How to Do Your Case Study: A Guide for Students and ResearchersCase Study is one of the most widely applied methods of research and instruction in use today. Cases are used to frame research, aid teaching and help learning the world over. Yet, despite being so widely used, there remains a great deal of uncertainty about what constitutes case study research and how case studies should be designed and carried out. In this lucid, accessible and often witty new text, Gary Thomas introduces students and researchers to the basics of case study research. Using a wide range of real-life examples, this book sets out for those new to the method how best to design and carry out case studies in the social sciences and humanities How to do your case study: a guide for students and researchers deals with the core issues and methods that anyone new to case study will need to understand: - What is a case study? - When and why should case study methods be used? - How are case studies designed? - What methods can be used? - How do we analyse and make sense of our data? - How do we write up and write about our case? How to do your Case Study will be essential reading for any student or researcher in the Social Sciences, Health Sciences, in Business Studies, in Education and the Humanities. |
Contents
Getting your bearings | 1 |
1 What is a case study? | 3 |
2 The case study and research design | 25 |
3 Models of the whole | 45 |
Whats important? | 61 |
Getting down to doing it | 73 |
Finding your case | 75 |
6 Your purpose | 97 |
8 Your process | 137 |
Getting on with it and finishing | 159 |
some ways toc ollect data and evidence | 161 |
10 A toolkit for analysing and thinking | 170 |
11 Writing your study | 194 |
Generalisation induction abduction phronesis and theory | 206 |
219 | |
225 | |