Essentials of Grounded Theory
Essentials of Grounded Theory
Essentials of Grounded Theory
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
This chapter will help you to
1 Summarize the historical background of grounded theory
2 Discuss methodological influences on grounded theory as an approach to
research
3 Outline key positions taken in the literature about grounded theory
4 Identify a personal philosophical position
5 Define essential grounded theory methods
Introduction
Grounded theory is one of the most popular research designs in the world. Not only
are there thousands of publications that report on studies using grounded theory
methods, but there is also a collection of seminal texts that researchers can use to
guide their study and ensure the rigour of their work. So why then, you may ask, is
there a need for another book on grounded theory? For beginning researchers,
including graduate students, the magnitude of information that exists about
grounded theory methods and findings has made engaging in a grounded theory
study a complicated endeavour. Trying to understand the general principles of
grounded theory in context of the debate and discussion that is so much a part of
this research tradition can be incredibly difficult. Where to start? What to read?
Who to follow and why? This book aims to provide you with a place to begin as
you explore the wider grounded theory literature. Reading this text will assist you to
become an informed reader of grounded theory articles and seminal texts, allowing
you to make wise investments of your time. As you will come to understand,
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2 Grounded theory
grounded theorists take various philosophical and methodological positions that
influence the implementation of a set of essential grounded theory methods. Each
chapter in this text addresses these differences and highlights the implications they
may have when undertaking a study.
The grounded theory generations
Recently there has been an influx of new books about grounded theory, many of
which have documented the beginnings of the method and the original work of
Anselm Strauss and Barney Glaser (Covan, 2007; Stern, 2009). In 1960, Anselm
Strauss joined the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) School of
Nursing. The UCSF School of Nursing has a proud intellectual history: Edith
Bryan, the first American nurse to earn a doctoral degree, was its founding leader in
1918 (UCSF, 2007). In appointing the then 44-year-old Strauss to a professorial
position, the schools leaders were strategically investing in his intellectual capital
with the aim of establishing a doctoral studies programme. Shortly after his appoint-
ment, the Department of Social and Behavioral Science was created within the
school and Strauss appointed its inaugural Director.
In 1961, at the age of 33 years, Barney Glaser had completed his PhD at
Columbia University in New York under the guidance of Paul Lazerfeld and
Robert Merton (Covan, 2007). At this time, Strauss was successful with a grant
application for a four-year funded study to examine the experience of dying, and
recruited Glaser to the research team. It was during this study that the grounded
theory methods we know today began to coalesce. In 1967, after completion of
Awareness of dying, Glaser and Strauss published The discovery of grounded theory.
Together they made their scholarly motivation for this publication quite clear,
stating that:
We would all agree that in social research generating theory goes hand in hand
with verifying it; but many sociologists have been diverted from this truism in their
zeal to test either existing theories or a theory that they have barely started to
generate. (p. 2)
The notion of generating new theory from data, as opposed to testing existing
theory, resonated with other social scientists and grounded theory as a research
design became increasingly popular. For the next 10 years, Strauss and Glaser taught
together at UCSF, with many of their students now forming a coterie who would
carry on their legacy. While Strauss continued teaching at UCSF until 1987,
and later as an Emeritus Professor, Glaser left the academy to write, publish, consult
and teach around the world.
Increasingly there is a trend in the literature to categorize Glaser and Strauss as
the first generation of grounded theorists. At UCSF they created a challenging and
supportive teaching environment that was a crucible for many of those who have
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Essentials of grounded theory 3
become known as second-generation grounded theorists (Morse et al., 2009). It is
the second generation of grounded theorists who have written about their interpre-
tations of Glaser and Strausss grounded theory methods and who have in many
cases used the original work as a launching pad for their own iterations (Bowers &
Schatzman, 2009; Charmaz, 2006; Clarke, 2005).
Table 1.1 is ordered chronologically and lists those works considered by us to be
seminal grounded theory texts because they are characterized by their originality of
thought and subsequent influence. Making a decision about what to classify in this
way is an arbitrary process; however, the citation rate of each of these works
provides an indication of scholarly opinion. It is not suggested that a novice
grounded theorist read the books in this list from top to bottom, even though
supervisors sometimes recommend this.
Over the years, much has been made of a supposed split between Strauss and
Glaser following the publication of Strauss and Corbins text Basics of qualitative
research: grounded theory procedures and techniques in 1990. Glasers rebuttal (1992)
sparked a debate among grounded theory scholars (Boychuk-Duchscher &
Morgan, 2004; Heath & Cowley, 2004) about the relative merits of each scholars
work that continues today. It is worth noting, however, that in spite of the intel-
lectual discussion that surrounds variations in the use of grounded theory
methods, Glaser and Strausss personal and professional relationship endured until
Strauss death in 1996.
You will frequently see reference to Glaser and Strausss different perspectives on
grounded theory in the literature. Often a researcher will demonstrate (a sometimes
almost fanatical) adherence to either a traditional Glaserian or an evolved Straussian
version of grounded theory. This text aims to provide a balanced view of grounded
theory methods without adopting a dichotomous position. Few things are ever black
and white, especially when it comes to research with an overtly interpretive
component, and there is much to be learned from all antecedent grounded theorists.
Table 1.1 Seminal grounded theory texts
Year Author Title
1967 (Glaser and Strauss 1967) The discovery of grounded theory
1978 (Glaser 1978) Theoretical sensitivity
1987 (Strauss 1987) Qualitative analysis for social scientists
1990 (Strauss and Corbin 1990) Basics of qualitative research: Grounded theory procedures
and techniques
1992 (Glaser 1992) Basics of grounded theory analysis
1994 (Strauss and Corbin 1994) Grounded theory methodology: An overview in Handbook of
qualitative research (1st Edition)
1995 (Charmaz 1995) Grounded theory in Rethinking methods in psychology
1998 (Strauss and Corbin 1998) Basics of qualitative research: Grounded theory procedures
and techniques (2nd Edition)
2000 (Charmaz 2000) Grounded theory: Objectivist and constructivist methods in
Handbook of qualitative research (2nd Edition)
2005 (Clarke 2005) Situational analysis: Grounded theory after the postmodern turn
2006 (Charmaz 2006) Constructing grounded theory: A practical guide through
qualitative analysis
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4 Grounded theory
Philosophy, methodology and methods
One of the key aims of a doctoral research programme, and to a certain extent
other graduate programmes, is to instil in students knowledge of various philos-
ophies and in turn the methodologies and methods that are linked to these
schools of thought. It is important to understand the difference between a
methodology and a set of methods. Stemming from a congruent philosophy, a
methodology is a set of principles and ideas that inform the design of a research
study. Methods, on the other hand, are practical procedures used to generate and
analyse data. There is a fluid interplay that occurs between methodology and
method in the process of undertaking a research study, represented very simply
in the crossover between each of these domains in Figure 1.1. The method-
ological framework with its underpinning philosophy influences how the
researcher works with the participants, in other words the position they take in
the study. Depending on their philosophical beliefs and adopted methodology,
researchers take either a position of distance or acknowledged inclusion in both
the field and in the final product of the study (see Chapter 4). As well, and
crucially for grounded theory, the methodology subscribed to influences the
analysis of the data as it focuses the researchers attention on different dynamics
and alerts them to possible analytic configurations in the process of conceptual and
theoretical abstraction.
In this chapter, our purpose is to discuss philosophical and methodological
influences on grounded theory. For a broader and more comprehensive explanation
of the various paradigmatic positions that can be assumed by a researcher we
Methods
Methodology
Philosophy
Research design
Figure 1.1 Components of a research design
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Essentials of grounded theory 5
recommend you seek out other texts that address these issues in detail (for example,
Guba and Lincolns chapter Paradigmatic controversies, contradictions, and
emergent confluences in the Handbook of Qualitative Research 3rd Edition, edited by
Denzin and Lincoln (2005) or similar works).
One of the major criticisms of the first generation of grounded theorists, and
in this we include Juliet Corbin who co-wrote some of the seminal texts with
Strauss, is that they did not write about grounded theory as a methodological/
methods package; rather, they wrote only about the various strategies and
techniques (methods) that could be used. Fortunately this has been rectified to an
extent in the latest edition of Corbin and Strausss (2008) book, which includes a
chapter, absent from the earlier editions, explaining pragmatism and symbolic
interactionism as the philosophies that methodologically underpin Strausss
iteration of grounded theory methods. Glaser has never really entered the
conversation about grounded theory methodology, rather his writing has focused
on grounded theory method and what constitutes a grounded theory itself.
Conversely to Strauss and Corbin, he has dismissed the applicability of any
specific philosophical or disciplinary position, including symbolic interactionism,
in his belief that adopting such a perspective reduces that broader potential of
grounded theory (Glaser, 2005). Because of the language that Glaser uses when
writing about emergence in the process of concurrent data collection and analy-
sis, as well as in the later stages of analysis when the core category is also said to
emerge, he is generally cited as a critical realist researching within the post-
positivist paradigm (Annells, 1996).
Methodological gaps in seminal texts written by first-generation grounded
theorists have meant that students of grounded theory needed to figure out what
was (to borrow a famous grounded theory mantra) going on ontologically and
epistemologically in order to plan and execute a rigorous study that would pass
examination. Because of this, many second-generation grounded theorists devel-
oped methodological frameworks for grounded theory methods that are clearly
underpinned by various philosophies. Rather than argue for one genre of grounded
theory in this book, you will note that we move across a range of these now estab-
lished methodological positions in order to demonstrate their influence on
grounded theory methods. We have also made an assumption, in concert with
others (Bryant & Charmaz, 2007), that there is a set of methods essential to
grounded theory research design that must be used in order for the final product
to be considered as such.
Throughout this book, we encourage you to identify your own underlying
assumptions about the world, to decide how you are positioned philosophically and
in turn methodologically. To help you to achieve this we will provide you with some
strategies later in this chapter. Once you have accomplished this task, you will be in
a much better position to draw the best from a variety of thinkers about how
grounded theory methods can be used in individual research designs. This is what
many of the second-generation grounded theorists themselves have done, with the
result that grounded theory research design has moved into new methodological
spaces (Charmaz, 2000; Clarke, 2005).
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6 Grounded theory
Methodological influences on grounded theory
Grounded theory is most often derived from data sources of a qualitative (interpre-
tive) nature. Qualitative research studies originate from early world explorers who
document their experiences of encountering the tribes of foreign lands while
collecting cultural artefacts, all in the name of colonization.
Denzin and Lincoln (2005) identify eight moments of qualitative research
originating at different points of history and influenced by the social milieu of the
time. The eight moments of qualitative research are not moments that have ever
passed, rather they continue today and shape the variety of methodological
positions that researchers take in their designs. Methodologically, grounded
theory has been influenced by researchers situated in the second, third, fourth
and fifth of these eight moments of qualitative research. The dates attached to the
following explanations of these relevant moments are provided to indicate their
period of dominance.
The second moment (from the end of the Second World War to 1970) is known
as the golden age of rigorous qualitative analysis (Denzin & Lincoln, 2005: 16)
during which time Glaser and Strauss developed grounded theory methods.
Philosophically in the second moment post-positivism is the dominant school of
thought, resulting in researchers working within an ontological and epistemological
frame where there is an assumed reality worth discovering as a detached objective
observer.
The third moment of qualitative research dawned soon after the publication
of Discovery of grounded theory, as a response to cultural ruptures in American
society (2005). This phase is called blurred genres (197086) and is character-
ized by qualitative researchers questioning their place in research texts.
Constructivist thinking became very influential in this moment, and of impor-
tance to grounded theory, as Charmaz began to think about a grounded theory
using this methodological lens.
It was not until the fourth moment of qualitative research (2005), dubbed the
crisis of representation (198695), that Charmaz began to publish about construc-
tivist grounded theory (Charmaz, 1995). Charmazs work is clearly influenced
by the third and fourth moments in its focus on the place of the author in the text,
their relationship with participants, and the importance of writing in constructing
a final text that remains grounded in the data (Charmaz, 2000; 2006).
The fifth moment of qualitative research overlaps and extends the fourth and
is termed the triple crisis as it adds legitimation and praxis to representation.
Legitimation questioned measures for deciding on the merit of qualitative research
outcomes, while the crisis of praxis provoked questions about the ability of textual
analyses of society to effect change (Denzin & Lincoln, 2005). Postmodernist
thought permeated much of this debate and influenced the next key movement in
grounded theory, Clarkes work on situational analysis (2005).
In Box 1.1, Merilyn Annells discusses situating her own study within the fifth
moment of qualitative research and the influence this had on establishing her
philosophical position. Note how Annells supports researchers taking a broad and
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Essentials of grounded theory 7
evolving view of grounded theory and the advice she gives for ensuring success in
adopting a non-traditional position.
BOX 1.1 WINDOW INTO GROUNDED THEORY
Merilyn Annells on philosophical positioning
Although I did a small study in 1991 that I thought was grounded theory (GT)
research, my first real GT study commenced in 1994 as part of my PhD research.
The 1991 study included GT research processes but was descriptive, exploratory
qualitative research achieving conceptual ordering but not a full explanatory
scheme as per GT.
With my PhD research, fortunately a supervisor knew that in 1994 we were in
the fifth moment of qualitative research, which according to Norman Denzin and
Yvonne Lincoln, was being defined and shaped by dual crises of representation
and legitimation. Therefore, I was encouraged to consider in which paradigm of
qualitative research my philosophical position about inquiry positioned me so I
studied the writings of Egon Guba and Yvonne Lincoln to discover that I was
embedded in the constructivist paradigm.
However, this led me to a dilemma. How could I do GT research that would be
ontologically, epistemologically and methodologically constructivist? GT litera-
ture in that era did not satisfactorily answer the question. Disciples of Glaserian
or Straussian modes of GT were polarized about rightness of the modes, but
mostly silent about philosophical perspectives. So I took the bull by the horns
and did my own extensive analysis of writings by GTs major identities Barney
Glaser, Anselm Strauss and Juliet Corbin. My opinion became that Glaserian GT
was post-positivist and controversially that Straussian GT was leaning toward
constructivism although still showing signs of post-positivism with symbolic
interaction foundations. This led me to applying the Straussian mode but in an
ostensibly constructivist way, and I had to write a solid defense of this choice.
What helped was meeting with Juliet Corbin in the US in 1995 to discuss my
analysis of data for the study, and in 1996, prior to his death, having correspon-
dence about my philosophical analyses of GT with Anselm Strauss. Several
articles were published in the mid-1990s presenting my philosophical analyses of
GT modes this led to critical comment by others. Nevertheless, having eminent
examiners of the thesis added credibility to the research and the philosophical
analyses. These examiners were the qualitative research methodologist, Margarete
Sandelowski, and the pioneer grounded theorist nurse researcher who worked
with Glaser and Strauss in the 1960s, Jeanne Quint Benoliel.
What has remained constant is my conviction that GT can be conducted within
any qualitative paradigmatic position if ensuring commensurable process and
(Continued)
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8 Grounded theory
claims of outcome. This needs to be thoroughly justified when planning and
reporting the study. Additionally, I believe that GT is evolving and it is not only OK
but also beneficial to have multiple modes of GT from which to choose. PhD
candidates who I have supervised have justifiably and successfully used quite
different approaches to GT. These days there is plenty of literature about the
philosophical underpinnings of GT so a student does not have to try and work it
out but if there is something about GT that needs some new thought and opinion,
dont hesitate to delve into it. Viva la GT!
Annells perspective reinforces our assertion earlier in this chapter that dividing
grounded theory into either traditional or Glaserian grounded theory and evolved
or Straussian grounded theory is not very helpful. Doing so fails to account for the
subtleties and differences in grounded theory research design that have developed
in the third, fourth and fifth moments of qualitative research. Methodologically,
there are no right or wrong approaches to using grounded theory methods;
however, there are differences that need to be taken into account. It is the method-
ological differences in how essential grounded theory methods are used that we will
explore and explain in the chapters that follow.
Discerning a personal philosophical position
You may already be very clear about how you see yourself philosophically and in
turn methodologically. For some, this hard thinking work is part of their scholarly
history and training, but others may have yet to attempt this task in an orderly way.
The importance of discerning a personal philosophical position before you begin to
conceptualize a research study is highlighted in the following quote:
All research is interpretive; it is guided by the researchers set of beliefs and
feelings about the world and how it should be understood and studied. Some
beliefs may be taken for granted, invisible, only assumed, whereas others are
highly problematic and controversial. (Denzin & Lincoln, 2005: 22)
Articulating their beliefs and feelings about the world and reflecting on these
equips a researcher to make decisions of a methodological nature, which in turn
affects how the essential grounded theory methods are used. As to whether a
researchers beliefs and feelings are highly problematic and controversial, the
question must be asked: for whom might this be the case? Chapter 4 discusses
positioning the researcher at length; however, if there is some early work that
needs to be done to think through a philosophical position, now is the time to
clear a space for the writing voice, hacking away at the others with [a] machete
(Lamott, 1994), and begin to write.
(Continued)
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Essentials of grounded theory 9
Activity 1.1
Identifying your underlying assumptions about the world
Make sure that you will be uninterrupted and comfortable (get a cup of
coffee and perhaps a chocolate biscuit).
Prepare to time yourself to write for six minutes without stopping.
Think about the following questions:
1 How do we define our self?
2 What is the nature of reality?
3 What can be the relationship between researcher and participant?
4 How do we know the world, or gain knowledge of it?
Now write for six minutes, without stopping, about the questions listed.
Do not worry about style, spelling or punctuation just get your thoughts
down on paper. Dont stop to critique your work just concentrate on writing.
Put this piece of writing away for a couple of days and then come back
to it. Print it out, get a highlighter pen and go through it. Find the gems in
the dross, focus on these and write some more. Look for the gaps, reflect
on what else you need to read and consider. Write some more. Never
throw anything away; instead, file it carefully for another day.
Essential grounded theory methods
As will be discussed in the following chapters, many research studies purporting to be
grounded theories are often a qualitative descriptive analysis (Glaser, 2007) of a
particular phenomena. The Sage handbook of grounded theory (Bryant & Charmaz, 2007)
has brought the question of what are the salient characteristics of grounded theory
research design to the forefront of contemporary discussions about grounded theory.
We consider the following to constitute a set of essential grounded theory methods:
initial coding and categorization of data; concurrent data generation or collection and
analysis; writing memos; theoretical sampling; constant comparative analysis using
inductive and abductive logic; theoretical sensitivity; intermediate coding; selecting a
core category; theoretical saturation; and theoretical integration. The remainder of
this chapter provides a brief introduction to each of these methods to create a sense
of how they are used in undertaking a grounded theory study. The following chapters
will examine each of these methods in relation to producing an integrated grounded
theory while discussing the various debates and ideas present in the literature.
Initial coding and categorization of data
Initial or open coding is the first step of data analysis. It is a way of identifying impor-
tant words, or groups of words, in the data and then labelling them accordingly.
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10 Grounded theory
In vivo codes are when the important words or groups of words (usually verbatim
quotes from participants) are themselves used as the label, while categories are groups
of related codes (Holloway, 2008). Categories are referred to as theoretically saturated
when new data analysis returns codes that only fit in existing categories, and these
categories are sufficiently explained in terms of their properties and the dimensions.
There are various terms used to describe coding in grounded theory, which can
become confusing. In the original text, Glaser and Strauss (1967) paid little atten-
tion to describing the process of coding, assuming that the reader would know what
this entailed. Since then, the process of coding in grounded theory studies has had
phases of being quite elaborate (Strauss & Corbin, 1990) to in more recent times
becoming much more straightforward (Charmaz, 2006).
Concurrent data generation or collection
and analysis
Fundamental to a grounded theory research design is the process of concurrent data
generation or collection and analysis. To achieve this, the researcher generates or
collects some data with an initially purposive sample. The data from these initial
encounters is coded before more data is collected or generated. It is this concept that
differentiates grounded theory from other types of research design that required the
researcher either initially to collect and subsequently analyse the data, or to
construct a theoretical proposition and then collect data to test their hypothesis
(Glaser & Strauss, 1967).
Writing memos
Memos have been wonderfully described as intellectual capital in the bank (Clarke,
2005: 85). More prosaically, memos are written records of a researchers thinking
during the process of undertaking a grounded theory study. As such, they vary in
subject, intensity, coherence, theoretical content and usefulness to the finished
product. However harshly you may critique your efforts at memo writing, never
throw a memo away as you cannot anticipate when it might suddenly become vitally
important. Memo writing is an ongoing activity for grounded theorists as memos
are generated from the very early stages of planning a study until completion. Your
memos will in time transform into your grounded theory findings. Writing consis-
tently and copiously will help build your intellectual assets.
Theoretical sampling
Researchers use theoretical sampling to focus and feed their constant comparative
analysis of the data. During this iterative process, it will become apparent that more
information is needed to saturate categories under development. This often occurs
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Essentials of grounded theory 11
when you want to find out more about the properties of a category, conditions that
a particular category may exist under, the dimensions of a category or the relation-
ship between categories (Strauss & Corbin, 1998). To sample theoretically, the
researcher makes a strategic decision about what or who will provide the most
information-rich source of data to meet their analytical needs. Writing memos is an
important technique to use in this process, as it allows the researcher to map out
possible sources to sample theoretically, while at the same time creating an important
audit trail of the decision-making process for later use.
Constant comparative analysis
Part of the process of concurrent data collection and analysis is the constant
comparison of incident to incident, incident to codes, codes to codes, codes to
categories, and categories to categories. This is termed constant comparative analysis
and is a process that continues until a grounded theory is fully integrated.
Grounded theory methods are referred to as inductive in that they are a process
of building theory up from the data itself. Induction of theory is achieved through
successive comparative analyses. The logic of abduction is also much more appar-
ent in the recent literature about grounded theory methods (Charmaz, 2006;
Reichertz, 2007; Richardson & Adams St Pierre, 2005). Abductive reasoning occurs
at all stages of analysis, but particularly so during the constant comparative analysis
of categories to categories leading to theoretical integration. When using abductive
reasoning, the researcher has decided no longer to adhere to the conventional
view of things Abduction is therefore a cerebral process, an intellectual act, a
mental leap, that brings together things which one had never associated with one
another: A cognitive logic of discovery (Reichertz, 2007: 220)
Theoretical sensitivity
Theoretical sensitivity is first cited in Glaser and Strausss seminal text (1967) as a
two-part concept. Firstly, a researchers level of theoretical sensitivity is deeply
personal; it reflects their level of insight into both themselves and the area that they
are researching. Secondly, a researchers level of theoretical sensitivity reflects their
intellectual history, the type of theory that they have read, absorbed and now use in
their everyday thought. Researchers are a sum of all they have experienced. The
concept of theoretical sensitivity acknowledges this fact and accounts for it in the
research process. As a grounded theorist becomes immersed in the data, their level
of theoretical sensitivity to analytical possibilities will increase.
Intermediate coding
Intermediate coding is the second major stage of data analysis following on from
initial coding. In saying this, the researcher moves between initial and intermediate
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12 Grounded theory
coding during the process of concurrent data generation or collection and analysis,
and the constant comparison of data. The researcher employs intermediate coding
in two ways: firstly, to develop fully individual categories by connecting sub-catego-
ries, and fully developing the range of properties and their dimensions; and,
secondly, to link categories together. Initial coding is often said to fracture the data,
whereas intermediate coding reconnects the data in ways that are conceptually much
more abstract than would be produced by a thematic analysis. Axial coding is the
most advanced form of intermediate coding and has been a feature of the work of
Strauss (1987) and Strauss and Corbin over time (Strauss & Corbin, 1990).
Identifying a core category
Developing categories through the process of intermediate coding will increase the
level of conceptual analysis apparent in the developing grounded theory. At this
time, the researcher may choose to select a core category that encapsulates and
explains the grounded theory as a whole. Further theoretical sampling and selective
coding focus on actualizing the core category in a highly abstract conceptual
manner. This is achieved through full theoretical saturation of both the core
category and its subsidiary categories, sub-categories and their properties.
Advanced coding and theoretical integration
Advanced coding is critical to theoretical integration. Theoretical integration is the
most difficult of the essential grounded theory methods to accomplish well. A
grounded theory generally provides a comprehensive explanation of a process or
scheme apparent in relation to particular phenomena. It is comprehensive because
it includes variation rather than assuming there is a one-size-fits-all answer to a
research question. Advanced coding procedures include the use of the storyline
technique (Strauss & Corbin, 1990) as a mechanism of both integrating and present-
ing grounded theory. Glaser (2005) employs theoretical coding during the advanced
coding stage. Theoretical codes can be drawn from existing theories to assist in
theoretical integration while adding explanatory power to the final product of a
grounded theory study by situating it in relation to a theoretical body of knowledge.
Generating theory
The final product of a grounded theory study is an integrated and comprehensive
grounded theory that explains a process or scheme associated with a phenomenon.
This theory is generated by the researcher (Glaser & Strauss, 1967) using the
methods we have just provided an overview of. Figure 1.2 illustrates how the essen-
tial methods fit together during the process of grounded theory research.
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Essentials of grounded theory 13
We have purposefully grouped essential grounded theory methods into three
cogs that can drive a machine (you) to generate grounded theory. The largest cog
includes purposive sampling, initial coding, concurrent data generation and collec-
tion and analysis, theoretical sampling, constant comparative analysis and category
identification. This cog constitutes the most straightforward and easiest to
accomplish of the methods. Together large cog methods form the powerhouse of
grounded theory research design, enabling you both to generate and refine data.
The two smaller cogs include concepts and techniques that are no less important.
Rather, small-cog methods take your study to a level of sophistication that will lift
your analysis beyond qualitative description. The lower of the small cogs includes
theoretical sensitivity, intermediate coding, identifying a core category and theoret-
ical saturation. Engaging in these methods will further refine your analysis while
increasing the comprehensiveness of the final product. The upper small cog
includes complex methods of advanced coding and theoretical integration. This is
where a grounded theory either comes together, or not, as the case may be. Writing
memos lubricates each of the cogs as they rotate around each other during the
A grounded theory
Advanced coding;
Theoretical
integration
Theoretical
sensitivity;
Intermediate coding;
Selecting a core
category; Theoretical
saturation
Purposive sampling; Initial
coding; Concurrent data
generation and collection;
Theoretical sampling;
Constant comparative
analysis; Category
identification
M
e
m
o
s
M
e
m
o
s
M
e
m
o
s
Figure 1.2 Essential grounded theory methods
01-Birks_Mills-4134-Ch-01.indd 13 20/09/2010 7:25:57 PM
14 Grounded theory
research process. Without high-quality memos, the machine will very quickly grind
to a halt. If one of the small cogs become jammed, or has absent components, then
a grounded theory will never be produced. It is as simple as that.
Conclusion
This chapter has provided you with an introduction to grounded theory research. In
the chapters that follow, you will have the opportunity to explore in detail the critical
elements of grounded theory introduced so far. By now, you will have written your
first memo, and perhaps eaten several chocolate biscuits! Both of these are extremely
important tasks to be accomplished before you begin to plan your grounded theory
study, which is the subject of Chapter 2.
CRITICAL THINKING QUESTIONS
1 How important do you think the prevailing research culture was in shaping Glaser
and Strausss original work on grounded theory?
2 Consider second-generation grounded theorists. What do you think were the
most important influences on their work?
3 Essential grounded theory methods are multi-faceted. Identify the purposes of
each of these.
4 Reflect on the different methodological influences apparent in grounded theory
research. What type of language would you expect each of the seminal authors
to use in relation to both participants and their findings?
WORKING GROUNDED THEORY
Review the Working grounded theory example presented in Appendix A. Note:
The preconceptions this researcher held about grounded theory prior to
commencing the study.
The relationship this researcher had with the seminal works on grounded theory.
The personal philosophical position of the researcher and how this was expressed.
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