Factors involved with qualitative syntheses: A new focus for research in science education
- 1 May 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Research in Science Teaching
- Vol. 19 (5) , 337-350
- https://doi.org/10.1002/tea.3660190502
Abstract
This article describes the nature of qualitative syntheses and reports such efforts as a new focus for research in science education. It uses Project Synthesis as conceived by Norris Harms as an example of a Qualitative Synthesis. It identifies four features for such research efforts: (1) They involve research teams structured to provide a variety of perspectives and viewpoints. (2) They involve a wide variety of data sources, including massive sets of data from a variety of sources and perspectives. Much of these data are qualitative and often gathered initially for a variety of purposes. (3) They include at least one conceptual scheme for accomplishing a synthesis. Most include a set of goals as one organizer and a set of critical incidents as another. Studies involving more than two such dimensions provide even more meaningful and useful synthesis. (4) They conclude with an analysis of meaning, a formulation of an overarching scheme, and a new model to be used for further thinking, research, and analysis. Such synthesis efforts also end with a set of recommendations for action and/or hypotheses to be tested.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Disciplines of Inquiry in Education: An OverviewEducational Researcher, 1981
- Current indicators for the discipline of science educationScience Education, 1981
- The Use of Ethnographic Techniques in Educational ResearchReview of Educational Research, 1977