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Methodology of a Qualitative Study of Film
Reflections on an Alternative Representation
Jason D. DeHart
The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Spring 2018
Pilot study context
Data were compiled for a pilot study focused on how teachers use film with adolescents.
Participants included a middle grades science teacher, a middle grades history teacher, and a high school history teacher who was serving as an administrator.
I conducted one 45-60 minute interview with each participant.
Arts based research is…
“engaged in for a purpose often associated with artistic activity: arts-based research is meant to enhance perspectives pertaining to certain human activities”
“defined by the presence of certain aesthetic qualities or design elements that infuse the inquiry project”
(Barone & Eisner, 1997, p. 95)
Research as Art?
Collins (1992), writing from the perspective of a researcher and musician, noted that qualitative research in itself might be considered an art form.
Given the question of whether or not to use poetry as a means of analysis, Cahnmann (2013) responded, “why not?” (p. 35), and suggested that analysis is not a closed concept.
A sort of bricolage (Kincheloe, 2001)?
A “Process” Statement:Problematizing the Problem Statement
Research has suggested that qualitative analysis can be done in a variety of creative ways (Bogumil, Capous Desyllas, Lara, & Reshetnikov, 2015; Cahnmann, 2013; Lahman et al., 2010).
Examples from professional literature have considered a multiplicity of methods, as I will illustrate throughout the description of my own processes.
Poetry in Research
McCullis (2013) suggested that the nature of poetry aligns well with qualitative research, either as products created by participants or as beginning points to spark responses to elicit and gather data.
Hopper and Sanford (2008) noted that poetry produced from a three-year project captured complexities of experience, and suggested that poetry can accomplish this representation uniquely.
Cahnmann (2003) suggested that researchers can gain a “heightened form of language” from poetic analysis, including use of metaphor and rhythm (p. 31).
Representation Beyond Poetry
• Photography in tourism research
(Rydzik, Pritchard, Morgan, & Sedgley, 2012)
• Music and other literary genres
(Carson, 2017; Gunaratnam, 2007)
• Film, charts, and diagrams
(Eisner, 1997)
• LEGO blocks and illustrations
(Pressner, 2013)
• Comic strips, documentary films, and blogs
(Bogumil et al., 2013; Sousanis, 2015)
• Interactive larger installations
(Lapum, Ruttonsha, Church, Yau, & David, 2011)
Choosing Colors
Carroggio De Molina (2014) discussed the way stains and colors can form a representation of what the artist wishes to convey.
Rose/warm light red – caring
Green – earth/world
Yellow – illumination/learning
Coding after Data Collection
Storying Filtering
Band of Brothers personal I wouldn’t have shown
Greatest portrayals of human life Finding a good movie
Story elements They don’t miss the message
You know the story I want it to stand out for them
Part of the American story Even if it’s a struggle
Story elements Mindful of which class
I wanted structure
Poetic Representations for Three Participants
The Seer Poetic Representation
A three-year vision,
swirling with dreams,
now compounded in a
sigh,
building rapport,
finding that voice
through elements of story,
being careful not to
miss the message,
I know I’m not alone.
Other participants
included “The Organizer”
and “The Traveler.”
The Final ProductThemes
Care and Connection
Invitation to Sight
Invitation to Story
Living in a Digital World
Intentional Planning/Integration
Closing Questions
How might an artistic representation open up opportunities to see data in new ways?
What is the process statement that undergirds the problem statements our research addresses?
Does the process statement always look the same, or does it depend on the context of our work?
ReferencesBarone, T., & Eisner, E. (1997). Arts-based educational research. Complementary
methods for research in education, 2, 75-116.
Bogumil, E., Capous Desyllas, M., Lara, P., & Reshetnikov, A. (2015). Art as mode and
medium: A pedagogical approach to teaching and learning about self-reflexivity
and artistic expression in qualitative research. International Journal of Research
& Method in Education, 1-19. doi: 10.1080/1743727X.2015.1114602.
Cahnmann, M. (2003, April). The craft, practice, and possibility of poetry in
educational research. Educational Researcher, 32(3), 29-36.
Carroggio De Molina, A. (2014). Color sensation in figurative painting. Sport and Art,
2(1), 1-4.
Carson, A.D. (2017). Owning my masters. Retrieved from http://phd.aydeethegreat.com.
Collins, E.C. (1992, Spring). Qualitative research as art: Toward a holistic process.
Theory into Practice, 31(2), 181-186.
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of data representation. Educational Researcher, 26(6), 4-10.
Gunaratnam, Y. (2007, November). Where is the love? Art, aesthetics, and research. Journal of
Social Work Practice, 21(3), 271–287.
Hopper, T., & Sanford, K. (2008, May). Using poetic representation to support the development of
teachers’ knowledge. Studying Teacher Education, 4(1), 29-45.
Kincheloe, J.L. (2001). Describing the bricolage: Conceptualizing a new rigor in qualitative research.
Qualitative Inquiry, 7(6), 679-692.Lapum, J., Ruttonsha, P., Church, K., Yau, T., & David, A.M. (2011). Employing the arts in research as an
analytical tool and dissemination method: Interpreting experience through the aesthetic.
Qualitative Inquiry, 18(1), 100-115.
McCullis, D. (2013). Poetic inquiry and multidisciplinary qualitative research. Journal of Poetry Therapy,
26(2), 83-114.
Picasso, P. (1937). Weeping woman. Retrieved from flickr.com.
Prosser, J.D. (2013). Visual methodology: Toward a more seeing research. In N.K. Denzin and Y.S. Lincoln
(Eds.), Collecting and interpreting qualitative materials (4th Ed.), (pp. 177-211). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications, Inc.
Rydzik, A., Pritchard, A., Morgan, N., & Sedgley, D. (2013). The potential of arts-based transformative
research. Annals of Tourism Research, 40(1), 283–305.
Sousanis, N. (2015). Unflattening. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
References
Contact InformationJason D. DeHart