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Monday 28 April 2025 at 09:30 to Friday 2 May 2025 at 16:00
Monday 17 March 2025 at 22:55
Dalgas Have - room DHV 2.69, 2.70 & 2.71 (second floor),
Dalgas Have 15,
2000 Frederiksberg
Dalgas Have - room DHV 2.69, 2.70 & 2.71 (second floor)
Dalgas Have 15
2000 Frederiksberg
Faculty
Associate Professor Jasper Hotho
Department of Management, Society and Communication, CBS
Associate Professor Verena Girschik
Department of Management, Society and Communication, CBS.
Prerequisites
Aim
In this course, we aim to equip you with the ability to read, write and evaluate papers applying qualitative methodologies, and to understand how qualitative research — and case-study research in particular — can contribute to theory building. During the course, we will pay particular attention to the logic and internal consistency of the case study research process. That is, the importance of coherence and alignment between the research question, qualitative approach, research design, and opportunities for theory development.
In our experience as authors, reviewers, and editors, this is a crucial issue when seeking to publish qualitative research — and a point where many authors struggle. The course does not aim to provide an exhaustive overview of qualitative methods, nor will it cover more specific approaches to data collection and analysis. As a result, this course complements courses that dive into specific methods.
Course content
For details, see below under ‘Lecture plan’.
Teaching style
The course is organized as a five-day intensive workshop, consisting of eight sessions. Each session combines an introductory talk with in-class assignments and discussion. We hope and expect that you will prepare for each session by reading the assigned literature. Also, please make sure to look into the exercise material, which will serve as the starting point for many of our in-class discussions. For those of you who are actively doing or planning to do case-study research, the course also offers opportunities for you to discuss your own project. The course closes with a review assignment in which you are challenged to evaluate a paper and to offer constructive suggestions for its improvement. The review should be around 2-3 pages (max. 1500 words).
Discussions of PhD projects
The course includes two exercises where we split the class into two groups and apply insights from the course to your projects. As we move closer to the course start and in preparation for these sessions, we will offer you the opportunity to send us a 3-pager with:
Lecture plan (Preliminary)
DAY 1: Qualitative research: Alternative approaches
Session 1: Introduction
Monday morning, 9:30-12:00
Facilitators: Verena Girschik & Jasper Hotho
Session 1 provides an introduction to the content, and structure of the course, the value of qualitative research to theory development, and the challenges of theorizing from qualitative data. Students will also have the opportunity to briefly introduce and discuss their projects. The session ends with a discussion of the role of the research question in the qualitative research process.
Topics include:
Readings
Session 2: Alternative approaches to qualitative research
Monday afternoon, 13:00-16:00
Facilitator: Jasper Hotho
Session 2 introduces different approaches to doing qualitative research. We will practice how to evaluate the strengths, weaknesses, and appropriateness of these approaches, and to recognize these approaches in action.
Topics include:
Readings
DAY 2: Designing qualitative research
Session 3: Designing qualitative research
Tuesday morning, 9:30-12:00
Facilitator: Jasper Hotho
Session 3 introduces students to central elements of case-study research designs, including case selection and the selective introduction of variance. The session also highlights the importance of congruence between research question and research design.
Topics include:
Readings
Discussion of students’ projects (Part I)
Tuesday afternoon, 13:00-16:00
Facilitators: Jasper Hotho & Verena Girschik
DAY 3: Evaluating qualitative research / Moving from findings to theory
Session 4: Evaluating qualitative research
Wednesday morning, 9:30-12:00
Facilitator: Verena Girschik
Session 4 focuses on the evaluation of qualitative research designs. Students are introduced to the meaning of rigor in qualitative research designs, and some of the ways in which rigor can be evaluated.
Topics include:
Readings
Session 5: Theorizing from qualitative findings
Wednesday afternoon, 13:00-16:00
Facilitator: Jasper Hotho
Session 5 introduces students to different types of theory and theorizing. We also discuss different forms of theory development and how these are enabled by different qualitative approaches.
Topics include:
Readings
DAY 4: Qualitative research: Contributing to theory
Session 6: Constructing a theoretical contribution
Thursday morning, 9:30-12:00
Facilitator: Verena Girschik
In session 6, we will look at alternative ways in which a theoretical contribution may be constructed. We will focus on the iterative process of going back and forth between data and theory and discuss alternative ways in which contributions may be constructed.
Topics include:
Readings
Discussion of students’ projects (Part II)
Thursday afternoon, 13:00-16:00
Facilitators: Jasper Hotho & Verena Girschik
DAY 5: Writing and publishing qualitative research
Session 7: Writing up qualitative case-study research
Friday morning, 9:30-12:00
Facilitator: Verena Girschik
Session 7 focuses on the challenges of condensing rich qualitative findings into a concise and convincing manuscript, and the importance of writing to convince reviewers of the credibility of qualitative research findings in the absence of significance levels, effect sizes, and measures of explained variance.
Topics include:
Readings
Session 8: Editor and author perspectives on publishing qualitative research
Friday afternoon, 13:00-16:00
Facilitators: Jasper Hotho & Verena Girschik
The course ends with a discussion between the instructors and participants of the course on the challenges of getting qualitative research published in leading academic journals in the fields of organization and management. The instructors will draw on their experience as authors, reviewers, and editors of qualitative research papers.
Topics include:
Readings
Exam
N/A
Course Literature
See lecture plan above.
Note: In case we receive more registrations for the course than we have seats, seats will be filled based on the motivation uploaded upon registration. CBS PhD students will have priority.
Registration Deadline and Conditions
The registration deadline is 17 March 2025. If you wish to cancel your registration, it must be done by this date. By this deadline, we determine whether there are enough registrations to run the course or decide who should be offered a seat if we have received too many registrations.
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CBS PhD School
Nina Iversen
Phone: +45 3815 2475
ni.research@cbs.dk
CBS PhD School
Nina Iversen
Phone: +45 3815 2475
ni.research@cbs.dk