Guide 60
Guide 60
Case Studies
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This guide examines case studies, a form of qualitative descriptive research that is used
to look at individuals, a small group of participants, or a group as a whole. Researchers
collect data about participants using participant and direct observations, interviews,
protocols, tests, examinations of records, and collections of writing samples. Starting with
a definition of the case study, the guide moves to a brief history of this research method.
Using several well documented case studies, the guide then looks at applications and
methods including data collection and analysis. A discussion of ways to handle validity,
reliability, and generalizability follows, with special attention to case studies as they are
applied to composition studies. Finally, this guide examines the strengths and
weaknesses of case studies.
Overview
Case studies typically examine the interplay of all variables in order to provide as
complete an understanding of an event or situation as possible. This type of
comprehensive understanding is arrived at through a process known as thick description,
which involves an in-depth description of the entity being evaluated, the circumstances
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which involves an in-depth description of the entity being evaluated, the circumstances
under which it is used, the characteristics of the people involved in it, and the nature of
the community in which it is located. Thick description also involves interpreting the
meaning of demographic and descriptive data such as cultural norms and mores,
community values, ingrained attitudes, and motives.
Unlike quantitative methods of research, like the survey, which focus on the questions of
who, what, where, how much, and how many, and archival analysis, which often situates
the participant in some form of historical context, case studies are the preferred strategy
when how or why questions are asked. Likewise, they are the preferred method when the
researcher has little control over the events, and when there is a contemporary focus
within a real life context. In addition, unlike more specifically directed experiments, case
studies require a problem that seeks a holistic understanding of the event or situation in
question using inductive logic--reasoning from specific to more general terms.
In scholarly circles, case studies are frequently discussed within the context of qualitative
research and naturalistic inquiry. Case studies are often referred to interchangeably with
ethnography, field study, and participant observation. The underlying philosophical
assumptions in the case are similar to these types of qualitative research because each
takes place in a natural setting (such as a classroom, neighborhood, or private home),
and strives for a more holistic interpretation of the event or situation under study.
Unlike more statistically-based studies which search for quantifiable data, the goal of a
case study is to offer new variables and questions for further research. F.H. Giddings, a
sociologist in the early part of the century, compares statistical methods to the case study
on the basis that the former are concerned with the distribution of a particular trait, or a
small number of traits, in a population, whereas the case study is concerned with the
whole variety of traits to be found in a particular instance" (Hammersley 95).
History
Case studies are not a new form of research; naturalistic inquiry was the primary
research tool until the development of the scientific method. The fields of sociology and
anthropology are credited with the primary shaping of the concept as we know it today.
However, case study research has drawn from a number of other areas as well: the
clinical methods of doctors; the casework technique being developed by social workers;
the methods of historians and anthropologists, plus the qualitative descriptions provided
by quantitative researchers like LePlay; and, in the case of Robert Park, the techniques of
newspaper reporters and novelists.
Park was an ex-newspaper reporter and editor who became very influential in developing
sociological case studies at the University of Chicago in the 1920s. As a newspaper
professional he coined the term "scientific" or "depth" reporting: the description of local
events in a way that pointed to major social trends. Park viewed the sociologist as
"merely a more accurate, responsible, and scientific reporter." Park stressed the variety
and value of human experience. He believed that sociology sought to arrive at natural,
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and value of human experience. He believed that sociology sought to arrive at natural,
but fluid, laws and generalizations in regard to human nature and society. These laws
weren't static laws of the kind sought by many positivists and natural law theorists, but
rather, they were laws of becoming--with a constant possibility of change. Park
encouraged students to get out of the library, to quit looking at papers and books, and to
view the constant experiment of human experience. He writes, "Go and sit in the lounges
of the luxury hotels and on the doorsteps of the flophouses; sit on the Gold Coast settees
and on the slum shakedowns; sit in the Orchestra Hall and in the Star and Garter
Burlesque. In short, gentlemen [sic], go get the seats of your pants dirty in real
research."
But over the years, case studies have drawn their share of criticism. In fact, the method
had its detractors from the start. In the 1920s, the debate between pro-qualitative and
pro-quantitative became quite heated. Case studies, when compared to statistics, were
considered by many to be unscientific. From the 1930's on, the rise of positivism had a
growing influence on quantitative methods in sociology. People wanted static,
generalizable laws in science. The sociological positivists were looking for stable laws of
social phenomena. They criticized case study research because it failed to provide
evidence of inter subjective agreement. Also, they condemned it because of the few
number of cases studied and that the under-standardized character of their descriptions
made generalization impossible. By the 1950s, quantitative methods, in the form of
survey research, had become the dominant sociological approach and case study had
become a minority practice.
Educational Applications
The 1950's marked the dawning of a new era in case study research, namely that of the
utilization of the case study as a teaching method. "Instituted at Harvard Business School
in the 1950s as a primary method of teaching, cases have since been used in classrooms
and lecture halls alike, either as part of a course of study or as the main focus of the
course to which other teaching material is added" (Armisted 1984). The basic purpose of
instituting the case method as a teaching strategy was "to transfer much of the
responsibility for learning from the teacher on to the student, whose role, as a result,
shifts away from passive absorption toward active construction" (Boehrer 1990). Through
careful examination and discussion of various cases, "students learn to identify actual
problems, to recognize key players and their agendas, and to become aware of those
aspects of the situation that contribute to the problem" (Merseth 1991). In addition,
students are encouraged to "generate their own analysis of the problems under
consideration, to develop their own solutions, and to practically apply their own
knowledge of theory to these problems" (Boyce 1993). Along the way, students also
develop "the power to analyze and to master a tangled circumstance by identifying and
delineating important factors; the ability to utilize ideas, to test them against facts, and
to throw them into fresh combinations" (Merseth 1991).
In addition to the practical application and testing of scholarly knowledge, case
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idea behind these studies is the collection of past studies will allow for greater
generalization without additional cost or time being expended on new, possibly repetitive
studies.
Critical Instance Case Studies
These examine one or more sites for either the purpose of examining a situation of unique
interest with little to no interest in generalizability, or to call into question or challenge a
highly generalized or universal assertion. This method is useful for answering cause and
effect questions.
Examples
Two examples of case studies are used consistently throughout this chapter. The first, a
study produced by Berkenkotter, Huckin, and Ackerman (1988), looks at a first year
graduate student's initiation into an academic writing program. The study uses
participant-observer and linguistic data collecting techniques to assess the student's
knowledge of appropriate discourse conventions. Using the pseudonym Nate to refer to
the subject, the study sought to illuminate the particular experience rather than to
generalize about the experience of fledgling academic writers collectively.
For example, in Berkenkotter, Huckin, and Ackerman's (1988) study we are told that the
researchers are interested in disciplinary communities. In the first paragraph, they ask
what constitutes membership in a disciplinary community and how achieving membership
might affect a writer's understanding and production of texts. In the third paragraph they
state that researchers must negotiate their claims "within the context of his sub
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specialty's accepted knowledge and methodology." In the next paragraph they ask, "How
is literacy acquired? What is the process through which novices gain community
membership? And what factors either aid or hinder students learning the requisite
linguistic behaviors?" This introductory section ends with a paragraph in which the
study's authors claim that during the course of the study, the subject, Nate, successfully
makes the transition from "skilled novice" to become an initiated member of the
academic discourse community and that his texts exhibit linguistic changes which indicate
this transition. In the next section the authors make explicit the sociolinguistic theoretical
and methodological assumptions on which the study is based (1988). Thus the reader
has a good understanding of the authors' theoretical background and purpose in
conducting the study even before it is explicitly stated on the fourth page of the study.
"Our purpose was to examine the effects of the educational context on one graduate
student's production of texts as he wrote in different courses and for different faculty
members over the academic year 1984-85." The goal of the study then, was to explore
the idea that writers must be initiated into a writing community, and that this initiation
will change the way one writes.
The second example is Janet Emig's (1971) study of the composing process of a group of
twelfth graders. In this study, Emig seeks to answer the question of what happens to the
self as a result educational stimuli in terms of academic writing. The case study used
methods such as protocol analysis, tape-recorded interviews, and discourse analysis.
In the case of Janet Emig's (1971) study of the composing process of eight twelfth
graders, four specific hypotheses were made:
1. Twelfth grade writers engage in two modes of composing: reflexive and extensive.
2. These differences can be ascertained and characterized through having the writers
compose aloud their composition process.
3. A set of implied stylistic principles governs the writing process.
4. For twelfth grade writers, extensive writing occurs chiefly as a school-sponsored
activity, or reflexive, as a self-sponsored activity.
In this study, the chief distinction is between the two dominant modes of composing
among older, secondary school students. The distinctions are:
1. The reflexive mode, which focuses on the writer's thoughts and feelings.
2. The extensive mode, which focuses on conveying a message.
Emig also outlines the specific questions which guided the research in the opening pages
of her Review of Literature, preceding the report.
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study came under heavy fire because of their decision to use only one method, and it
was, at least according to some researchers, an unreliable method at that.
Participant Selection
Case studies can use one participant, or a small group of participants. However, it is
important that the participant pool remain relatively small. The participants can represent
a diverse cross section of society, but this isn't necessary.
For example, the Berkenkotter, Huckin, and Ackerman (1988) study looked at just one
participant, Nate. By contrast, in Janet Emig's (1971) study of the composition process of
twelfth graders, eight participants were selected representing a diverse cross section of
the community, with volunteers from an all-white upper-middle-class suburban school, an
all-black inner-city school, a racially mixed lower-middle-class school, an economically
and racially mixed school, and a university school.
Often, a brief "case history" is done on the participants of the study in order to provide
researchers with a clearer understanding of their participants, as well as some insight as
to how their own personal histories might affect the outcome of the study. For instance,
in Emig's study, the investigator had access to the school records of five of the
participants, and to standardized test scores for the remaining three. Also made available
to the researcher was the information that three of the eight students were selected as
NCTE Achievement Award winners. These personal histories can be useful in later stages
of the study when data are being analyzed and conclusions drawn.
Data Collection
There are six types of data collected in case studies:
1. Documents.
2. Archival records.
3. Interviews.
4. Direct observation.
5. Participant observation.
6. Artifacts.
In the field of composition research, these six sources might be:
1. A writer's drafts.
2. School records of student writers.
3. Transcripts of interviews with a writer.
4. Transcripts of conversations between writers (and protocols).
5. Videotapes and notes from direct field observations.
6. Hard copies of a writer's work on computer.
Depending on whether researchers have chosen to use a single or multi-modal approach
for the case study, they may choose to collect data from one or any combination of these
sources.
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Protocols, that is, transcriptions of participants talking aloud about what they are doing as
they do it, have been particularly common in composition case studies. For example, in
Emig's (1971) study, the students were asked, in four different sessions, to give oral
autobiographies of their writing experiences and to compose aloud three themes in the
presence of a tape recorder and the investigator.
In some studies, only one method of data collection is conducted. For example, the
Flower and Hayes (1981) report on the cognitive process theory of writing depends on
protocol analysis alone. However, using multiple sources of evidence to increase the
reliability and validity of the data can be advantageous.
Case studies are likely to be much more convincing and accurate if they are based on
several different sources of information, following a corroborating mode. This conclusion
is echoed among many composition researchers. For example, in her study of predrafting
processes of high and low-apprehensive writers, Cynthia Selfe (1985) argues that
because "methods of indirect observation provide only an incomplete reflection of the
complex set of processes involved in composing, a combination of several such methods
should be used to gather data in any one study." Thus, in this study, Selfe collected her
data from protocols, observations of students role playing their writing processes, audio
taped interviews with the students, and videotaped observations of the students in the
process of composing.
It can be said then, that cross checking data from multiple sources can help provide a
multidimensional profile of composing activities in a particular setting. Sharan Merriam
(1985) suggests "checking, verifying, testing, probing, and confirming collected data as
you go, arguing that this process will follow in a funnel-like design resulting in less data
gathering in later phases of the study along with a congruent increase in analysis
checking, verifying, and confirming."
It is important to note that in case studies, as in any qualitative descriptive research,
while researchers begin their studies with one or several questions driving the inquiry
(which influence the key factors the researcher will be looking for during data collection),
a researcher may find new key factors emerging during data collection. These might be
unexpected patterns or linguistic features which become evident only during the course
of the research. While not bearing directly on the researcher's guiding questions, these
variables may become the basis for new questions asked at the end of the report, thus
linking to the possibility of further research.
Data Analysis
As the information is collected, researchers strive to make sense of their data. Generally,
researchers interpret their data in one of two ways: holistically or through coding. Holistic
analysis does not attempt to break the evidence into parts, but rather to draw
conclusions based on the text as a whole. Flower and Hayes (1981), for example, make
inferences from entire sections of their students' protocols, rather than searching through
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in other writing stages. The report of this case study is followed by Murray's reply,
wherein he agrees with some of Berkenkotter's conclusions and disagrees with others.
As is the case with other research methodologies, issues of external validity, construct
validity, and reliability need to be carefully considered.
Strengths
Flexibility
The case study approach is a comparatively flexible method of scientific research.
Because its project designs seem to emphasize exploration rather than prescription or
prediction, researchers are comparatively freer to discover and address issues as they
arise in their experiments. In addition, the looser format of case studies allows
researchers to begin with broad questions and narrow their focus as their experiment
progresses rather than attempt to predict every possible outcome before the experiment
is conducted.
Emphasis on Context
By seeking to understand as much as possible about a single subject or small group of
subjects, case studies specialize in "deep data," or "thick description"--information based
on particular contexts that can give research results a more human face. This emphasis
can help bridge the gap between abstract research and concrete practice by allowing
researchers to compare their firsthand observations with the quantitative results obtained
through other methods of research.
Weaknesses
Inherent Subjectivity
"The case study has long been stereotyped as the weak sibling among social science
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methods," and is often criticized as being too subjective and even pseudo-scientific.
Likewise, "investigators who do case studies are often regarded as having deviated from
their academic disciplines, and their investigations as having insufficient precision (that is,
quantification), objectivity and rigor" (Yin 1989). Opponents cite opportunities for
subjectivity in the implementation, presentation, and evaluation of case study research.
The approach relies on personal interpretation of data and inferences. Results may not be
generalizable, are difficult to test for validity, and rarely offer a problem-solving
prescription. Simply put, relying on one or a few subjects as a basis for cognitive
extrapolations runs the risk of inferring too much from what might be circumstance.
High Investment
Case studies can involve learning more about the subjects being tested than most
researchers would care to know--their educational background, emotional background,
perceptions of themselves and their surroundings, their likes, dislikes, and so on. Because
of its emphasis on "deep data," the case study is out of reach for many large-scale
research projects which look at a subject pool in the tens of thousands. A budget request
of $10,000 to examine 200 subjects sounds more efficient than a similar request to
examine four subjects.
Ethical Considerations
Researchers conducting case studies should consider certain ethical issues. For example,
many educational case studies are often financed by people who have, either directly or
indirectly, power over both those being studied and those conducting the investigation
(1985). This conflict of interests can hinder the credibility of the study.
The personal integrity, sensitivity, and possible prejudices and/or biases of the
investigators need to be taken into consideration as well. Personal biases can creep into
how the research is conducted, alternative research methods used, and the preparation
of surveys and questionnaires.
A common complaint in case study research is that investigators change direction during
the course of the study unaware that their original research design was inadequate for
the revised investigation. Thus, the researchers leave unknown gaps and biases in the
study. To avoid this, researchers should report preliminary findings so that the likelihood
of bias will be reduced.
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"case cluster method," that is, when a single unit within a larger case is randomly
sampled, and that data treated quantitatively." For instance, in Emig's (1971)
study, the case cluster method was employed, singling out the productivity of a
single student named Lynn. This cluster profile included an advanced case history of
the subject, specific examination and analysis of individual compositions and
protocols, and extensive interview sessions. The seven remaining students were
then compared with the case of Lynn, to ascertain if there are any shared, or unique
dimensions to the composing process engaged in by these eight students.
3. Conduct Member Checks: Initiate and maintain an active corroboration on the
interpretation of data between the researcher and those who provided the data. In
other words, talk to your subjects.
4. Collect Referential Materials: Complement the file of materials from the actual
site with additional document support. For example, Emig (1971) supports her
initial propositions with historical accounts by writers such as T.S. Eliot, James
Joyce, and D.H. Lawrence. Emig also cites examples of theoretical research done
with regards to the creative process, as well as examples of empirical research
dealing with the writing of adolescents. Specific attention is then given to the four
stages description of the composing process delineated by Helmoltz, Wallas, and
Cowley, as it serves as the focal point in this study.
5. Engage in Peer Consultation: Prior to composing the final draft of the report,
researchers should consult with colleagues in order to establish validity through
pooled judgment.
Although little can be done to combat challenges concerning the generalizability of case
studies, "most writers suggest that qualitative research should be judged as credible and
confirmable as opposed to valid and reliable" (Merriam 1985). Likewise, it has been
argued that "rather than transplanting statistical, quantitative notions of generalizability
and thus finding qualitative research inadequate, it makes more sense to develop an
understanding of generalization that is congruent with the basic characteristics of
qualitative inquiry" (1985). After all, criticizing the case study method for being
ungeneralizable is comparable to criticizing a washing machine for not being able to tell
the correct time. In other words, it is unjust to criticize a method for not being able to do
something which it was never originally designed to do in the first place.
Annotated Bibliography
Armisted, C. (1984). How Useful are Case Studies. Training and Development
Journal, 38 (2), 75-77.
This article looks at eight types of case studies, offers pros and cons of using
case studies in the classroom, and gives suggestions for successfully writing
and using case studies.
Bardovi-Harlig, K. (1997). Beyond Methods: Components of Second Language
Teacher Education. New York: McGraw-Hill.
A compilation of various research essays which address issues of language teacher
education. Essays included are: "Non-native reading research and theory" by Lee, "The
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This article discusses the origins of the case method, looks at the question of
what is a case, gives ideas about learning in case teaching, the purposes it
can serve in the classroom, the ground rules for the case discussion, including
the role of the question, and new directions for case teaching.
Bowman, W. R. (1993). Evaluating JTPA Programs for Economically
Disadvantaged Adults: A Case Study of Utah and General Findings. Washington:
National Commission for Employment Policy.
"To encourage state-level evaluations of JTPA, the Commission and the State
of Utah co-sponsored this report on the effectiveness of JTPA Title II programs
for adults in Utah. The technique used is non-experimental and the
comparison group was selected from registrants with Utah's Employment
Security. In a step-by-step approach, the report documents how
non-experimental techniques can be applied and several specific technical
issues can be addressed."
Boyce, A. (1993) The Case Study Approach for Pedagogists. Annual Meeting of
the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance.
(Address). Washington DC.
This paper addresses how case studies 1) bridge the gap between teaching
theory and application, 2) enable students to analyze problems and develop
solutions for situations that will be encountered in the real world of teaching,
and 3) helps students to evaluate the feasibility of alternatives and to
understand the ramifications of a particular course of action.
Carson, J. (1993)The Case Study: Ideal Home of WAC Quantitative and
Qualitative Data. Annual Meeting of the Conference on College Composition and
Communication. (Address). San Diego.
"Increasingly, one of the most pressing questions for WAC advocates is how to
keep [WAC] programs going in the face of numerous difficulties. Case histories
offer the best chance for fashioning rhetorical arguments to keep WAC
programs going because they offer the opportunity to provide a coherent
narrative that contextualizes all documents and data, including what is
generally considered scientific data. A case study of the WAC program, . . . at
Robert Morris College in Pittsburgh demonstrates the advantages of this
research method. Such studies are ideal homes for both naturalistic and
positivistic data as well as both quantitative and qualitative information."
---. (1991). A Cognitive Process Theory of Writing. College Composition and
Communication. 32. 365-87.
No abstract available.
Cromer, R. (1994) A Case Study of Dissociations Between Language and
Cognition. Constraints on Language Acquisition: Studies of Atypical Children.
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Teacher Education, Denver, CO, March 1985. Offers information of in-service training,
specifically case studies application.
Ellram, L. M. (1996). The Use of the Case Study Method in Logistics Research.
Journal of Business Logistics, 17, 2, 93.
This article discusses the increased use of case study in business research, and
the lack of understanding of when and how to use case study methodology in
business.
Emig, J. (1971) The Composing Processes of Twelfth Graders. Urbana: NTCE.
This case study uses observation, tape recordings, writing samples, and school
records to show that writing in reflexive and extensive situations caused
different lengths of discourse and different clusterings of the components of
the writing process.
Feagin, J. R. (1991). A Case For the Case Study. Chapel Hill: The University of
North Carolina Press.
This book discusses the nature, characteristics, and basic methodological
issues of the case study as a research method.
Feldman, H., Holland, A., & Keefe, K. (1989) Language Abilities after Left
Hemisphere Brain Injury: A Case Study of Twins. Topics in Early Childhood
Special Education, 9, 32-47.
"Describes the language abilities of 2 twin pairs in which 1 twin (the
experimental) suffered brain injury to the left cerebral hemisphere around the
time of birth and1 twin (the control) did not. One pair of twins was initially
assessed at age 23 mo. and the other at about 30 mo.; they were
subsequently evaluated in their homes 3 times at about 6-mo intervals."
Fidel, R. (1984). The Case Study Method: A Case Study. Library and Information
Science Research, 6.
The article describes the use of case study methodology to systematically
develop a model of online searching behavior in which study design is flexible,
subject manner determines data gathering and analyses, and procedures
adapt to the study's progressive change.
Flower, L., & Hayes, J. R. (1984). Images, Plans and Prose: The Representation
of Meaning in Writing. Written Communication, 1, 120-160.
Explores the ways in which writers actually use different forms of knowing to
create prose.
Frey, L. R. (1992).Interpreting Communication Research: A Case Study
Approach Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall.
The book discusses research methodologies in the Communication field. It
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nation building determines the character of the organization; and how the
character of the organization influences the output of the organization."
Kenny, R. (1984). Making the Case for the Case Study. Journal of Curriculum
Studies, 16, (1), 37-51.
The article looks at how and why the case study is justified as a viable and
valuable approach to educational research and program evaluation.
Knirk, F. (1991). Case Materials: Research and Practice. Performance
Improvement Quarterly, 4 (1 ), 73-81.
The article addresses the effectiveness of case studies, subject areas where
case studies are commonly used, recent examples of their use, and case study
design considerations.
Klos, D. (1976). Students as Case Writers. Teaching of Psychology, 3.2, 63-66.
This article reviews a course in which students gather data for an original case
study of another person. The task requires the students to design the study,
collect the data, write the narrative, and interpret the findings.
Leftwich, A. (1981). The Politics of Case Study: Problems of Innovation in
University Education. Higher Education Review, 13.2, 38-64.
The article discusses the use of case studies as a teaching method. Emphasis
is on the instructional materials, interdisciplinarity, and the complex
relationships within the university that help or hinder the method.
Mabrito, M. (1991, Oct.). Electronic Mail as a Vehicle for Peer Response:
Conversations of High and Low Apprehensive Writers. Written Communication,
509-32.
No abstract available.
McCarthy, S., J. (1955). The Influence of Classroom Discourse on Student Texts:
The Case of Ella. East Lansing: Institute for Research on Teaching.
A look at how students of color become marginalized within traditional classroom
discourse. The essay follows the struggles of one black student: Ella.
Matsuhashi, A., ed. (1987). Writing in Real Time: Modeling Production Processes
Norwood, NJ: Ablex Publishing Corporation.
Investigates how writers plan to produce discourse for different purposes to
report, to generalize, and to persuade, as well as how writers plan for
sentence level units of language. To learn about planning, an observational
measure of pause time was used" (ERIC).
Merriam, S. B. (1985). The Case Study in Educational Research: A Review of
Selected Literature. Journal of Educational Thought, 19.3, 204-17.
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Popkewitz edits this series of essays that address case studies on educational change and
the training of teachers. The essays vary in terms of discipline and scope. Also, several
authors include case studies of educational practices in countries other than the United
States.
---. (1984). The Predrafting Processes of Four High- and Four Low Apprehensive
Writers. Research in the Teaching of English, 18, (1), 45-64.
No abstract available.
Rasmussen, P. (1985, March) A Case Study on the Evaluation of Research at the
Technical University of Denmark. International Journal of Institutional
Management in Higher Education, 9 (1).
This is an example of a case study methodology used to evaluate the
chemistry and chemical engineering departments at the University of
Denmark.
Roth, K. J. (1986). Curriculum Materials, Teacher Talk, and Student Learning:
Case Studies in Fifth-Grade Science Teaching. East Lansing: Institute for
Research on Teaching.
Roth offers case studies on elementary teachers, elementary school teaching, science
studies and teaching, and verbal learning.
Selfe, C. L. (1985). An Apprehensive Writer Composes. When a Writer Can't
Write: Studies in Writer's Block and Other Composing-Process Problems. (pp.
83-95). Ed. Mike Rose. NMY: Guilford.
No abstract available.
Smith-Lewis, M., R. and Ford, A. (1987). A User's Perspective on Augmentative
Communication. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 3, 12-7.
"During a series of in-depth interviews, a 25-yr-old woman with cerebral palsy
who utilized augmentative communication reflected on the effectiveness of the
devices designed for her during her school career."
St. Pierre, R., G. (1980, April). Follow Through: A Case Study in Metaevaluation
Research . 64th Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research
Association. (Address).
The three approaches to metaevaluation are evaluation of primary
evaluations, integrative meta-analysis with combined primary evaluation
results, and re-analysis of the raw data from a primary evaluation.
Stahler, T., M. (1996, Feb.) Early Field Experiences: A Model That Worked. ERIC.
"This case study of a field and theory class examines a model designed to
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"This case study of a field and theory class examines a model designed to
provide meaningful field experiences for preservice teachers while remaining
consistent with the instructor's beliefs about the role of teacher education in
preparing teachers for the classroom."
Stake, R. E. (1995). The Art of Case Study Research. Thousand Oaks: Sage
Publications.
This book examines case study research in education and case study
methodology.
Stiegelbauer, S. (1984) Community, Context, and Co-curriculum: Situational
Factors Influencing School Improvements in a Study of High Schools. Presented
at the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association, New
Orleans, LA.
Discussion of several case studies: one looking at high school environments, another
examining educational innovations.
Stolovitch, H. (1990). Case Study Method. Performance And Instruction, 29, (9),
35-37.
This article describes the case study method as a form of simulation and
presents guidelines for their use in professional training situations.
Thaller, E. (1994). Bibliography for the Case Method: Using Case Studies in
Teacher Education. RIE. 37 p.
This bibliography presents approximately 450 citations on the use of case
studies in teacher education from 1921-1993.
Thrane, T. (1986). On Delimiting the Senses of Near-Synonyms in Historical
Semantics: A Case Study of Adjectives of 'Moral Sufficiency' in the Old English
Andreas. Linguistics Across Historical and Geographical Boundaries: In Honor of
Jacek Fisiak on the Occasion of his Fiftieth Birthday. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
No abstract available.
United Nations. (1975). Food and Agriculture Organization. Report on the
FAO/UNFPA Seminar on Methodology, Research and Country: Case Studies on
Population, Employment and Productivity. Rome: United Nations.
This example case study shows how the methodology can be used in a
demographic and psychographic evaluation. At the same time, it discusses the
formation and instigation of the case study methodology itself.
Van Vugt, J. P., ed. (1994). Aids Prevention and Services: Community Based
Research. Westport: Bergin and Garvey.
"This volume has been five years in the making. In the process, some of the
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policy applications called for have met with limited success, such as free
needle exchange programs in a limited number of American cities, providing
condoms to prison inmates, and advertisements that depict same-sex couples.
Rather than dating our chapters that deal with such subjects, such policy
applications are verifications of the type of research demonstrated here.
Furthermore, they indicate the critical need to continue community based
research in the various communities threatened by acquired
immuno-deficiency syndrome (AIDS) . . . "
Welch, W., ed. (1981, May). Case Study Methodology in Educational Evaluation.
Proceedings of the Minnesota Evaluation Conference. Minnesota. (Address).
The four papers in these proceedings provide a comprehensive picture of the
rationale, methodology, strengths, and limitations of case studies.
Williams, G. (1987). The Case Method: An Approach to Teaching and Learning in
Educational Administration. RIE, 31p.
This paper examines the viability of the case method as a teaching and
learning strategy in instructional systems geared toward the training of
personnel of the administration of various aspects of educational systems.
Yin, R. K. (1993). Advancing Rigorous Methodologies: A Review of 'Towards
Rigor in Reviews of Multivocal Literatures.' Review of Educational Research, 61, (3).
(3).
"R. T. Ogawa and B. Malen's article does not meet its own recommended
standards for rigorous testing and presentation of its own conclusions. Use of
the exploratory case study to analyze multivocal literatures is not supported,
and the claim of grounded theory to analyze multivocal literatures may be
stronger."
---. (1989). Case Study Research: Design and Methods. London: Sage
Publications Inc.
This book discusses in great detail, the entire design process of the case
study, including entire chapters on collecting evidence, analyzing evidence,
composing the case study report, and designing single and multiple case
studies.
Related Links
Consider the following list of related Web sites for more information on the topic of case
study research. Note: although many of the links cover the general category of
qualitative research, all have sections that address issues of case studies.
1. Sage Publications on Qualitative Methodology: Search here for a
comprehensive list of new books being published about "Qualitative Methodology"
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http://www.sagepub.co.uk/
2. The International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education: An on-line
journal "to enhance the theory and practice of qualitative research in education."
On-line submissions are welcome.
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/tf/09518398.html
3. Qualitative Research Resources on the Internet: From syllabi to home pages
to bibliographies. All links relate somehow to qualitative research.
http://www.nova.edu/ssss/QR/qualres.html
Citation Information
Bronwyn Becker, Patrick Dawson, Karen Devine, Carla Hannum, Steve Hill, Jon
Leydens, Debbie Matuskevich, Carol Traver, and Mike Palmquist.. (1994 2012). Case Studies. Writing@CSU. Colorado State University. Available at
http://writing.colostate.edu/guides/guide.cfm?guideid=60.
Copyright Information
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