Doctoral Seminar 2
This quote summarizes the Doctoral Seminar 2 (DS2) summer course on quantitative research at Brock University in St. Catherine's, which focused on the research process, educational issues, and an introduction to quantitative methodology. While the topic of statistics struck fear in my psyche, getting access to the syllabus well in advance of the course allowed me to structure a progressive reading schedule that eased my concerns. Hoy and Adams (2016) primed me for qualitative research. Creswell & Guetterman (2019) became a well tagged guide. Caldwell (2013) and Nardi (2018) were at my side providing tips and strategies. But it was Kransler (2018) who became my primary navigator through the course. As I read through the course readings I applied the four sentence summary that was introduced in DS1, but also used a template from Hoy and Adams (2016) to analyze and synthesize the readings for this course (DeWaard, 2019b)But whether you learn to enjoy it or not, whether you go on to more advanced work or just sty with what you now know, whether you actively use your statistics or simply become an informed consumer - whatever you do with it - nobody can change or take away the fact that you did learn it and that you did survive. And it wasn't as bad as you thought it would be - truly now, was it? (Kranzler, 2018, p. 184)
The course presented extensive opportunities to critically examine, analyze, synthesize, and evaluate research from published papers. This included deconstructing the research question, determining the purpose for the research, examining items included or excluded from the literature review, analyzing the descriptions of methodology and methods used, interpreting the discussion of results with a critical lens on the statistical analysis, and appraising the stated research implications. This practice was then applied to the construction of our own research proposal using a qualitative or mixed method approach.
While qualitative or mixed method research remains on my horizon as a result of this course, there would be much to learn beyond the statistical introduction provided in DS2. I have become a critical reader and consumer, acquiring the skills and fluencies necessary to design, create, plan, carry out, and report on quantitative or mixed method research yet would require additional learning opportunities, with practice in action.
It was during DS2 that I took steps toward practicing data analysis. In particular I became interested in how to use software to support research efforts. I downloaded and introduced myself to SPSS, but have not yet resolved technical issues that impact my use of this digital resource. I purchased NVivo software and began exploring this digital tool as a way to analyze research information in meaningful ways. This was only the beginning of my active use of NVivo, which you will see in the reflections from the Research Colloquium course.
DS2 prompted some deeper analysis of the foundations of literature reviews. Before the course started, I reflected on my own literature reviews from a critical stance (DeWaard, 2019a) with these observations:
- look for tighter themes in the literature and comprehensively integrate ideas rather than listing articles in random order with threads of ideas tying pieces together
- refine and rewrite since there are too many quotations in the body of my writing. I need to reveal my own voice and only quote those ‘diamond gems’ of pithy wisdom that can’t be restated without losing their lustre.
- scope wide AND deep to find interlinking articles and fields of thought; then knit and fuse them together (cnyttan) (This notion was shared at Domains 19 on Virtually Connecting by Lora Taub.)
- analysis is important, it’s part of that knitting that needs to be done. I could go deeper into themes by using coding and concept mapping tools (Combs et al., 2010; Chen et al., 2016). Since I have not done any systematic coding or coding analysis, it’s time to learn how to work with software options (Randolph, 2009) such as NVivo.
During the course, a round of 'lightning talks', where we were asked to share and query each other's research questions as part of an in class task, honed and shaped my question and resulting research design (DeWaard, 2019c). These conversations reinforced the key elements that need to be in the research question. As discussed in class: variables need to be clearly defined and operationalized, the context of the research needs to be explained, the characteristics of participants and their selection should be stated, and the hypothesized directions for the research need to be established.
While my research plan for my dissertation inquiry may not include quantitative research methods or methodologies, this course helped me see how each piece of the research puzzle relies on other pieces to ensure they fit into the whole research picture. This becomes even more evident in the learning that occurs in the Research Colloquium course. The paradigmatic framework I apply to research originates from my ontological, axiological, epistemological, and ethical foundations (Guba & Lincoln, 2005). It is in this reflexive comprehensive portfolio that as my steps bring me closer to the center of this Joint PhD labyrinth, they also bring me closer to myself as researcher, "the human as instrument" (Guba & Lincoln, 2005, p. 210). This process of knowing myself will continue into my research as a "conscious experiencing of the self as both inquirer and respondent, teacher and learner, as the one coming to know the self within the processes of research itself" (Guba & Lincoln, 2005, p. 210).