Using Someone Else's Data: Problems, Pragmatics and Provisions

In the current climate of requirements for ethical research, qualitative research data is often archived at the end of each unique research project. Yet qualitative data is capable of being revisited from multiple perspectives, and used to answer different research questions to those envisaged by th...

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Main Author: Jo-Anne Kelder
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: FQS 2005-01-01
Series:Forum: Qualitative Social Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/501
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spelling doaj-b78cb2b506ff47918c6224271bc9bda72020-11-24T22:35:54ZdeuFQS Forum: Qualitative Social Research1438-56272005-01-0161489Using Someone Else's Data: Problems, Pragmatics and ProvisionsJo-Anne Kelder0University of TasmaniaIn the current climate of requirements for ethical research, qualitative research data is often archived at the end of each unique research project. Yet qualitative data is capable of being revisited from multiple perspectives, and used to answer different research questions to those envisaged by the original data collector. Using other people's data saves time, avoids unnecessarily burdening your research participants, and adds confidence in interpreting your own data. This paper is a case of how data from one research project was acquired and then analysed to ground the analysis of a separate project using Distributed Cognition (Dcog) theory and its associated methodology, cognitive ethnography. Theoretical considerations were the benefits and difficulties of using multiple sources and types of data in creating a theoretical account of the observed situation. Methodological issues included how to use (and not misuse) other people's data and coherently integrate data collected over time and for different purposes. Current ethics guidelines come from a paradigm of control suited to experimental, quantitative research approaches. A new paradigm that recognises researchers' inherent lack of control over qualitative research contexts needs to be developed. This research demonstrates the benefits of designing an ethics application to provide for data reuse and giving participants choice over the level of protection they require. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0501396http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/501ethicssecondary datadistributed cognition theoryweather forecasting
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jo-Anne Kelder
spellingShingle Jo-Anne Kelder
Using Someone Else's Data: Problems, Pragmatics and Provisions
Forum: Qualitative Social Research
ethics
secondary data
distributed cognition theory
weather forecasting
author_facet Jo-Anne Kelder
author_sort Jo-Anne Kelder
title Using Someone Else's Data: Problems, Pragmatics and Provisions
title_short Using Someone Else's Data: Problems, Pragmatics and Provisions
title_full Using Someone Else's Data: Problems, Pragmatics and Provisions
title_fullStr Using Someone Else's Data: Problems, Pragmatics and Provisions
title_full_unstemmed Using Someone Else's Data: Problems, Pragmatics and Provisions
title_sort using someone else's data: problems, pragmatics and provisions
publisher FQS
series Forum: Qualitative Social Research
issn 1438-5627
publishDate 2005-01-01
description In the current climate of requirements for ethical research, qualitative research data is often archived at the end of each unique research project. Yet qualitative data is capable of being revisited from multiple perspectives, and used to answer different research questions to those envisaged by the original data collector. Using other people's data saves time, avoids unnecessarily burdening your research participants, and adds confidence in interpreting your own data. This paper is a case of how data from one research project was acquired and then analysed to ground the analysis of a separate project using Distributed Cognition (Dcog) theory and its associated methodology, cognitive ethnography. Theoretical considerations were the benefits and difficulties of using multiple sources and types of data in creating a theoretical account of the observed situation. Methodological issues included how to use (and not misuse) other people's data and coherently integrate data collected over time and for different purposes. Current ethics guidelines come from a paradigm of control suited to experimental, quantitative research approaches. A new paradigm that recognises researchers' inherent lack of control over qualitative research contexts needs to be developed. This research demonstrates the benefits of designing an ethics application to provide for data reuse and giving participants choice over the level of protection they require. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0501396
topic ethics
secondary data
distributed cognition theory
weather forecasting
url http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/501
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