
• The author of a vision of knowledge as propositional, a knowledge as praxis - or "learn" practical.
• It discusses research into a future that is in training, which has a direction, through critical research, creation of new practices and a collaborative action.
• In the text, it is also given attention to the role of theory, and a relational ethics of research.
p.1
• The author begins by presenting issues that permeate the recent and intense debates about the nature of scientific truth. For these, they leave a trail of misunderstanding, animosity, and a growing gap between the traditionalists and those variously termed "post-fundamentalist," "post-empiricist" and "postmodern".
• It is not to review the vast literature on these issues, or to resolve these tensions. What you want is:
Putting the focus on most recognizable results of these debates
Take the support of critics and defenders of tradition.
Extend the implicit logic of these conclusions
E explore an emerging conception of what is to conduct research in the field of human or social sciences.
• Finally, point to significant deficiencies widely shared traditions, both conceptual and pragmatic.
• proposed outline the potential of this alternative.
• He believes that this conception of a future in research-oriented training gives way to new goals, practices, ethical deliberations and reflections.
• It's not only eliminate the long-standing traditions, but to put new focus on potential long-range research.
The emergence of a reflective pragmatism
• Points widespread criticism of traditional theories based on the value of saturation claims of knowledge, its dependence on the literary and rhetorical, and your social life (as opposed to empirical), which virtually eliminated the search for a fundamental philosophy of science.
• This is the legacy of the Enlightenment and the rational foundations of science.
• But we found the controversies of so-called "science wars" that are largely missing.
• There are several lines of criticism that in its less antagonistic way, have become relatively uncontroversial, which does not allow a place for traditional lines of research, although they consider qualified in significant respects.
• The author characterizes this emerging consensus as a reflective pragmatism (Gergen, 2014).
• It has two hypotheses more widely shared that lend themselves to a reflective pragmatism are as follows:
Everything that exists does not make necessary demands on the representation. One of the most controversial points of friction in the debate concerns the extent to which our accounts in the world can be driven or determined by events in the world.
 On one side is the empiricist tradition, arguing that the descriptions of the world are "data driven", and can be corrected and improved through observation.
 On the other hand, there are numerous researchers throughout the social sciences that if something similar to hold the theoretical structure (or language), no significant observations.
• Indeed, theory determines what counts as data. Putting aside the ends of these positions (eg naive empiricism vs. Linguistic reductionism)
p.2
• There is only one agreement: all it takes to understand the world does not require or required any particular form of representation (eg, statements, dials, movements, signs or graphics).
Ex. There are many ways to describe the world.
• Saussure (1916) points to the culturally situated character of relations between signifier and signified.
• Quineau (1981), states that one can recognize the various ways to describe what might otherwise call "the same situation."
• Kant proposed that not only is the space and time that can not be derived from experience, but actually the experience itself may not require such common words like "table" and "chair". A second assumption disarming follows the first.
• In this regard, what stands out as objective truth can be established within a research tradition.
• A significant tension between traditionalists and critics concerns the assumption that the scientific research allows us to move towards an objective truth.
• Traditionalists believe in the advancement of the natural sciences, but critics believe that the social sciences are broader in its dimensions.
• The understanding that the relationship between the world and word is negotiable, there is broad agreement that the useful agreements can be reached on the nature of what exists.
• With (Bourdieu, 1977) concept of habitus, it is to recognize the common sense structures of everyday life - including concepts, practices and artifacts.
• The appointment of the real can not be justified by reference act is the same sedimentation social understandings that enables communities of science to achieve what we normally see as progress.
• Kuhn (1962), states that since there is a shared paradigm (metaphysical, ontological and practical), science can become productive.
• With a broad agreement of these two assumptions, the contentious atmosphere in decades began to decline. As puts Wertz (2011), there is an emerging fairly robust spirit of pluralism, which has fueled the huge expansion of qualitative research practices.
• The reflection moves from questions of a philosophical basis aimed at social utility. For all research practices can be legitimized on their own terms, the issue then becomes one of its results.
• What research can ultimately contribute to the world more generally? And this question is accompanied by a critical concern with politics and ideology. There have other questions: - Who are the intended useful results, and how; who benefits, who might be harmed; and who is absent from the discussion? We then pragmatism with a social conscience.
p.3
• There is much to be considered in favor of this condition on "agreements". However, there is a feeling of dullness of the eternal return "the same".
• Speech big fight between the traditional scientists and social scientists.
• I am not proposing that there is a wide acceptance of his own metaphor; in fact, it has been the subject of significant criticism.
• However, as discussions about investigative reasons are abandoned in favor of a pluralistic pragmatic, traditional form of research remains largely unchallenged.
• Thus, much of the research today remain dedicated to "reveal", "lighting", "understanding" or "reflecting" a certain state of affairs.
• In my opinion, this central vision tradition severely restricts the capabilities of the social sciences.
• If we extend the implications of the assumptions described above, we find a radically new vision research and its potential.
Findings, performative and Consequences
• In their seminal work, "How to do things with words", JL Austin (1962) classified the famous distinction between constative and performative utterances.
• "the act of appointment has consequences for subsequent actions. Similarly, as social scientists go about describing the nature of the" aggression "," mental illness "," suicide ", and so on, they are" naming " or "dubbing" those under study in ways that invite our actions toward them. - curtailing their aggression, treatment of mental illness, suicide prevention, and so on These consequences were in fact the focus of initial studies "labeling" social deviation (see, e.g., Gove 1975)
• And that's not consequential character of social science description, limited to the saturated value language as the previous one.
• As Peter Winch (1958) once wrote: "Since understanding something involves understanding its contradiction, someone who, with understanding, performs X must be able to envision the possibility of doing X" (p 89.).
o By implication, this is to say that any research that aims to describe human behavior, also lays the foundation for a possible action (or resistance).
4
• From the perspective of reflective pragmatism, the constative statements are essential in any scientific community to conduct its activities.
• In this sense, they have important pragmatic value while maintaining the common community values.
• What is added here is the way in which these "realities-postulated" and the values ​​that are external to them are shared with the culture more broadly.
• Indeed, in their descriptions of human activity, communities of social sciences have the ability to transform society in general.
• (Gergen, 1973) calls "the purpose of clarification" to explain the way in which the exposure of social behavior of scientists could alter behavior patterns in society.
• Because the conduct of science can transform your object - the result was to place social science knowledge in the historical context, but he failed to exploit the productive possibilities.
• You need to develop a more proactive view of the potential for social science research. Instead of recognizing this purpose, the service of a more reflective view of science, a case will be made for future research as a practical training - a practice in which social change is in fact the main objective. Before exploring the potential of this point of view, it is important to point out the limits and dangers of search as a mirror.
The Captivating Gaze
• When there is a local agreement among researchers on descriptive or interpretive language, along with references and methodological procedures practices, researchers can actually contribute to the community to which they belong.
Example: In the agreement conditions, the narrative research can illuminate the suffering of the oppressed, phenomenology can give us an insight into the experience of loneliness, and conversation analysis can give us insight into the structure of the conversation.
• In practical terms, we must not dispense with tradition.
• At the same time, there are harsh consequences for both the humanities and the societies in which they operate.
• Shared agreements are essentially engaging. And, to a significant degree, the captivating look simultaneously constrains the imagination and numbs the sensitivity to the consequences.
• At first, the agreements themselves were essential to move forward with a process of investigation, in effect, ontologically and culturally preserved.
p.5
• To light, reflect, or understand a certain state of affairs, maintains a tradition in this "state of affairs" acquired ontological status.
the conducting research on what exists, we borrowed inertia to conventional forms of life.
• Indeed, the survey mirroring tradition favors the status quo.
• Ex: research and treatments on mental health
The mirroring for doing (most important part)
• In view of the limits of metaphor mirroring research, the author proposes return to the question of the consequences
• As already proposed when the search begins with a "subject matter", the result is an extension of the existing traditions, and suppression of alternate realities.
• The social imagination is limited.
• But, we ask, which suspended the mirror metaphor, and its invitation to study what captivates the look?
• Given a prized view of the possible, the challenge for research would be to explore such a possibility could be held. The aim of the investigation would not be the highlight "what is", but to create "what is to become." Herein lies the essence of a future training guidance for research.
• This is to extend the Aristotelian concept of knowledge through praxis.
• When the pursuit of knowledge through theoria is to establish an articulated truth, seek knowledge through praxis is achieved through representations within an action in progress.
• In contemporary educational circles, the distinction is in the representation and the contrast between the propositional and procedural knowledge, as the latter is implied, not formalized, and carried through to completion.
• Also relevant is the Socratic concept of episteme, or the knowledge embodied in the active realization of a goal with a téchne representing the craft or ability to perform.
p.6
• As the investigation should be made in this direction forming future? as a preparatory stimulus, quotes Harry Harlow, on monkeys in groups and isolated.
• Cita Kahneman, Slovic and Twersky, (1982) on cognitive processing, immigrants from depression situation.
• cites two previous questions:
The first concerns the metaphysical assumptions
The second concerns the conditions of the contemporary world, both of which add substantial weight to this proposal.
Social research in metaphysical context
• All research is informed directly or indirectly by certain assumptions or agreements that allow, either in the form of a metaphysical or ontological background fully articulated.
• In surveys of metaphysical bases, such as changing mirroring evidence which could be understood as a profound change in the conception of knowledge.
• When fully expanded, this change also bring along important implications for social science research. As we have come to understand scientific knowledge, your goal is to light up a subject such that its results will benefit future action.
• Traditionally, this benefit is drawn up in the forecast and control language, but in a less pronounced way can be found in all mirroring research.
• But what should be assumed about the nature of this subject to make this plausible goal? At least one feature seems to be the resistance character.
• That is, the object must be sufficiently durable (repetitive or replicable) that useful knowledge can be established. When we assume the continued existence of a subject matter, we can begin to measure correctly, generalize and predict. The very concept of research affirms the assumption, suggesting that the object of our gaze is stable, so that we can return to "search" again.
• At the same time, what are the potential consequences of a metaphysics of change?
• The author proposes that the limitations in traditional orientation are substantial; the potential of a metaphysical process-oriented are rich and largely unexplored. In this light, it is useful to consider that our world conditions appear to be contemporary.
Search in a World Flows
• As you can tell, the "objects of study" traditional are slowly dissolving.
• This condition is coming to all the social sciences? In light of the impact of communication technologies on cultural life, such a conclusion seems eminently plausible.
• For nearly a century, we saw the flourishing of technologies that intensify, complexities, and speed up communication processes. Starting with the radio, the automobile, mass transit systems, and mass publication in the early twentieth century, and subsequently adding jet transportation, television, the internet and the mobile phone, the human exchange landscape is radically changed.
• All these technologies work to create, maintain, or subvert the ways of understanding or belief, with the result that the meaning of worlds are in continuous motion - with modifications, absorptions, confrontations and creations that occur constantly and instantly around the globe.
• If human action is significantly dependent on negotiated agreements between people, as suggested above, then the stable traditions are everywhere under siege.
• Such changes in conditions of the world have been the subject of a wide academic concern. Berman (1983), All that is solid melts into air: The experience of modernity, and Hardison (1990) Disappearing through the skylight: culture and technology in the twentieth century, and went in the time.
• My own work, The saturated self: Dilemmas of identity in everyday life, then focused on the impact of technology on self concepts. And in more recent times, there is, for example, the works
p.8
• of Eitzen and Zinn (2011), about the changes on society of massive globalization; Rogers (2011) on the "old fracture"; Bauman (2011) on the "liquidity" emerging human relations, and Giddens (2000), on how globalization is reshaping our lives.
• These are, of course, the proposals of work, but they pose a formidable question.
• If we find ourselves in a world where increasingly unpredictable fluctuation mark all facets of life - self-conception, the life of the family and community, the global power settings, economics, and disease -
• What is the place of a research tradition that tries to mirror a stable state of affairs? In what sense can we sustain a hypothesis progress in knowledge?
• The author proposes that the most promising way is a science that engages in the very conformation of change direction.
Toward Future Research Forming

• This is not boarding a disjunctive imaginary world of a research world beyond the reach of contemporary researchers.
• According to the author seems more promising to examine current and emerging practices with potential for forming future.
• If such practices can be addressed in terms of this potential, a new awareness can be germinated.
• New, more powerful practices can be stimulated.
• In some ways, then, this offer can serve as a mid-wife at a moving forming.
• The voice can be given the sensitivity of other disjointed manner, thus giving form and function to future endeavors.
• In this light, the author consider three ways to search with prescient potential.
Inquiry as incitement
• The attempt is to draw critical attention to the ways of situations, and to engender a critical awareness that social change can jump.
• The hope is that "seeing with new eyes" could incite resistance to the status quo.
• While most of the critical work today is arguably theoretical, there is a large amount of research that are dedicated to liberating purposes.
• The methodological options for doing this kind of work is unlimited.
• Here, the intention is to illuminate the ways of use of language that variously serve to oppress, discriminate, dominate, or because of other socially corrosive forms.
• Inspired especially by libertarian ideas, the goal of this research is to free the reader from traditional forms or common sense formation of the world.
• However, there are also substantial restrictions on critical research in their future potential form.
9

• Points criticism of open questions regarding the need to use traditional genres of scientific writing.
• Writing is elitist, and serves only to increase the power of those who are privileged by virtue of education and class.
• The performative approach paves the way to explore various forms of writing, including for example the use of short stories, poetry, autobiography, collaborative writing and more.
• Other researchers explore the representation of potential beyond the writing.
• Researchers in critical performative field are thus favored by a powerful array of rhetorical means by which they can reach a larger audience with more impact.
Research as Creative Construction
• It is represented by a range of researchers trying to build or create new "forms of life."
• More fully connected the view of knowledge through practice, which aims to create replicable practices that achieve meta-invested.
• The goal is not to illuminate the problems in society, but to design practices that can achieve better or more viable results.
• Such guidance was especially attractive in fields specifically confronted with practical challenges (eg, education, organizational development, health care, mental health, reduced conflict).
• In many of these areas the traditional attempt to solve problems through scientific research has been frustrating and ineffective.
• Traditional research is often dedicated to support theoretical propositions; however, there is no obvious means arising from abstract propositions or actions relevant to specific circumstances. Even when the survey was designed to solve a particular problem, he is concerned about the narrow band of selected variables, ambiguity in the measurement, conflicts between statistical models and multiple interpretations of the results, all in a context of fluctuating conditions continuously.
• Traditional research does not produce any reliable or authoritative way forward.
• The result among professionals is a growing sense that "The best way to predict the future is to create it."
the examples: Wertern Reserve, drawing constructivist narrative ideas, or psychiatric patients and pharmaceutical industries
p.10
• In all these examples, we have a form of research in which knowledge is acquired through the complex and creative process of building a successful practice (see also Hassan, 2014; and Kahane 2012).
• When this knowledge is shared, it becomes a resource for others.
• There is also a mode where such research is cumulative.
• How many practices are generated, they provide alternatives from which you can select the one that best fits local needs (see, for example, Bojer, Roehl, & Knuth, 2008), or from which new hybrids can be formed. U
• m grouping of peacebuilding practices, for example, provides what amounts to a "vocabulary" from which new practices can emerge.
p.11
Research as a collaborative action
• Potential for Research on future building practices are huge.
• Capacity building remains largely in the hands of the research community.
• With constant repetition, the meaning of dialogue can change; conversations, since they absorb in their spontaneity now become subject to programmatic and policy development.
• Knowledge of a dialogic practice becomes subject to manipulation.
• A highly promising alternative to the practice of construction represented in trying a growing number of researchers to work in collaboration with those outside the academy to achieve social change.
• More formally, these efforts are called action research.
• Many organizational scholars share an interest in communities of practice action research, and especially relevant to this offer, learning communities.
• Examples of researchers on women's rights, or in education, or or in the field of management.
• These examples culminate in an instruction - liberating, producing practical and focused action - illustrating the substantial potential inherent in a future orientation doing research.
• According to the author, carry with them the first winds of change, heralds a significant change in the conception of knowledge and practice of social research.
p.12
• With education in the science of world-making, and the broad dissemination of successful innovations, maybe we could escape the logic of determinism and begin to realize the potential for collaboration shaping the future.
• There are also important social and political implications of this shift toward the question as taking future.
• One of the major problems with mirroring tradition is that the conclusions on the conditions have little impact on the welfare of society.
• This is not only because the forms of shared discourse within the professions are largely unavailable or inaccessible to those outside, but the truth postulates of the profession are highly vulnerable to criticism on methodological grounds.
• The laboratory situations designed to "test" general hypotheses are typically far from everyday life.
• The samples used in Western social science are often criticized as WEIRD (trend in, educated, industrialized, rich and democratic Western samples).
• Find traditional research results insensitive to the currents of social change; as it is said, the social science research is "journalism in slow motion."
• In contrast, the meaning of forming a future with research orientation does not rest on the general truth also postulates active achievements.
Example, research in a hospital.
Theory in a changing world
• This offer has focused almost exclusively on research practices as opposed to theoretical work in the social sciences.
• It can be argued that the theoretical work is itself a form of research, but for the present is useful to honor the distinction theory / traditional research.
• In the same way, all the research brings premises or premises which can be seen as the theoretical.
• The author distinguishes the function of the theory within the traditional view of a science mirroring and its potential in the future of record making.
• The main functions of the traditional social science theory are:
to integrate and synthesize the results, observations and interpretations of the broad field of research;
to provide a framework from which to assemble a new search (with viability or on the final truth value of theory); and
to offer the society a world which has useful applications can be derived.
• The most important here, however, is the question of how this approach to function theory in terms of its potential future are prepared.
• Within the social sciences, traditional surveys do not provide a simple answer
the presence of research results has rarely served as a major boost to the theoretical conjecture.
the there is little confidence in systematic research.
• In fact, most such theories serve as fundamental statements about the nature of human action.
• For the author, to the extent that the intelligibilities traditional theories are inspired by the research of social sciences, the result for society has been modest.
• This is largely due to the separation between the research community and society in general.
• In another sense, there are theoretical trying to replace the traditional understanding of society as comprising individual units or persons provided with a relational process view from which the very idea of ​​individuals may (or may not) emerge.
• The relational theory moves now slowly rearing practices, therapy and organizational development.
• In short, in future deliberations on the possibility of a future decision science, social theorists should be giving a significant place in the scientific field.
Final Challenges
• This proposal researcher vision as an active agent training for the future raises many questions, both theoretical and practical.
• In the conceptual side, the challenge is to more fully enhance the design knowledge from a viewpoint of process. "Knowing what" can be seen as a specialized form of "knowing" with claims to unmask its dependence on the disjointed process from which they derive.
• In a world of rapid and unpredictable flow, focus on "what is the case" has limited potential. The challenge is that of rapidly synthesizing multiple sources of information, and moving improvisavelmente an ambiguous context.
p.14
• At the same time, the author is seen within a training framework for the future, a renewal and re / viewing of the moral dimension of research.
• Most traditional researchers perceive in the mirror as an escape from significant resolution of such issues, with the claim that strict lighting than is the case in any way benefit the world.
• The critical theorists have provided full illustrations of the ideological saturation of social research, and others have continued to enrich our understanding of the moral dimensions of social research (eg, Richardson, Fowers and Guignon, 1999; Brinkmann, 2011), communities relevant research seem unchanged.
• Most research traditions continue with little thought of their ideological or moral implications.
• However, if the search view as a future form is a more fully realized enterprise, there is little escaping deliberation on such issues.
• This is because specifying these future conditions for some researchers to develop corresponds most dedicated efforts.
o To address the issue in a responsible way "to what kind of future that I can contribute," is facing complex issues of good. "Who would be valuable such an achievement, for those who would be oppressive; what we are doing with this diversity of traditions of good?"
The claim that the traditional science is concerned with what is, rather than what should be, is now reversed.
• The logic developed in the text also offers a significant dimension to these deliberations.
• moral choice issues are traditionally linked to the individual actor.
It is the individual who acquires moral value because of his / her choices.
• There are close associations between this vision and eye tradition in science.
The metaphor of the solitary figure of Galileo heroically confronting the church, lends tacit support to an individualistic view of moral decision-making.
The issue of the "duty" is therefore a personal matter, "the future that I value?"
the The key is embedded in the proposition previously to know about a particular form of behavior makes it possible to be done (or not).
In general, we act on our lives in ways we seek what "makes sense" within relationships in which we participate - reflecting simultaneously and potentially transformative tradition.
• From this point of view, the activities become valuable, worthwhile, or morale within relational activity.
• What moral trends are rooted in social traditions is hardly a new idea (MacIntyre, 1981; Alexander, 2002).
• We live in a world of competing and conflicting moral traditions.
• The values ​​represented in any research effort are inherently vulnerable.
• The choices of future results in research training should not then be a matter of personal integrity, but of relational responsibility - the responsibility for the social process from which morality emerges.
• For Gergen, (2009) made the multiple traditions of good, moral decision-making can ideally rest on dialogical process - deliberation among stakeholders. We approach a social pragmatic morality.
• In conclusion,
• The importance of the natural sciences in society was not derived from their superiority claims on truth, but on their contribution to the affairs of everyday life.
• The dramatic investments in science that marked the twentieth century were largely due to the results of this research for the cure of diseases, energy use, making more effective weapons, creating better building materials, and so on.
p.15
• There was appreciation of the scientific knowledge derived not from their propositions but from their social outcomes.
• The social sciences have been very involved with the role of truth-making, thus pushing the concern with cultural contribution to a secondary position. (Opinion of the author)
• Example: when we write for magazines and books, we believe that these applications will be held in the minds and hearts of the population. It is the thrust of this proposal to reverse the investment - to undertake research as a form of social action.
• We live in a world where religious and political conflict threaten the world, governments are dysfunctional, communities are running out, the long-standing cultural traditions are evaporating, we struggle with our relationships and our habitat - both natural and technological .

• It is time for the social sciences channel their substantial resources of intelligence and ingenuity and create more flourishing forms of coexistence.

confliting discourse in qualitative research: The search for divergente data within cases




Tamar M.J.Antin; Norman A. Constantine, Geoffrey Hunt
Student: Kátia Rosa Azevedo
Teacher: Silviane Barbato
Conflicting Discourses in Qualitative Research: the serch for divergente data within cases
Disconfirming evidence/negative cases
Disconfirming evidence/negative cases
FROM DISCONFIRMING EVIDENCE TO CONFIRMING AMBIVALENCE
DESCRIPTION OF STUDY
DESCRIPTION OF STUDY
MÉTODO 1: OPEN-ENDED QUESTION
MÉTODO 2: COGNITIVE DOMAIN ACTIVITIES
MÉTODO 3: PHOTO-ELICITATION INTERVIEW (PEI)
Análises
SEARCH FOR DIVERGENT DATA WITHIN CASES: Using Field Notes
RESEARCH MEMOS
DISCUSSION
Geralmente a busca por desconfirmar uma evidência é conduzida no final da análise e associada com outros processos sistemáticos que foram desenhados para reduzir  os riscos para validade
Esse processo vem recebendo pouca atenção
Os autores constatam/ argumentam que  a busca pela desconfirmação de evidência revelou muito mais que  a validade dos achados
Ele revelou inconsistências nas narrativas dos respondentes, transformando tensão em significado
Isso sugere que os respondentes podem falar do mesmo tema de forma diferente por que a  mudança no contexto da entrevista leva as pessoas a depender de diferentes armazenamentos de conhecimento.
Contribuiu mais para análise dos dados que para invalidação dos mesmos
Contradição não é um sinal de falsidade, nem a falta de contradição um sinal de verdade
REFLEXÕES SOBRE O TEXTO
 Os resultados do estudo apresentado nos slides anteriores apontaram alguns equívocos na condução do  método. Dentre os quais, podemos salientar:
o uso de fotos previamente escolhidas revelam intenções prévias por parte do pesquisador e apontam para o risco dos efeitos de sugestionamento e,  por conseguinte, invalidação dos dados.
O uso de relatos das observações dos pesquisadores como dado mais relevante que a própria fala dos participantes acaba por inviezar o caminho metodológico e retirar a voz dos  sujeitos e o lugar de protagonistas que lhes deveria ser conferido.
Entendemos que o uso da fotografia, quando bem encaminhada pode:
Registrar detalhes do real e ser um rico instrumento para obtenção de dados
Dar voz a grupos e sujeitos vulneráveis, conferindo-lhes protagonismo
Ser legítima para compreensão de diferentes situações da vida real
Permitir aos sujeitos rever suas experiências de vida, portanto, pode ter efeito terapêutico para os sujeitos

Multiple methods in qualitative research with children: more insight or just more?
PHILIP DARBYSHIRE  - University of  South Australia, & Flinders University
COLIN  MACDOUGALL  - Flinders University
WENDY  SCHILLER  - University of  South Australia

Background to the study
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY, OBESITY AND CHILDREN
This part reports about the problems caused by obesity.
Obesity is a risk factor for all morbidity and mortality (Sallis et al., 1997; Sallis
and Owen, 1999).
Being Physically   active   is   important   for   children’s   overall   physical emotional and social health, and wellbeing – a positive benefit that extends into   adult   life  (Saakslahti    et  al.,  2004; Suadicani     and    Gyntelberg,     2004; Wedderkopp et al., 2004).
In   addition   to   biomedical   and   epidemiological data,   recent   studies   from children’s social and cultural geography reveal the wide spread and complex ways   that   children’s   worlds   of   play   and physical   activity   and   their   use   of public    spaces    have   been    constricted    an d   controlled     (Blades    et  al.,  1998; Furedi,   2002;   Matthews   et   al.,   1999).
While the importance of  physical activity for children is widely recognized,      research   literature   on   childhood   obesity   and   physical   activity   reveals   a dearth of    research where children themselves have been asked to give their perspectives   and   understandings   of       physical   activity.   There   are   few   studies where children have expressed the meanings that physical activity holds for them,   or   where   they   have   been   able   to   contextualize   such   understandings within   their   everyday   physical   and   social   worlds.   The   study   attempted   to            redress this gap in research understanding.
“The missing child
The   predominant        approach      to  researching       children’s experiences      is  grounded     in  ‘research    on’   rather   than    ‘research    with’   or research for’ children (Darbyshire, 2000; Oakley, 1994), ignoring the views of children as active agents and ‘key informants’ in matters pertaining to their health and wellbeing.
Plan of the article

 This article presents a discussion of  the methodological approach taken in a            recent    qualitative     study    with    multiple    aims    and    funding     sources    that investigated   children’s   experiences   and   perceptions   of       physical   activity   and       places and spaces in their lives in relation to the broader topic of  obesity childhood.
Qualitative approaches to understanding children’s world
Children’s Rights agenda has shaped child research by fostering a realization that children and young people have a right to be consulted, heard and to appropriately influence the services and facilities that    are   provided     for  them   (Lansdown,        1994;    Woodhouse,        2004).    
The ‘participation   and   involvement’   agenda   challenges searchers   to   consider  ways   of   actively   and   meaningfully   involving   children   in   all   aspects   of      the research process (Barter and Renold, 2000; Curtis et al., 2004; Devine, 2002; Lightfoot and Sloper, 2002; Mulvihill et al., 2000; Shemmings, 2000; Sloper and    Lightfoot,    2003).
Eliciting children’s understanding and experiences of place, space and physical activity
The   aim   of  the   current   study   was   to   encourage   and   enable   children   aged            between 4 and 12 years to articulate their perspectives on physical activity, its related barriers and enablers, and the places and spaces in their environment that were important in their everyday activities. Specifically we sought to:
  determine       words     and    images     that   children     associate    with    physical  activity, exercise, sport, fitness and play;
 understand children’s choices about physical activity and play;
identify children’s activity preferences and choice-making processes; and
consider      whether     children    are   able  to  be   as  active   as  they   wish    and identify any barriers and enablers that may exist for them.
Using multiple methods
FOCUS GROUP INTERVIEWS WITH CHILDREN
 MAPPING
PHOTOVOICE
Discussion
The value of using multi-methods
The     study’s    consultative     and    participatory     approach      gleaned     valuable           information from children. Our use of  multiple methods increased children’s         opportunity       to  choose     and    have   at   least  partial    control    about    how    to            contribute      and   what    to  say,  and    helped    engage    and   interest    them    while            demonstrating   that   we   recognized   them   as   active   agents   in   the   creation   of           their worlds.
 It is unlikely that a single method would have revealed some of            the most important study findings such as the stark differences between their            conceptions of  play and sport, their understandings of  the place of  television in   their   lives   and   their  enthusiastic   desire   for   involvement   in   decisions   that affect their lives here and now (MacDougall et al., 2004).
Pitfalls and lessons learned
Research with children demands flexibility and creativity on the part of  both the researchers and their ‘data collection’ approaches.
Such flexibility is not methodologically sloppy, but an important element of  a research relationship with children. We had to modify and adapt elements of  the study          as   it  progressed      in  the   light   of  the   children’s     responses.     This    required            experienced       researchers      who    understood       research,    schools     and   children. Such   a   fieldwork  involvement   with   participant   children   should   be   the   clear responsibility of  an experienced chief  investigator(s) and is not an element of a study that can be delegated to a relatively inexperienced research assistant with only ‘hands off ’ supervision.
Pitfalls and lessons learned
they did find that the focus groups were more interactive and productive when  held   in   less   formal   school   spaces.   It   was   also   beneficial,   as   Morgan   et   al (2002)   found,   to   have   both   a   moderator/facilitator   and   a   non-participant note-taker/recorder   present   as   taping   these   groups   for   transcription   would have   proved   impossible. These   notes   and   observations   of  the   dynamics   and interactions   within   the   group   were   important   contributions   to   subsequent         data analysis.
During data analysis and interpretation we also found that a particularly useful   strategy   was   to   have   one   of   the   chief  investigators   take   the   role   of devil’s advocate and qualitative-research skeptic who would openly challenge emerging lines of  thought and potential findings with tough questions such as: ‘So what?’, ‘Where’s the evidence for that?’, ‘What do you mean by ‘interesting?’, ‘What else could this mean?’ and ‘How exactly do these ideas relate?’. We  found   this   to   be   a   valuable   guard   against   any   interpretive   ‘premature closure’ (Beck, 2003).
Several    lessons    were   learned    from    this  study   that   would   influence our methodological decisions in future studies.
Conclusion
As    researchers. only glossing    over   the  challenges   involved   in   moving   from   the   ‘adultist’   orientation   that   produces research   ‘on’   children,   to   a   more   participatory   and   child-sensitive   research with’ children would be a disservice.
Nor is it helpful to report a sanitized account of  research that comprises       only   successful     stages    on   the   open    highway      from    question     to recommendations.
 Such    a   conceptual       and    methodological         shift  is  not achieved   simply   by   adopting   or   adapting   a   particular   methodology   or   data collection      technique       to  ‘fit’  children     but   by   critically    questioning       and reflecting     on   all  aspects    of  the    research     process    from    the   generation      of            questions   to   the   dissemination   of      findings   and   by   trying   to   learn   as   much           from     our   shortcomings        as   from    our   successes.   
 As   Hendrick      (2000:     55)            argues,   ‘Only   when   the   mentality   of      adultism   has   been   overcome   will   it   be,  possible to hear a more authentic and, probably, unsettling set of  voices’.
 Conclusion
  They  have shared their experiences of using variety of qualitative  approaches in order to explore children’s perceptions of  physical activity, play and their related social and physical environments. We contend that using a variety of  research strategies to interest and engage children in the study was both philosophically appropriate and pragmatically valuable.
 These strategies respected   children’s   agency   as   social   actors   and   active   participants in the creation   of   their   own   worlds   of    meaning. The   various   approaches complemented rather than duplicated and enabled the expression of  different aspects of  the children’s experiences. The multiple approaches were also successful in depicting the children’s worlds in ways that influential adults also found to be credible and valuable.
In the end…
The   best   way   to  defend   the development of children’s studies   for  children   is  to  enroll  them   fully  in  the research process. (Oakley, 1994: 26)


THANKS...