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Phenomenology Report

This document provides an overview of phenomenology. It defines phenomenology as the direct investigation and description of phenomena as consciously experienced by people. Phenomenology searches for the meaning or essence of an experience rather than measurements or explanations. It emphasizes subjectivity and uses methods like interviews and conversations to understand lived experiences. Strengths include helping understand experiences and exposing misconceptions, while limitations are the time consuming nature and difficulty establishing reliability. The document also outlines phenomenology methods such as bracketing biases, collecting data from lived experiences, and analyzing and writing descriptions to capture the essence of a phenomenon.

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Kimber Garcia
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
197 views9 pages

Phenomenology Report

This document provides an overview of phenomenology. It defines phenomenology as the direct investigation and description of phenomena as consciously experienced by people. Phenomenology searches for the meaning or essence of an experience rather than measurements or explanations. It emphasizes subjectivity and uses methods like interviews and conversations to understand lived experiences. Strengths include helping understand experiences and exposing misconceptions, while limitations are the time consuming nature and difficulty establishing reliability. The document also outlines phenomenology methods such as bracketing biases, collecting data from lived experiences, and analyzing and writing descriptions to capture the essence of a phenomenon.

Uploaded by

Kimber Garcia
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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PHENOMENOLOGY

Group 9
PHENOMENOLOGY
• What is Phenomenology?

• ~ Phenomenology can be defined as the direct investigation and
description of phenomena as consciously experienced by people
leaving those experiences.

• ~ It searches for the meaning or essence of an experience rather
than measurements or explanations.

• ~ Phenomenology makes use of a variety of methods including
interviews, conversations, participant observation, action
research, focus meetings and other personal text.

• ~ Phenomenology emphasizes subjectivity.

PHENOMENOLOGY
•Strengths and Limitations of Phenomenology

• Strengths of Phenomenology

• • Helps to understand a lived experience and brings meaning to it.

• • Results may help expose misconceptions about an experience.

• • The qualitative nature of phenomenology allows the researcher to notice
trends and look at the big picture. The data is not fit into a statistical test
that confines or restricts the interpretation.


PHENOMENOLOGY

• Limitations of Phenomenology

• • Gathering data and data analysis may be time consuming and
laborious.

• • The research participants must be able to articulate their thoughts and
feelings about the experience being studied.

• • Presentation of findings may be difficult. The subjectivity of the data
may lead to difficulty in establishing reliability and validity.
PHENOMENOLOGY METHODS

• Determine if the problem is suited to a phenomenological study.


• Identify the commond phenomenon of interest to the study.
• Determine philosophical and personal positioning (transcendental,
hermeneutic or phenomenography) to determine the way research will
develop because philosophy and methodology are connected.
• BRACKETING the researcher set aside their experiences biases, and
preconceived notions to understand the phenomenon appear to the
participant not how it is perceived by the researcher
PHENOMENOLOGY METHODS

• RECRUIT PARTICIPANTS who have lived experience with the concept ir


phenomenon being researched
• COLLECT DATA from participants (data can also be collect through documents
such as journal, diaries and through observations. )
• DATA ANALYSIS researchers highlights sentences/quotes describe how the
participants experiencedthe phenomenon and develops clusters at meaning into
themes.
• WRITING DESCRIPTION of what the individual participants experienced and a
description ofnthe context and setting that influenced HOW the participants
experienced the phenomenon.
• Writebthe essence ofbthe phenomenon. This gives potential researcher insight
into what it would be like to experience the phenomenon.
ADVANTAGES and DISADVANTAGES

ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
• Can understand if live experience • Large amount of data.
• Can be used accros a variety of disciplines • Take a lot of time
• Voices are heard3 • May be difficult find participants
😚THANK YOU 😚

• GROUP 9
• Dela Cruz, Dann Albert
• Gemeniano, John Friztzer
• Lajera, Joisa
• Sison, Robert Coy
• Vila, Imee Cristina
• Vinluan, Christian

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