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娇色导航鈥檚 postgraduate symposium: A lifebelt in the methodological mire

Emma Clarke

As a doctoral student, 娇色导航鈥檚 Postgraduate Forum symposium on research methodology seemed the perfect opportunity to present the methodological aspects of my research to a critical audience before I had to defend my decisions in the viva. Descriptions of the 鈥榤uddy ambiguity鈥 (Finlay, 2002) of undertaking research rang true for me, and at times the 鈥榤essiness鈥 of the process (Letherby, 2003) and methodological 鈥榮wamp鈥 (Finlay, 2002) threatened to halt my research entirely. I looked for sure footing among the 鈥榩ure鈥 methodologies (Maggs鈥怰apport, 2000) that formed a major component of many books I had bought. However, the more I searched for a single methodology that would help me answer my research question, the more 鈥榬estrictive鈥 (Morse and Chung, 2003) the process became.

White (2013) has warned new researchers about the dangers of 鈥榠dentifying鈥 with specific 鈥榬esearch traditions鈥 due to their limiting effects, or what Janesick (1994) had described as 鈥榤ethodolotry鈥. These views steered me away from the prescribed ways of working in the more traditional methodologies, and made me consider methodological issues more carefully.

A pragmatic methodology, defined by (2010) simply as 鈥榯he use of more than one qualitative approach with another鈥, was identified as 鈥榯he most sensible and practical method to answer a research question鈥. Methodological pragmatism, rather than being prescriptive, was proposed as a way of 鈥榰n-thinking鈥, as 鈥榓nti-philosophy鈥 and advocating action (Biesta and Burbules, 2003; Johnson and Onwuegbuzie, 2004). This suited my research question perfectly, and it was along these 鈥榓nti-philosophy鈥, action centred lines that I finally progressed.

During my presentation at the symposium, when one of the moderating professors folded her arms with the slightest sigh, I began to question my thinking. She proposed that using a pragmatic methodology did in fact involve a great deal of philosophising. Over the coming weeks I reflected on the feedback: had I in fact been engaged in thinking rather than 鈥榰n-thinking鈥, and 鈥榩hilosophising鈥 as well as action in my research?

Through considering methodology deeply in order to arrive at the decision to utilise pragmatism, I belatedly realised that much philosophising had been undertaken. This had resulted in a deep understanding of the importance and influence of methodological choices, and I subconsciously developed a questioning as opposed to an accepting stance. The feedback gained at the 娇色导航 symposium had altered my perspective. Methodological pragmatism changed from something that had caused problems due to its lack of prescription and the resultant, significant amount of additional reading and deliberation, to something that emphasised the 鈥榳hy鈥 in research (Morgan, 2014). I became more confident that a pragmatic methodology was not simply a good choice but the only choice for my research, agreeing with those who argued that 鈥榤ethodological pluralism鈥 was both 鈥榓bsolutely necessary鈥 and 鈥榠ncreasingly inevitable鈥 (Johnson et al 2008).


References

Biesta G and Burbules N (2003) Pragmatism and Educational Research, Oxford: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc.

Finlay L (2002) 鈥楴egotiating the swamp: The opportunity and challenge of reflexivity in research practice鈥, Qualitative Research 2(2): 209鈥230

Frost N, Nolas S M, Brooks-Gordon B, Esin C, Holt A, Mehdizadeh L and Shinebourne P (2010) 鈥楶luralism in qualitative research: The impact of different researchers and qualitative approaches on the analysis of qualitative data鈥, Qualitative Research 10(4): 441鈥460

Janesick V (1994) 鈥楾he dance of qualitative research design: metaphor, methodolatry and meaning鈥, in Denzin Y and Lincoln N (eds) Handbook of Qualitative Research, London: SAGE Publications

Johnson R B and Onwuegbuzie A J (2004) 鈥楳ixed methods research: A research paradigm whose time has come鈥, Educational Researcher 33(7): 14鈥26

Johnson M, Long T and White A (2008) 鈥楢rguments for 鈥淏ritish Pluralism鈥 in qualitative health research鈥, Journal of Advanced Nursing 33(2): 243鈥249

Letherby G (2003) Feminist Research in Theory and Practice, Buckingham: Open University Press

Maggs鈥怰apport F (2000) 鈥楥ombining methodological approaches in research: Ethnography and interpretive phenomenology鈥, Journal of Advanced Nursing 31(1): 219鈥225

Morgan D L (2014) 鈥楶ragmatism as a paradigm for social research鈥, Qualitative Inquiry 20(8): 1045鈥1053

Morse J M and Chung S E (2003) 鈥楾oward holism: the significance of methodological pluralism鈥, International Journal of Qualitative Methods 2(3): 13鈥20

White P (2013) 鈥榃ho鈥檚 afraid of research questions? The neglect of research questions in the methods literature and a call for question-led methods teaching鈥, International Journal of Research and Method in Education 36(3): 213鈥227