Module 3 QRM-1
Module 3 QRM-1
Module 3 QRM-1
● Research Design is a plan for collecting and analyzing evidence that will
make it possible for the investigator to answer whatever questions has posed.
1.Abstract
2.Introduction
3.Method
4.Analysis
5.Reference
6.Appendices
⮚ 1.Abstract:
State the specific audiences who will benefit from the project and why they
will benefit.
⮚ 2.Introduction:
● Research problem
● What effect did this sentence have? Would it entice a reader to read on? Was
● Consider and write about whether there is a single problem involved in the
proposed study or multiple problems that lead to a need for the study.
● Reviewing studies
literature exists to document the research problem. Also, it makes sense that
a topic is being proposed for study precisely because little research has been
conducted on it.
● Deficiencies in past literature may exist because topics not have been
sections of journal articles, and authors can reference these ideas and
provide further justification for their proposed study.
● Proposal writers need to tell how their planned study will remedy or address
these deficiencies.
● Significance of a study
study for select audiences in order to convey the importance of the problem
for different groups that may profit from reading and using the study.
● In designing this section, one might include three or four reasons about how
the study helps improve practice and as to why the study will improve policy
or decision making.
● Purpose statement
phenomenon explored in the study, the participants in the study, and the
research site.
● Focus on a single phenomenon (concept /idea). Narrow the study to one idea
● Use action verbs to convey how learning will take place. Action verbs and
phrases, such as, understand, develop, explore, examine the meaning of, or
discover, keep the inquiry open and convey an emerging design.
analysis, and the process of research, such as whether the study will use an
ethnographic, grounded theory, case study, phenomenological, narrative
approach, or some other strategy.
● Identify the site for the research, such as homes, classrooms, organizations,
programs, or events. Describe this site in enough detail so that the reader
knows exactly where a study will take place.
specific goals for the research) or hypotheses (i.e., predictions that involve
variables and statistical tests). These research questions assume two forms:
(a) a central question and (b) associated subquestions.
● Ask one or two central research questions. The central question is a broad
questions.
● Begin the research questions with the words what or how to convey an open
and emerging design. The word why often implies that the researcher is
trying to explain why something occurs.
⮚ 3.Methods:
● Characteristics of Qualitative research:
● Natural setting
● Participants’ meanings
● Emergent design
● Reflexivity
Step 1. Organize and prepare the data for analysis. This involves transcribing
interviews, optically scanning material, typing up field notes, cataloguing all of the
visual material, and sorting and arranging the data into different types depending
on the sources of information
Step 2.Read or look at all the data. This first step provides a general sense of the
information and an opportunity to reflect on its overall meaning.
Step 3. Start coding all of the data. Coding is the process of organizing the data by
bracketing chunks (or text or image segments) and writing a word representing a
category in the margins
Step 4.Use the coding process to generate a description of the setting or people as
well as categories or themes for analysis. Description involves a detailed rendering
of information about people, places, or events in a setting. Researchers can
generate codes for this description.
Step 5. Advance how the description and themes will be represented in the
qualitative narrative.
Thus, interpretation in qualitative research can take many forms; be adapted for
different types of designs; and be flexible to convey personal, research-based, and
action meanings.
● Verification:
Member checking
Peer examination
⮚ References
⮚ Appendices:
● Survey questionnaire
⮚ Grounded theory
Grounded theory is one of the basic approach and most prominently used
technique in qualitative research. Grounded theory refers to ‘the process generation
of theory which is based on collection of data from multiple sources’. The
approach of grounded theory was developed by Glaser and Strauss in 1960’s. The
grounded theory approach aims to collect data and interpret the data from the
textual base (for example, a collection of field notes or video recordings). After the
process of interpreting, the data base is categorized in to different variables and
then the interrelationship between these variables are analyzed and studied.
⮚ Steps
Memoing
The first objective of the researcher is to collect data in form of memos. Memos
are a form of short notes that the researcher writes and prepares. These memos act
as a source of data which is further put in other processes of analysis and
interpretation. These short notes or memos can be prepared in three ways:
a) Theoretical note
This form of note contains the details regarding how a textual data bas is related to
the existing literature of the concerned study. The note consists of about one to the
existing literature of the concerned study. The note consists of about one to five
pages, Any how, the final theory and report consists of an integration of several
such theoretical notes.
b) Field note
Field note consists of the notes prepared when the researcher actively participates
with the population/ culture or the community under study. It can be the
observations of behaviors, interactions, events or situations that occurs on the spot
and it also contains the causal notes behind such actions.
c) Code notes
The researcher or the ground theorist may also prepare notes by naming, labeling
or categorizing things, properties and events. The code notes are those notes which
discuss the codes of such labeling. These code notes further acts as a source of
formation of final reports. Further, these code notes also acts as a guide to the
ground theorists while analyzing a text or a case.
Ground theorists analyze and categorize events and try to identify the meaning of
the text with the help of the prepared code notes. Preparation of the code can be
done in three ways-
Selective Coding
In this type of coding out of all the available categories, the ground theorist select
one category to be the center or the major one and then tries to relate the other
categories with the selected major category. In this way, the ground theorist tries to
analyze how other categories are affecting the major category or how the major
category is having an effect on the other related categories.
Open Coding
It is the process of identifying, labeling and analyzing the phenomena found in the
text. The ground theorist on the basis of generalization categorizes names, events
or properties in to more general categories or dimensions.
Axial Coding
It is the process of relating the categories or properties (that is the codes) to each
other with the help of deductive and inductive thinking. The ground theorists try to
analyze the causal relations between these variables, that is, which of the code is
the ‘cause’ which has led to the occurrence of other codes- the ‘context’. The
grounded theorist analyses and interprets the ‘cause’ codes and the ‘context’ codes
without showing much interest on the ‘consequences’ of the phenomenon itself.
⮚ NARRATIVE INQUIRY
Narrative research is a strategy of inquiry in which the researcher studies the lives
of individuals and asks one or more individuals to provide stories about their lives.
This information is then often retold or restoried by the researcher into a narrative
chronology. In the end, the narrative combines views from the participant’s life
with those of the researcher’s life in a collaborative narrative. Narrative research
employs restorying the participants’ stories using structural devices, such as plot,
setting, activities, climax, and denouement.
⮚ Defining Features
• Narrative researchers collect stories about individuals’ lived and told experiences.
Thus, there may be a strong collaborative feature of narrative research as the story
emerges through the interaction or dialogue of the researcher and the participant(s).
• Narrative stories tell of individual experiences, and they may shed light on the
identities of individuals and how they see themselves.
• Narrative stories are gathered through many different forms of data, such as
through interviews that may be the primary form of data collection but also
through observations, documents, pictures, and other sources of qualitative data.
• Narrative stories are analyzed using varied strategies. An analysis can be made
about what was said (thematically), the nature of the telling of the story
(structural), who the story directed toward (dialogic/performance), or using visual
analysis of images or interpreting images alongside words. Other options for
analysis involve foci on values, plot, significance, or character mapping and time.
• Narrative stories often are heard and shaped by the researchers into a chronology,
although may not be told that way by the participant(s).
⮚ Types of Narratives
Narrative researchers can select from various types of narratives for guiding the
collection of stories.
• Autoethnography is written and recorded by the individuals who are the subject
of the study. defines Autoethnography as the idea of multiple layers of
consciousness, the vulnerable self, the coherent self, critiquing the self in social
contexts, the subversion of dominant discourses, and the evocative potential. They
contain the Personal story of the author as well as the larger cultural meaning for
the individual’s story.
• A life history portrays an individual’s entire life, while a personal experience
story is a narrative study of an individual’s personal experience found in single or
multiple episodes, private situations, or communal folklore.
• Select one or more individuals who have stories or life experiences to tell, and
spend considerable time with them gathering their stories through multiples types
of information.
• Consider how the collection of the data and their recording can take different
shapes.
• Embed information about the context of these stories into data collection,
analysis, and writing.
• Analyze the participants’ stories using the process of reorganizing the stories into
some general type of framework called restorying.
⮚ Challenges
⮚ DISCURSIVE PSYCHOLOGY
contexts of time and space, take up available discourses and use features of
language (sometimes referred to as linguistic devices, strategies, or
resources) to perform social actions, including how they construct versions
of reality with what possible consequences.
● DA approaches generally orient to language as being performative; that is,
PHENOMENOLOGY
– The term has acquired a broader meaning as phenomenology has been developed
as a human science that is employed in professional disciplines such as education,
health science.
– Phenomenology may explore the unique meanings of any human experience or
phenomenon.
For example, it may study what it is like to have a conversation, how students
experience difficulty in learning something, how pain is experienced in childbirth,
what it is like to experience obsessive compulsions, how young people begin to
experience secrecy and inwardness, and so forth psychology, and law.
TYPES
It describes the way that knowledge comes into being in consciousness and
clarifies the assumptions upon which all human understandings are grounded.
For example, one could write about the combination of objective reality and
individual experiences.
– Collect data from the individuals who have experienced the phenomenon by
using in-depth and multiple interviews.
From the structural and textural descriptions, the researcher then writes a
composite description that presents the “essence” of the phenomenon, called
the essential, invariant structure.
A final challenge for phenomenological researchers is how (or for many if) a
newer approach, fits within phenomenology.
ETHNOGRAPHY
--Ethnographers study the meaning of the behavior, the language, and the
interaction among members of the culture-sharing group.
FEATURES
--Using the theory and looking for patterns of a culture-sharing group involves
engaging in extensive fieldwork, collecting data primarily through interviews,
observations, symbols, artifacts, and many diverse sources of data.
TYPES
REALIST ETHNOGRAPHY
● The realist ethnography is a traditional approach used by cultural
anthropologists.
quotations and has the final word on how the culture is to be interpreted and
presented.
CRITICAL ETHNOGRAPHY
Ethnography is appropriate if the needs are to describe how a cultural group works
and to explore the beliefs, language, behaviors, and issues facing the group, such as
power, resistance, and dominance.
Typically, this group is one whose members have been together for an extended
period of time so that their shared language, patterns of behavior, and attitudes
have merged into discernable patterns.
These themes, issues, and theories provide an orienting framework for the study of
the culture-sharing group. It also informs the analysis of the culture-sharing group.
Perhaps how the group works needs to be described, or a critical ethnography can
expose issues such as power, hegemony, and advocacy for certain groups.
– Gather information in the context or setting where the group works or lives.
Gathering the types of information typically needed in an ethnography involves
going to the research site, respecting the daily lives of individuals at the site, and
collecting a wide variety of materials.
CHALLENGES
– The time to collect data is extensive, involving prolonged time in the field. In
much ethnography, the narratives are written in a literary, almost storytelling
approach, an approach that may limit the audience for the work and may be
challenging for authors accustomed to traditional approaches to scientific writing.
– Sensitivity to the needs of individuals being studied is especially important, and
the researcher must access and report his or her impact in conducting the study on
the people and the places being explored.
FEATURES
– Case study research begins with the identification of a specific case that will be
described and analyzed. Examples of a case for study are an individual, a
community, a decision process, or an event. A single case can be selected or
multiple cases identified so that they can be compared. Typically, case study
researchers study current, real-life cases that are in progress so that they can gather
accurate information not lost by time.
– The key to the case identification is that it is bounded, meaning that it can be
defined or described within certain parameters- specific place where the case is
located and timeframe in which the case is studied.
The intent of the case study may be to understand a specific issue, problem,
or concern (e.g., teenage pregnancy) and a case or cases selected to best
understand the problem. This is called an instrumental case
TYPES
– The types of qualitative case studies are distinguished based on the case
studying one individual, several individuals, a group, an entire program, or an
activity.
– They may also be distinguished in terms of the intent of the case analysis.
Three variations exist in terms of intent: the single instrumental case study,
the collective or multiple case study, and the intrinsic case study.
– In a collective case study (or multiple case study), the one issue or concern is
again selected, but the inquirer selects multiple case studies to illustrate the issue.
– The researcher must identify the case- The case selected may be broad in scope
(e.g., the Boy Scout organization) or narrow in scope (e.g., a decisionmaking
process at a specific college).
– The case study researcher must decide which bounded system to study-
recognizing that several might be possible candidates for this selection and
realizing that either the case itself or an issue, which a case or cases are selected to
illustrate, is worthy of study.
– The researcher must consider whether to study a single case or multiple cases. As
the use of multiple case studies increases, it is important to consider three issues:
resource limitations, case selection, and cross-case analysis.
ACTION RESEARCH
– The outcomes of action research are both practical and theoretical: The
knowledge it generates has a direct and ongoing impact on changing practice for
participants and on a wider audience through its publications.
– This entry describes the origins of action research and its use in a variety of
fields throughout the world.
– The first person to use the term action research was probably Kurt Lewin.
HISTORICAL RESEARCH
– A historical research design is of particular relevance to research about
contemporary social and cultural issues, as it enhances an understanding of the
present.
– It also explores issues in the evaluation and analysis of such data and briefly
reviews the impact of technology on historical research.
TYPES
A theoretical framework can provide a guide for the historical study, both in data
collection and analysis.
It can be the most time- and labor intensive part of the research process depending
on the subject and accessibility of data sources.
The researcher evaluates the data, including the analysis and meaning of missing
data, and forms generalizations.
The findings are described along with their interpretation and which provides
detailed supportive evidence in defense of the conclusions
● The research process for qualitative researchers is emergent. This means that
the initial plan for research cannot be tightly prescribed, and that all phases
of the process may change or shift after the researchers enter the field and
begin to collect data.
⮚ Case study
● Purpose: To understand the important aspects of the life cycle of the unit or
● Yin (1998) has listed six types of data with which researchers of case study
must be aware.
a) Archival record : Archival records are usually quantitative data that include
survey, questionnaire, records of organizations etc.
c) Direct observation : when the researcher visits the case study site, and prepares
some field notes based upon observation.
● Stake (1994) has distinguished between the following three types of case
studies:
1) Intrinsic case study: It is defined as a case study where the study is undertaken
because the researcher prefers a better understanding of the case of personal
interest is selected for study.
⮚ Longitudinal studies
● In a longitudinal study, the data are collected at two or more points in time.
repeatedly at selected time intervals to note changes that occur over time in
the specified characteristics.
longitudinal designs can Only be applied in parts, since such a design needs
enough time between the moments of data collection for making
development and change visible.
⮚ Comparative studies
● In a comparative study, you will not observe the case as a whole and in its
⮚ Retrospective studies
in the past.
● Usually conducted either on the basis of the data available for that period or
● Examples
● Beyond the area of research, the Internet has become a part of everyday life
for many people. Many people have Internet access at home and many
professional activities and routines have integrated the use of the Internet.
Finally, the number of people using e-mail as a form of communication is
growing continually across social groups. Nevertheless, we should not forget
that not everyone has access to the Internet or wants to have access to it.
● Given the widespread use of this medium, it is no surprise that the Internet
has been discovered as an object of research and also as a tool to use for
research.
Also, should have regular access to the Internet, should be familiar with the
different forms of online communication like e-mail, chatrooms, mailing
lists, social networking sites, and blogs.
issue that you can best or only study by using qualitative online research.
● The prospective participants of the study should have access to the Internet
qualitative research independent from their online use before you transfer
them to Internet research.
METHODS
ONLINE INTERVIEWING
that you get in touch with your participant in a chatroom where you can
directly exchange questions and answers while you are both online at the
same time.
means that you send your questions to the participants and they send their
answers back after some time and you are not necessarily online at the same
time -Mostly done in the form of e-mail exchanges.
questions to participants and asking them to send back the answers. But this
comes closer to the situation of sending out a questionnaire in a survey than
to the situation of a semi-structured interview.
● Some authors suggest that you design the collection of data more
● In some cases, you will know no more about them or have to rely on the
information they give you about their gender, age, location, and so on. This
may raise questions of reliability of such demographic information and lead
to problems of contextualizing the statements in the later interview.
they have to be clear and detailed, so that the participant knows what to do.
The instructions should not be too long in order to avoid confusion and
neglect on the side of the interviewee.
than online communication, but the latter allows the participants to reflect on
their answers more than the former.
LIMITATIONS
● The application of this approach is limited to people ready and willing to use
● The synchronous online focus group requires that all participants are online
at the same time and may take part in a chatroom or by using specific
conferencing software.
● Asynchronous means that all participants need to have this software on their
● Asynchronous focus groups do not require that all participants are online at
the same time (and this prevents the problems of co-ordinating this
precondition).
the participants, explains the procedures and what is expected from the
participants, what the rules of communication among the participants should
be like (e.g., please be polite to everyone ..."), and so on.
environment.
● For the recruitment of participants, you can basically use the same sources as
because too many participants might make the discussion in the group too
fast and superficial, whereas you can manage this problem more easily in
asynchronous groups.
● Finally, it is important that you choose a topic for the discussion that is
relevant for the group and participants in your study, so that it is attractive
for them to join the group and the discussion. Or, the other way around, it is
important that you find groups for whom your topic is relevant in order to
have fruitful discussions and interesting data.
LIMITATIONS
participants who take part in their everyday context. This may lead to
dropouts or distractions and influences on the data and their quality. This is
difficult to control for the researcher.
also disturb the discussion and influence the quality of the data.
● Besides the technical problems this may cause, many people may hesitate to
receive and install software for the purpose of taking part in a study.
● Finally, again, the application of this approach is limited to people ready and
VIRTUAL ETHNOGRAPHY
● You can study the Internet as a form of milieu or culture in which people
● For example, this led Kendall in her study of a multiple users group first to
observe and note the communication going on in this group and after a while
to become an active participant in the group to develop a better
understanding of what was going on there. This is similar to how
ethnographers become participants and observers in real-world communities
and cultures.The difference is that virtual ethnography is located in a
technical environment instead of a natural environment.
● There are many links between cyberspace and "real life,"which should be
taken into account. In this way, the Internet is a culture and a cultural
product at the same time. Mediated communication can be spatially and
temporally dislocated.
● You do not have to be at the same time or space to observe what is going on
among members of a virtual group. You can engage in a lot of other things
and then come back to your computer where your e-mails or entries in a
discussion group are waiting for you and you can access them from
computers anywhere in the world.
● Virtual ethnography is never holistic but always partial. You should give up
● To find a way from virtual communities to the real life of the participants is,
● The web is full of material like personal and institutional home pages,
documents, and files you can download from these pages, online journals,
advertisements, and the like. If your research question asks for such
documents to be analysed you will find an endless multitude of sites, often
with links among them or to other specific sites.
the realm of the virtual. Depending on the concrete research question, the
analytic tools of qualitative research can be selected and applied, but may
have to be adapted.
● Web pages are good examples to study and show the social construction of
● Many web pages are permanently updated, changed, disappear, and reappear
on the web, which is why it is necessary to always mention the date you
accessed a page when referring to it as a source.
● Concerning the starting point and sampling of web pages, can start with any
page that seems interesting for your research and then decide which one(s)
to include next in your sample according to the insights or unsolved
questions after analysing the first one.
LIMITATIONS
● To analyse a home page in order to make statements about the owner and
● They have a different structure from texts and include different forms of data
● Using the internet for the study makes many things easier.
● Can access all sorts of documents right from your desk and computer
face to face.
● Mann and Stewart (2000) present an ethical framework for Internet research
● You should collect data only for one specific and legitimate purpose and that
obtained, which can be difficult if your target group is not clearly defined
and your contact is based on e-mail addresses and nicknames
use, and researchers should know them and act according to them
o If these ethical issues are taken into account, if the technical problems
can be managed in a sufficient way, and if there is a good reason to
use the Internet for your research project, it can be fruitful and helpful.
The academic interest in the Internet as a culture and as a cultural
product will lead to more development on the methodological level.
⮚ INTERVIEW
■ How the interactions take place depends on the choice of interview type of
which there is great variety.
✓ Focus groups are advantageous when the interaction among interviewees will
likely yield the best Information, when interviewees are similar and cooperative
with each other, when time to collect Information is limited, and when individuals
interviewed one-on-one may be hesitant to provide Information.
■ Identify interviewees who can best answer these questions based on one of the
purposeful sampling procedures mentioned in the preceding discussion.
Use approximately five to seven open-ended questions and ample space between
the questions to write responses to the interviewees comments. Refine the
interview questions and the procedures through pilot testing. The pilot cases are
selected on the basis of convenience, access, and geographic proximity.
⮚ OBSERVATION.
It is the act of noting a phenomenon in the field setting through the five senses of
the observer, often with a note-taking instrument, and recording it for scientific
purposes .
✓ Complete participant. The researcher is fully engaged with the people he or she
is observing. This may help him or her establish greater rapport with the people
being observed .
the group under study, watching and taking field notes from a distance. He
or she can record data without direct involvement with activity or people
✓ Complete observer. The researcher is neither seen nor noticed by the people
under study.
■ The approach of changing ones role from that of an outsider to that of an insider
through the course of the ethnographic study is well documented in field research .
● The size of the group is approximately 6-10 individuals and the interview is
group that is why it proves useful for exploratory researches and pilot study.
It can also be used for investigation more developed research work.
Before the focus group discussion begins, the facilitator should obtain the socio-
demographic information of the participants such as their age, gender, occupation,
education and other pertinent information. The type of information to be gathered
depends on the FGD topic Once this is done, this sequence of steps is carried out:
3)The discussion is structured around the key themes using the probe questions
prepared in advance.
4) It is important to ensure that all the participants take an active part in the
discussion, which can be accomplished using variety of tactics.
• It allows for interaction and formation of reality for the participants. Group
processes allows members to explore others point of view and clarify their own.
• It not only stimulates the present reality of the participants but also aids them to
recall past events and formulate future opinions and attitudes.
• Its flexibility as a method has contributed to its growing popularity. FGD can be
used alone as a qualitative data collection tool or in combination with other
quantitative techniques. They can be used in psychology laboratories or in the
field; to study social world or as an attempt to change it in social action research.
• The advent of the Internet technology has greatly facilitated the conduction of
Focus Groups. Virtual Focus Groups have become popular.
Limitation
● Focus groups dont represent the typical beliefs, attitudes, ideas, or opinions
● They are expensive in terms of time and energy to organize, run and analyze
● Very few issues can be tackled in a session and hence only limited number
● Note taking proves problematic due to the constant shift in the group
dynamics
● As the role of researcher is minimized with respect to the direction of
discourse and the twists and turns can hardly be predicted, the data collected
is comparatively less rigorous than a directed laboratory experiment.
⮚ Survey
The success of survey depends upon the willingness and the cooperativeness of the
sample selected for the study.
The sample selected for survey research must be willing to give the desired
information. In case they are not willing and do not cooperate with the survey
researcher, he should drop the plan in favor of some other technique. Survey
research requires that the researcher be a trained personnel. He must have
manipulative skill and research insight. He must possess social intelligence so that
he may deal with people effectively and be able to extract the desired information
from the sample.
Depending upon the ways of collecting data , survey research can be classified as
●
2). Mail Questionnaire
3)Panel technique
● In this, re interview is the design which is used and the same sample is
● Purpose of survey is wide and extensive, multiple interviews are taken with
various factors bring changes through time in the attitudes of sample being
studied and when the same sample is interviewed twice it becomes more
sensitive and accurate measure of change than when two different sample
from different population are tested.
4). Telephone interview
distinctions Into account: either you can use solicited documents for your
research (e.g., ask People to write diaries for the next 12 months and then
analyze and compare these Documents), or you can use unsolicited
documents (e.g., the diaries people have Written as part of an everyday
routine)
dimensions: the authorship (who produced the document) And the access to
the documents.
● The authorship can be divided into personal and Official documents and the
latter again into private and state documents. Accessibility is the classifying
term for all of these documents.
● Limitation
● Advantages
• Can easily relate materials because they are so pervasive in our society •
Materials provides an opportunity for the participants to share directly their
perceptions of reality • Images such as videotapes and films provides extensive
data about real life as people visualize and relate it Disadvantages
• Difficult to analyze rich information • Researcher may influence the data collecte
In selecting the material researcher impose their meaning of the phenomenon ,
rather than participants views
⮚ Oral history
⮚ Life History
● It is a personal account of their life , in their own words and using their own
⮚ Conversation Analysis
● Conversation Analysis is the study of the talk; it is the approach to the study
● Disadvantages
⮚ Narrative Analysis
into a storied world,we live our lives through the creation and exchange of
narratives. A narrative can be defined as an organized interpretation of
sequence of events.
● Narratives are not just ways of seeing the world, but we actively construct
the world through narratives and we also live through the stories told by
others and by ourselves-they have ontological status.
Functions of Narrative Analysis
● Narratives not only bring order and meaning to our everyday life but, it also
● We tell stories about our lives to ourselves and to others. As such,We create
⮚ Cooperative inquiry
issues of concern and interests. Each member of the group provides ideas
and is a part of activity that is being investigated.
● Each member has the right to decide the questions that are to be addressed in
● There are some skills that are important while conducting a cooperative
inquiry. These skills include: Being present and open, Radical practice
and congruence, Non judgemental and meta-intentionality and
Emotional competence.
1) Being present and open ;This skills basically talks about compassion and
importance. It also includes openness to new experiences, classification
of our perception of objects and events, so that we can be more
participative to its crucial meaning.
2) Radical practice and congruence ;
While doing cooperative enquiry the researcher should have a skill of radical
practices and congruence, which in simply means that the researcher should
be aware of the purpose and the outcome, underlying values, its motives and
defining norms. Being aware of any lack of resemblance between these
different features of action and adjusting them accordingly are also included
in this skills.
3) Non-attachment and meta-intentionality ; This skill or ability is concerned
with the purpose of the research and not with ones identity and emotional security
in an action. It also includes having various alternative behavior and considering
their probable consequences and implication to the entire situation.
4) Emotional competence ; This skill helps in identifying and managing emotional
states in various ways. This skill focuses on keeping action free from alteration
driven by the condition of early years and unprocessed distress.