Directed Research Group: The COVID-19 Information Landscape (Fall 2020)
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DRG Schedule
Week 1:
Key Question: Who are we, what are we trying to do, and how are we going to go about it?
Preparation
- Read through this wiki page!
- Read the project outline (sent via email).
- Read this description of thematic analysis: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thematic_analysis
- Read this description of content analysis: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_analysis
- Make a Taguette Account: https://taguette.communitydata.science
- Bring your questions!
Meeting Agenda
- Introductions
- Scope Review
- Commitments and communication ++ time tracking
- Theme Analysis and Content Analysis: What are they?
- Important Issue: Qualitative versus Quantitative
- Toy Example: "What's it been like living in Seattle this September?"
- Tour and Overview of the Data
After-Meeting To-Do Items
- Read through page 22 of Kaylea's [version of Braun and Clark 2006] -- note that there are both highlighted areas and comments. You may need to adjust your view so you can see the sidebar with comments. Feel free to add your own notes and questions for everyone to benefit.
- First sample: Dive In To Trends
- Set aside a solid block of time.
- Open with a freewrite. What are you thinking and feeling? What are you bringing to the table as you sit down to read this body of data? Use a separate document as a personal journal, or whatever approach to journaling you like.
- Read through the entire set of trends, writing down thoughts as you go; this will become the foundation of your 'memos'.
- Read through the set of trends a second time, updating your thoughts as you go, in your memos.
- Reflect. If someone asked you "what's that all about?" or "what did you see?", what's the story you'd tell them? Add your story to the memo.
- Develop your memo further. Put thoughts you'd like to keep to yourself into a personal document. Edit the memo into something you're ok with sharing, and share it in the Google Docs folder.
- Second Sample: Images
- Set aside another solid block of time.
- Same process as above. Freewrite in your personal journal to focus on the task.
- Look through all of the images, write your notes as part of your memos.
- Look a second time, add more notes as a memo.
- Reflect, and add the story you'd tell into your memo.
- Develop your memo -- private thoughts can be put into your journal, reflections for sharing into your memo, edited, shared to Google Docs.
Week 2:
Key Questions: What are your initial impressions of this data? What do Braun and Clark say about how can we turn those initial impressions into knowledge?
Meeting Agenda
- Your sample: what trends did you see? Let's talk about the data!
- Walk through Braun and Clark.
After-Meeting Follow-Up
- Look back at your memos from the first week and read your colleagues' memos. What did they see that you didn't? Given our collective examination, what feels most important, useful, or surprising about this data?
- There are 6 new days of data to look at. You might do a memo per day, or all days in a single memo, or some other approach: organize yourself in a way that works for you.
- We'll follow our same memo process from last week: free write, immerse yourself in the data, make notes in multiple passes, synthesize and reflect. Remember Mako's comment that it's ok to treat your memo as a journal: cut and paste, scribble, sketch.
Week 3:
Key Question: What are we seeing in this data?
Meeting Agenda
- Research Protocol -- what's coming up next?
After-Meeting Follow-Up
- Braun & Clark phases 1&2 for a new set of data. This is codes development round 2.
Week 4:
Key Question: Is this working? Can we synthesize these codes into themes? Meeting Agenda
- Open codes discussion: what did you see?
- Prep for next phase.
After-Meeting Follow-Up
Week 5:
Key Question: Can we make a codebook out of what we've seen?
Meeting Agenda
- Codebook production discussion
After-Meeting Follow-Up
- Read pp. 1-2, 18-34 of Ch 1 of the online version of Neuendorf
Week 6:
Key Question: Is this working?
Meeting Agenda
- Discuss your experience coding data
- Discuss our agreement levels so far
- Update codebook as needed
After-Meeting Follow-Up
- Read Neuendorff, Ch 2., pp. 36-44, and Ch 3. pp 70-84. Skim the rest of Ch3.
- This is Pilot Round 1, and we are entity coding for agreement
Week 7:
Key Question Still Is: Is this working?
Meeting Agenda
- Discuss your experience coding data
- Discuss our agreement levels so far
- Update codebook as needed
Follow-up Items
- Read Neuendorff p. 139-166.
- This is Pilot Round 2, and we are entity coding for agreement
Week 8:
Meeting Agenda
- Discuss coding progress
Follow-Up Items
- Keep Coding
- Read Neuendorff p.169-206
- If Agreement is sufficiently high, this is when we Begin independent coding
Week 9
Meeting Agenda
- Discuss coding progress
Follow-Up Items
- Keep Coding
- Read Neuendorff p. 221-230, 234-248 (through just the first paragraph)
Week 10:
Complete Writing and Coding Tasks
- Read Neuendorf p. 334-340, 394-403
Finals Week:
- Revision Task
- Dissemination Task