+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Agenda for today

Agenda for today

Date post: 16-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: dunn
View: 12 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Department of Information Systems INF 799 Research Methodologies and Proposal Mr N. Mavetera Adapted From Prof Dewald Roode. Agenda for today. A closer look at the field of Information Systems Epistemology and Ontology of the field of Information Systems - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
35
Department of Information Systems INF 799 Research Methodologies and Proposal Mr N. Mavetera Adapted From Prof Dewald Roode
Transcript
Page 1: Agenda for today

Department of Information Systems

INF 799Research Methodologies and

Proposal

Mr N. MaveteraAdapted From Prof Dewald Roode

Page 2: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Agenda for todayAgenda for today

A closer look at the field of Information Systems Epistemology and Ontology of the field of Information Systems The four paradigms of Burrell and Morgan Research paradigms

Positivist Interpretivist Critical

The theoretical underpinnings of interpretivist and critical research

Research Methodologies

Page 3: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The field of Information SystemsThe field of Information Systems

Is it a scientific discipline? What is a ‘discipline’?

The term ‘discipline’ is often loosely applied to indicate the organized ‘body of knowledge’ or ‘domains of discourse’ within which (mainly) academic activities concerning a specific topic or a number of related topics, are conducted

Page 4: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The field of Information SystemsThe field of Information Systems

Banville and Landry’s* classification of scientific disciplines according to three dimensions Degree of strategic dependence Degree of strategic task uncertainty Degree of functional dependence

*Communications of the ACM, Vol 32, No. 1 (1989) pp 48-60

Page 5: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The field of Information SystemsThe field of Information Systems

Strategic dependenceRefers to the extent to which researchers have to persuade colleagues of the significance and importance of their problem and approach in order to obtain a high reputation from them (high, low)

Page 6: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The field of Information SystemsThe field of Information Systems

Strategic task uncertaintyDefined in relation to the fact that the stability of problem formulation and the hierarchy of problems according their importance and significance vary across fields. It is low when members of a field agree on a hierarchy of research problems and high in the presence of loosely coupled ‘schools of thought’

Page 7: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The field of Information SystemsThe field of Information Systems

Functional dependenceDenotes the extent to which researchers have to use the specific ideas of fellow specialists in order to construct knowledge claims which are regarded as useful contributions (high, low)

Page 8: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Degree of functional dependence

Low High

Low

Low

High

High

Degree of strategic task uncertainty

Degree of strategic task uncertainty

Degree of strategic dependence

Low

High

Fragmented adhocracy

Professional adhocracy

Technologically integrated

bureaucracy

Polycentric oligarchy

Partitioned bureaucracy

Polycentric profession

Conceptually integrated

bureaucracy

The field of Information Systems

Page 9: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The field of Information SystemsThe field of Information Systems

Research in IS is rather personal and weakly co-ordinated in the field as a whole

A researcher can gain a reputation by contributing in a way that is largely specific to a group of colleagues or a research site

The field is largely open to an educated public and amateurs can effect the field’s standards

Barriers to entry in the field are weak and going from one fragment to another is quite easy

Reputations are fairly fluid, control of resources is unstable, coalitions are likely to be ephemeral and leadership is often of a charismatic nature

Common-sense languages dominate the communication system

Page 10: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Epistemology and Ontology of the field of ISEpistemology and Ontology of the field of IS

EpistemologyRefers to the type of (valid) knowledge that can be obtained about a phenomenon under study

OntologyRefers to the underlying assumptions made about phenomena under study

Page 11: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Epistemological assumptionsEpistemological assumptions

Objectivist position Models and methods from the natural sciences can be applied to the

study of human affairs, treating the social world as if it were the natural world

Institutional aspects of social systems are seen to be independent of human action, hence portraying social reality as objective

Page 12: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Epistemological assumptionsEpistemological assumptions

Subjectivist position Denies the appropriateness of the natural science paradigm for studying

the social world, stating that the social researcher cannot separate him/herself from the phenomena being studied, and therefore can at best be relative and never completely objective

Subjectivists attempt to understand social phenomena by explaining how individuals create and recreate their social world through deliberate action

Page 13: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Ontological assumptionsOntological assumptions

Order view: an orderly society, functionally stable and co-ordinated

Conflict view: society is in a state of change, conflict and disintegration

Page 14: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Functionalism Interpretivism

Radical structuralism Neo-humanism

Order

Conflict

Objectivism Subjectivism

Burrell and Morgan: Sociological Paradigms and Organisational Analysis, Heinemann, London, 1979

The four paradigmsThe four paradigms

Page 15: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The four paradigmsThe four paradigms

The functionalist paradigmIt is assumed that the social world is ordered and composed of relatively concrete empirical artefacts and relationships that can be identified, studied and measured through approaches derived from the natural sciences.

Page 16: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The four paradigmsThe four paradigms

The interpretive paradigmIs characterized by a need to understand the world as it is, to understand the fundamental nature of the social world at the level of subjective experience. It seeks explanation within the frame of reference of participant in, rather than objective observer of, the action. It assumes an orderly world.

Page 17: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The four paradigmsThe four paradigms

The radical structuralist paradigmShares an objective departure point with the functionalist paradigm, but assumes that radical change is built into the very nature and structure of contemporary society. It focuses primarily on the structure and analysis of economic power relationships

Page 18: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The four paradigmsThe four paradigms

The neo-humanist paradigmDiffers from the interpretivist paradigm only in the sense that it is committed to overthrowing or transcending the limitations of the existing social world. It assumes a social world that is in flux and conflict.

Page 19: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The four paradigmsThe four paradigms

Burrell and Morgan view these paradigms as mutually exclusive In practice, problems rarely allow us to study them within a single

paradigm, and a multi-paradigmatic approach is often indicated or even required

Page 20: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Use of the four paradigmsUse of the four paradigms

Four paradigms of IS development* Helps to identify an appropriate research paradigm Helps to generate research questions (more about this later

when we discuss the structure of the Project Proposal)

*Hirschheim and Klein: CACM, Vol 32, (1989) pp1199 - 1216

Page 21: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Research paradigmsResearch paradigms

Positivist Interpretivist Critical

Page 22: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Research paradigmsResearch paradigms

Positivist Positivist research falls within the functionalist paradigm It assumes a physical and social world, independent of humans, which can be

characterized and measured The researcher is assumed to be objective and impartial, and aims at uncovering reality

through defining constructs and precise quantitative measures It is the preferred research approach in the natural sciences, and its use in the social

sciences is based on the belief that social sciences can be investigated in the same way

Fundamentally, the positivist approach involves the manipulation of theoretical propositions using the rules of formal logic and the rules of ‘hypothetico-deductive’ logic

Rationality underlies the major claims of positivists, and strongly developed formalized method (mathematical, statistical) are used for checking the validity of their findings, thus displaying the rigour of the approach

Page 23: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Research paradigmsResearch paradigms

Interpretivist Differs from positivist research approach in that the epistemological stance

is that our knowledge of reality is a social construction by human actors Value-free data cannot be obtained, since the researcher uses his/her

preconceptions to guide the research process During the research process, the researcher interacts with human subjects,

thereby changing the perceptions of both parties The main aim of interpretive research is to understand, rather than to

predict

Page 24: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Research paradigmsResearch paradigms

Critical realism Ontologically,CR assumes the existence of a domain of structures and mechanisms,

events, and experiences (the Real). These structures have causal powers or tendencies the interplay of which leads to the occurrence (or absence) of particular events (the Actual). These structures may be physical, social, or conceptual, and may well be unobservable except through their effects. Some, but not all, of the events will be observed or experienced by people and thus become Empirical.

Epistemologically, CR recognizes that our knowledge is always provisional and historically and culturally relative – we do not have observer-independent access to the world – but this does not make all theories or beliefs equally valid.

Methodologically, the CR view is that science is not essentially about discovering universal laws, purely predictive ability, or the simple description of meanings and beliefs. Rather, it is centrally concerned with explanation, understanding, and interpretation. It moves from some phenomenon (or its absence) that has been observed or experienced, to the postulation of some underlying mechanism(s) or structure(s) which, if they existed, would causally generate the phenomenon. Efforts are then made to confirm or refute the proposed mechanisms. (Mingers, paper 10)

Page 25: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The theoretical underpinnings of interpretivist and critical The theoretical underpinnings of interpretivist and critical research (an incomplete list)research (an incomplete list)

Hermeneutics Structuration Theory (Giddens) Giddens’ “Consequences of Modernity” Actor-Network Theory Theories about the social context of Information Systems (e.g.,

the Human Environment Model) Critical Social Theory (Habermas)

Page 26: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

The theoretical underpinnings of interpretivist and critical The theoretical underpinnings of interpretivist and critical researchresearch

How is it used in research? As a way of thinking and speaking about the phenomena being studied As a “lens” through which the data is viewed and interpreted

We will come back to the theoretical bases after acquiring a “feel” for research methodology

Page 27: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Research MethodologiesResearch Methodologies

Field studies (survey research) Case study research Ethnography Action research Discourse analysis Grounded theory research

Page 28: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Field Studies (survey research)Field Studies (survey research)

Common in the positivist tradition Collecting data through questionnaires or interviews Analyzing the collected data to draw conclusions about relationships

between particular sets of data Could also be exploratory and in the interpretivist tradition, as

long as the data they yield are not regarded as ‘objective facts’ but rather as products of the respondents’ interpretation of their situation

Page 29: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Case Study ResearchCase Study Research

Can involve only quantitative data, only qualitative data, or both

Within the idiographic* rather than the nomothetic† research style, trying to understand a phenomenon in its contexts rather than seeking general laws about the phenomenon

Uses multiple methods of data collection After data collection, the researcher deductively or

inductively arrives at explanations or causal linkscontinued …

Page 30: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Case Study Research (continued)Case Study Research (continued)

Lee has developed a scientific methodology (MISQ 13(1): 33-50) with which to conduct case study research in the IS field

Walsham: ‘the validity of an extrapolation from an individual case or cases depends not on the representativeness of such cases in the statistical sense, but on the plausibility and cogency of the logical reasoning used in describing the results from the cases, and in drawing conclusions from them’ (Interpreting Information Systems in Organizations, Wiley 1993)

Page 31: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

EthnographyEthnography

A form of research in which the researcher (the ethnographer) participates overtly or covertly in people’s daily lives for an extended time

Data are collected by questioning, observing, listening, etc

Page 32: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Action ResearchAction Research

Requires experimentation, in which participants in real-life situations collaborate with the action researcher to identify and solve problems of social practice

Usually continues over an extended period of time Usually has as its objective the testing of some theory or

hypothesis The action researcher is not an independent observer but an

active participant, and the process of change becomes the subject of research

Page 33: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Discourse analysisDiscourse analysis

Discourse Linguists understand discourse as language use; psychologists as cognition, and

sociologists as social interaction An interrelated set of texts, and the practices of their production, dissemination, and

reception, that brings an object into being Critical discourse analysis

Focuses on discursive activity in constituting and sustaining traditional power relations Sensitive to wider issues, but does not consider the individual as an active agent and

therefore does not treat text as a human action and a mediator of context Social constructivist discourse analysis

Discursive patterns in language are viewed as regularities in text through which phenomena are constructed, reconstructed and ignored

Example: analysis of email exchanges between members of a virtual team to analyse the phenomenon of “presence” within a virtual team (Panteli, paper 7)

Page 34: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Grounded Theory ResearchGrounded Theory Research

Theory that is systematically and inductively arrived at through ongoing collection and analysis of data

Does not begin with preconceived ideas or theory and then force the data to fit them for the purpose of verification or testing – it is grounded systematically in the data

The researcher would then typically have no research problem, merely an interest in a particular area

The research problem emerges during data collection The yield of grounded theory research is conceptual hypotheses,

not verified theory A grounded theory is modifiable as new data or properties

emerge

Page 35: Agenda for today

INF 830 Research Methodologies and Project Proposal Prof Dewald Roode

Useful referencesUseful references

Choosing Information Systems Research Approaches, Chapter 8 in Galliers, RD (ed) (1992) Information Systems Research: Issues, Methods and Practical Guidelines. Oxford: Blackwell

The Use and Misuse of Statistical Methods in Information Systems Research, Chapter 11 in Galliers

Qualitative research in Information Systemshttp://www.auckland.ac.nz/msis/isworld/index.html


Recommended