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HEL-8042 Qualitative methodology and methods in health researchs - 5 stp


The course is administrated by

Institutt for samfunnsmedisin

Type of course

The course is part of the PhD-program of the Faculty of Health Sciences, UiT - The Arctic University of Norway. It is available as a singular course.

Course overlap

HEL-8025 Qualitative Methods in Health Research 2 stp

Course contents

Qualitative research methods are useful for the study of human experience and people’s way of understanding and reasoning. They also create understanding of social contexts, relations and practice/actions, i.e. the experience of patients, their relations to health professionals, the role of the health system and the practices of both patients and professionals.  This course will provide in-depth knowledge on what qualitative methods are and how to use them, how methodologies guide research and what are the important steps in developing a qualitative study. The course is a specialised and advanced course relevant for PhD-students within medicine, health sciences and social sciences.

In the course, we will first go in-depth with the most commonly used methods in health research (observation, interviews, focus group discussions, narrative inquiry, document analysis, visual methods). We will discuss each method and their prerequisites, adequacy, challenges and possibilities with special emphasis on what are the premises and assumptions for each method. Specific issues for each method will be critically discussed.

Second, all methods will be compared and discussed in terms of their sustainability for a given project design, their adequacy as methodic tool and their differences. We will focus on how different methodologies apply these methods and produce knowledge through a distinct ‘logic of inquiry’.

Third, the course will emphasize and demonstrate how all choices of methodologies and methods require consistency between theory of science, research question and design. Further, we will address how any research project is embedded in research communities informed by contemporary values, policies and economics.       


Application deadline

Applicants from Nordic countries: 1 June

Application for exchange students and Fulbright students: 15 April


Admission requirements

Participants must be enrolled in a PhD program or a Student Research Program at UiT or another Norwegian/Nordic university. PhD students from other universities may also apply. All participants must have a qualitative design or a mixed methods design in their PhD research projects.

We recommend that participants have competence and knowledge of theory of science, research ethics and research design at PhD level (e.g. through HEL-8040 or a similar course).  Participants are also assumed to have basic skills in qualitative research.

The course will be held only with a minimum of 6 participants. The maximum number of participants is 12 students.

If there are more applicants than available seats in the course, students will be given priority from category 1 to 4:

Applicants who have minimum a master's degree or equivalent, but have not been admitted to a PhD programme

Application code: 9301


Objective of the course

Knowledge:

By the end of this course, the candidate has knowledge that enables him/her to:

 

Skills

By the end of this course, the candidate has skills that enable him/her to

General competence

By the end of this course, the candidate is expected to be able to


Language of instruction

English

Teaching methods

The course will consist of 3x2 full day seminars during one academic year. Preparation in terms of reading the curriculum for the course is expected.  

Each seminar day will be a combination of teacher-led and student-led activities. The educational approach is based on lectures and student involvement through interactive teaching, group work, and peer learning. Seminars will be led by two teachers co-teaching and consist of:

 

method of the day


Assessment

An individually written home exam over two weeks on a given topic, length 2000 - 3000 words (written in English). Graded as pass or fail.

 

Students who fail the exam are allowed to deliver a revised version within 2 weeks after the marking has been announced.


Date for examination

Take-home assignment hand out date 22.04.2021 hand in date 06.05.2021

The date for the exam can be changed. The final date will be announced at your faculty early in May and early in November.