Sunday, May 20, 2007

To Post a Comment or add a post

To post a comment, you first have to sign in. The id is qualsw@yahoo.com. The password is qualitative. Once you are signed in, click on the post you want to comment on. The links are on the right of the posted blogs. When the new screen comes up with the post you requested, scroll to the end of the post. Then click on "post a comment." A screen will come up and you can post your comment.

To add a post, click on "new post" which is on the right top. After you write your post, then click on publish post or your can save it as a draft. If you want to edit your own post, then click on "new post" and then on edit posts. Only edit your own posts.

Jane Gilgun
jgilgun@umn.edu

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Video analysis and Social work

I am interested in talking to others who use video analysis or are interesting in developing skills using video analysis in their work. After the conference at Champaign Illinois, I had the opportunity to work with Dr David Woods who has been working on software for a while which is changing the way analysis is done using video.

I think that opportunities lie in using this within Social Work qualitative research. I would be really keen to speak to others who are working with video to develop a better understanding of approaches that are unique to Social work and also to consider developing work that uses video analysis, with others within the profession.

Paul

Hello to Social Work Researchers Internationally

Hello, this blog is for social workers who do qualitative research. It is an open blog. I will send the blog address, ID, and password to everyone on the list I put together from a meeting of social workers at the 3rd International Congress of Qualitative Research held in Urbana, IL, early in May 2007. The id for this blog is qualsw@yahoo.com. The password is qualitative.

The purpose of the blog is to share whatever we want to share about qualitative research. I am doing some things that I would like to get feedback on. For instance, I see qualitative methods a huge role for qualitative methods in documenting programs that work. For too long, social work has been unable to show the everyday activities that lead to program success. I believe that participant observation, interviewing, and document analysis can do this. I will write more about this later.