Styles of Qualitative Writing and Reporting
Type:
Workshop
Category:
Azores
Place:
University of the Azores - Room 3
Date and time:
12:30 to 14:00 on 01/24/2024
11:30 -13:00 (Azores timetable) - In-person Workshop
This 90-minute workshop outlines an in-person and online six clock hour course in writing experiences with up to nine different styles of qualitative reportage: Descriptive and Realistic, Analytic and Formal, Interpretive, Confessional, Reflexive, Critical and Advocacy, Literary Narrative, Autoethnographic, and Poetic. Participants receive an overview of each style, accompanied with brief examples from the scholarly literature. Ten to 15-minute blocks of writing time are provided throughout for writers to document and experiment with a current research project’s manuscript, an unpublished thesis or dissertation, or a data base awaiting analytic review. Reading aloud and receiving peer feedback provide writers rapid assessment of their work in progress with ideas for further development.
The workshop describes the primary content of each writing module and its accompanying writing prompts and feedback frame, plus recommended titles for writing resources, strategies for maintaining effective writing habits, and reflections on the legacy of a writer’s work. Participants in this workshop will experiment with writing a passage in at least three different styles.
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Johnny Saldaña is Professor Emeritus from Arizona State University’s School of Film, Dance, and Theatre. He is the author of Longitudinal Qualitative Research: Analyzing Change through Time, Fundamentals of Qualitative Research, The Coding Manual for Qualitative Researchers, Thinking Qualitatively: Methods of Mind, Ethnotheatre: Research from Page to Stage, Writing Qualitatively: The Selected Works of Johnny Saldaña, co-author with the late Miles and Huberman for Qualitative Data Analysis: A Methods Sourcebook, and co-author with Matt Omasta for Qualitative Research: Analyzing Life. Saldaña’s qualitative methods works have been cited and referenced in more than 30,000 research studies conducted in over 135 countries.