no rule for that. you can send it to some or all, up to you and this depends on the research design in general. In some studies you send all participants the summary, because you want to follow this up with a second interview. In others, however, you may just decide to pick some random participants for validation and send them the summary/the transcript.
It is NOT up to you whether you want apply the member check or not, but it is up to your level of academic integrity and also the journal you want to get publish your manuscript in. A simple check of top-tier journals will support this condition. If your participants want to change/delete something it is their right to do so, this is an ethical question of being honest as an academic researcher. If the participants want to change/delete something than it is obvious that the researcher failed to communicate well his/her research problem/question and/or asked inappropriate or wrong questions. I would expect that you, Jarek, started this video from explaining your ethical stance first.
very useful! thanks Dr. :)
Once again, thank you so much!! Amazing video, very helpful!!
Lets say you decide to send the summary of results- how do you choose how many participants to send to? Is there a specific rule on it?
no rule for that. you can send it to some or all, up to you and this depends on the research design in general. In some studies you send all participants the summary, because you want to follow this up with a second interview. In others, however, you may just decide to pick some random participants for validation and send them the summary/the transcript.
@@qualitativeresearcher Thank you Dr Kriukow for the prompt response 👍
Hi Dr ! For illetrate people or children we will do member checking interviews?
we can do it in other forms, rather than sending them transcripts we can call them and ask for clarification
@@qualitativeresearcher tq so much Dr
Thank you, this helped me a lot.
Thank you!
extremely useful, thank you
Glad to hear that, thank you!
well explained.
Thank you
It is NOT up to you whether you want apply the member check or not, but it is up to your level of academic integrity and also the journal you want to get publish your manuscript in. A simple check of top-tier journals will support this condition. If your participants want to change/delete something it is their right to do so, this is an ethical question of being honest as an academic researcher. If the participants want to change/delete something than it is obvious that the researcher failed to communicate well his/her research problem/question and/or asked inappropriate or wrong questions. I would expect that you, Jarek, started this video from explaining your ethical stance first.