Professional Documents
Culture Documents
()
1967
theoretical sampling
(coding paradigm)
Strauss19875
Strauss Corbin 1990
1997
1997
1967
Glaser & Strauss1967
4
Strauss Corbin
1997
19973
1967
19979
199724
199725
Karen1996
substantiveformal
Glaser Strauss
conceptualizationGlaser &
Strauss1967
Glaser & Strauss
1967
1.
2.
3.
4.
5. Glaser &
Strauss19673
substantiveformal
Glaser
& Strauss196780
Glaser &
Strauss196732-33
1996
Strauss
1994
Glaser Strauss
1994
Strauss
1995
1. Glaser Strauss1967
Glaser Strauss
2. Strauss1987
Strauss
3. Strauss Corbin1990
Strauss
19875
1920 1950
Strauss19876
1994
1994
open coding
1994
1994
1994
instances
1994
Strauss 1987 1990
1994
1994
order
1994
2
Strauss
1994
Glaser 1987
1994
1994
(+)
(1995:39-40):
vivo
concept
(transform)(Wax1971)
Strauss Corbin
( 86117 85)
(conceptual density)
10
--
(1994)
()
"
"
()
()
(qualification)
11
(Strauss & Corbin,19901997)
()
--
(condition)(consequences)(coping mechanisms)
(processes)
(1)
(2)
(Strauss&Corbin1990)
(Strauss1987)
( 85)
12
()
(
1997):
1.
(
)
13
2.
(
85,264)
(action)(process)(
1997)
technical literature
nontechnical literature
199753-62
14
1
2
3
4
5
2.
199753-62
data collection
15
:Strauss198719
data collection
Strauss198720
1.
199535
Creswell1998
2. Theoretical Sampling
Struass Corbin1990
43-44
16
3. theoretical saturation
1997209
1996
Struass Corbin199076-95
1.
2.
3.
(1)the flip-flop technique
(2)
(3)far-out comparisons
4.waving the red flag
17
conceptualized
open coding
axial coding
selecting coding
theoretical
sensitivity1997
1. open coding
199770-71
Struass
& Corbin, 199074
1997
71-841996611996152Strauss198758-64
1 labeling phenomena
conceptualizing
2 discovering categories
categories
18
categorizing
3 naming a category
in vivo
codes
.
.
.
6 code notes
19
2. (axial coding)
(
/)
(
86)"/
"
1997109-131Strauss198796-1151994
(1).
:A.
B.
C.
D.
(2)
(3)
(4)
(pattern)
20
3. (selective coding)
(core categories)
Glaser(1978)
(
1996:120)
(1994)
1997133~162Strauss1987116~142
(1)
++
(2)
()
21
(
)
(3)
()
(specificity)
(4)
--A.B.
(case)
(5)(filling in categories)
(
(processes))
()
22
( 1996155)
memosdiagrams
1996
64
1. code notes
2. theoretical notes
3. operational notes
4. logic diagrams
5. integrative diagrams
23
1996
641997223-226Strauss1987127-128
1.
2.
3.
4.
24
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
credibility
empirical
grounding1997279-280
Struass
& Corbin1990253-2581997280-286
1.
2.
25
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
cues
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
1.
2. Struass Corbin1990
26
:(1995:34)
Hammersley
Turner
Bryman
()
27
()
28
1996
141-158
1997
1996
47-73
85
89--
( 88)
()
84--
115-141
84 22 27-43
83
194-221
85
43263-278
83Basic of Qualitative Researchby A. L. Strass & J, Corbin &
The Discovery of Grounded TheoryBy B. G. Glaser & A. L. Strauss.
4249-254
Creswell, J., W., (1998). Qualitative Inquiry & Research Design . Thous & Oaks, CA:
Sage.
Glaser, B., & Strauss, A(1967).The discovery of grounded theory, Chicago: Aldine.
Strauss, A. & (1987). Qualitative analysis for social scientists. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Strauss, A. & Corbin,J.(1990). Basic of Qualitation Research: Grounded theory
procedures & techniques. Thous &s Oaks, CA: Sage.
Annelis, M. (1996). Grounded theory method Philosophical perspective, paradigm of
inquire, & postmodernism. Qualitative Health Research, l6(3), 379, 15.
Lock, K. (1996). Rewriting The Discovery of Grounded Theory after 25 years?
Journal of Management Inquiry, 5 (3), 239,7,1.
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