I am doing a comparative qualitative research on youth policy. I am interested in knowing how to design, code, analyze data and what theory to use in comparative qualitative research. Let me also know if there is any material about this topic.
It's available online in Software as a Service pricing packages. Its results are algorithmically derived and preserve the voice of your participants, so it reduces inadvertent interpretive bias. A variety of qualitative paradigms can be used with Raven's Eye (e.g., Phenomenology, Grounded Theory), as can quantitative and statistical approaches.
Raven's Eye is browser-based, so you can use it across multiple platforms (including smartphones and tablets). The graphic user interface is much more intuitive to learn than other such programs, although we also provide ample free tutorials, technicals, and practical information on the website.
Online graphs and downloadable results facilitate many types of visualization. There are plenty of examples online as well, including an analysis of everyday people's perspectives on the meaning of life, reasons for voter preference, analyses of U.S. political party platforms and inaugural addresses of U.S. Presidents.
Data can be analyzed in 65 different languages. This is a super great function if you are interested on doing research with people who speak varying languages other than English. But Raven's Eye analyzes English, as well.
I'd be a little concerned that you're already doing the research before being familiar with the basics of handling data in the methodology you've chosen... but that aside, there's plenty of material out there. "Basics of Qualitative Research" mentioned above is a start, but otherwise a standard library / journal search should turn up plenty to go on.
Or was there something more specific about it that you weren't sure about?
It's available online in Software as a Service pricing packages. Its results are algorithmically derived and preserve the voice of your participants, so it reduces inadvertent interpretive bias. A variety of qualitative paradigms can be used with Raven's Eye (e.g., Phenomenology, Grounded Theory), as can quantitative and statistical approaches.
Raven's Eye is browser-based, so you can use it across multiple platforms (including smartphones and tablets). The graphic user interface is much more intuitive to learn than other such programs, although we also provide ample free tutorials, technicals, and practical information on the website.
Online graphs and downloadable results facilitate many types of visualization. There are plenty of examples online as well, including an analysis of everyday people's perspectives on the meaning of life, reasons for voter preference, analyses of U.S. political party platforms and inaugural addresses of U.S. Presidents.
Data can be analyzed in 65 different languages. This is a super great function if you are interested on doing research with people who speak varying languages other than English. But Raven's Eye analyzes English, as well.