INTEGRATED MIXED METHODS USING ATTITUDE DATA TO
GENERATE SOCIAL EVIDENCE OF TENSE SITUATIONS, ESPECIALLY
REGARDING LABOURWendy Olsen
with Nathan Khadaroo supporting
Creative commons license. You may cite this work; please cite this presentations as mimeo , Wendy Olsen, 2014 (University of Manchester: Cathie Marsh Institute for Social Research). Via Slideshare.net .
Welcome to Our Workshop on Mixed Methods
Nov. 3, 2014, 10am-3pmFunded by British Academy and CMIST
www.cmist.manchester.ac.uk
Aims of the Workshop
• Piloting workshops for mixed methods with a strong statistical element. We are piloting on ourselves.
• We are demonstrating integrated mixed methods.
• TODAY’S WORKSHOP: Factor analysis activities first, having created a factors (scale) about attitudes on women’s attitudes about women holding jobs. We place ourselves on this factor then hold discussions in groups, NVIVO.
Research Group: Social Mobility and Labour Markets
Research Group, CMIST• Led by Dr. Wendy Olsen and Prof. Yaojun Li
• To join the group’s email list, send an email to:• [email protected]
• Indicate whether you also want to be put onto the Integrated Mixed Methods Network email list, which is separate [British Academy].
What is factor analysis?• Key questions available to us in the Demographic & Health Survey, and in the British Household Panel Survey
2007, and in the Understanding Society survey 2009-2012, include:
“A job is all right, but what most women really want is a home and children.”
“A man’s job is to earn the money, a woman’s job is to look after the home and family.”
“ It is not good if the man stays at home and cares for the children and the woman goes out to work.”
[this wording is from the BHPS 2007; the wording is different in each survey] • Positive scores demonstrate greater conservatism in gender role attitudes and negative scores are indicative of
greater liberalism. - Crompton, Brockmann and Lyonette, 2005. The authors Crompton et al. (2005) did not use factor analysis, but we are using it. Instead, in their work, they used a
classical scale:• “All of these questions were answered via a five-point scale ranging from ‘strongly agree’ through ‘neither agree
nor disagree’ to ‘strongly disagree’. A simple gender conservatism–liberalism scale was constructed as follows: strongly agree 2, agree 1, strongly disagree –2, disagree –1. ‘Neither agree nor disagree’ and ‘don’t know’ answers were scored 0. These scores were averaged, and mean scores at both times are shown in Table 1.”
Wendy Olsen and Ellie B. Schmidt have been looking at women’s vs. men’s attitudes to gendered social norms.
Gender Norms and Labour Supply in Comparative Context
6
Funding acknowledgements:M/cr Business School, Fairness at Work pilot grant scheme £5K.
Ellie Schmidt worked on the project under this scheme.Grants from ESRC DFID Poverty Alleviation round £330K over 3.5 years 2014-2017
British Academy £25K Integrated Mixed Methods Network, international
partnership and mobility fundsNext bid – Erasmus+ K2 strategic partnership for youth
Welcome to using factor analysis….
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Related to classical scales You make a summary variable that
does ‘data reduction’
from 3 or more
indicator variables.
Related to the world of multiple regression
Related to the mixed methods world too
We produce a regression that allows the scale to be associated
with key structural
background factors.
Many variants on the theme.
8
This is a structural equation model.
This one shows a latent growth curve model.
You can put a factor into this.
Muthen & Muthen’s MPLUS software
Gender Norms and Labour Supply in Comparative Context
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Useful, but so is MLWIN or STATA now. SPSS can also do a simple factor analysis.
The factor can be an independent variable, or a dependent variable.
'Gender Norms and Factor Analysis: A Sociological Reinterpretation'
2014 Wendy Olsen and Nik LoynesUniversity of Manchester
Women’s Labour Force Participation Fell in India By All Measures.
2004-2010.Is it because of a rise in wealth, or a
change in attitudes? Do women’s attitudes vary much?
A stylized fact about India not Bangladesh: INDIA EPW 2012
But why expect tensions to arise?...
1. general approaches to measuring attitudes Norms, roles, attitudes, beliefs,
desires Practices vs. strategies Agent orientations
2. specific issues of gender roles 3. attitudes and employment
SEM approach (DHS 2007 vs. NFHS 2006)
4. Change over time in two S. Asian contexts Context-dependent attitude measures Findings for Bangladesh DHS 2006/7
Vs. India NFHS 2005/6 UK we use the BHPS and UnderSoc
questions 5. Linking change to employment
Logistic regression results.
12 Gender Norms and Labour Supply in Comparative Context
Another Regression: How Attitude is Associated with Labour Supply
Household Paid and
Unpaid Work
Caring Work - Outside
Home Ownership &
WealthHis Work
Aspirations
Poverty
Homogamy and Age
Difference
Human Capital
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Her Caring Work - Kids
Caring Work - Outside
Human Capital
ealth
Home Ownership &
Wealth Aspirations
Poverty
Caring Work - Outside
Human Capital
HealthHealth
Scale of Traditional Attitudes
These are strongly correlated
+ with Labour Force Participation of Women
Gender Norms and Labour Supply in Comparative Context
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Four Variables Used in a Factor Analysis for Bangladesh DHS 2007
…to estimate the social norm that women and men can equally participate in the economy. This variable has four components.
Who Has: The final say on own health care The final say on making large household
purchases The final say on making household
purchases for daily needs The final say on visits to family or
relatives If respondent (wife) then the indicator takes the
value 4. (19% in 2007 for the last item shown above)
If respondent and husband decide together, it takes value 3. (42%)
If respondent and another person (which is rare), it takes value 2. (7%)
If any other decision maker, e.g. husband alone (27% in 2007), or someone else (rare), it takes value 1.
Integrated Mixed Methods Network IMMN
British Academy Funding
I plan later to apply for ERC funding for Training and Capacity Building
This might be an EU ITN
Innovative Training Network
We (U OF M) already have one!
Gender Norms and Labour Supply in Comparative Context
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See facebook group:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/438437119631157/
Our aim is to show specific argumentation strands that help really mix the interpretation of the various kinds of data. A) factor analysis with interview data. B) factor analysis with workshops
using street theatre (needs British Council funds)
C) QCA with qualitative data (see jiscmail group, QUAL-COMPARE, 230
members)
-- QCA is qualitative comparative analysis
-- the Dyadic work was key in getting the IMMN started.
REST OF TODAY
Exercises
COMMENTARIES
Use notelets
Use posterboards
Type in our data
Use NVIVO to analyse
Gender Norms and Labour Supply in Comparative Context
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How to use NVIVO
Free codes - these are annotations.
Tree codes – these are groupings of free nodes into groups on related themes.
Model – this is how we depict the developing interpretation.
Iteration and revision Hypothesis tests are deductive; Induction, retroduction Asking why the data have these
patterns.
NVIVO Slides are available
See slideshare.net
http://www.slideshare.net/
Wendyolseninmanchester/critical-
thinking-contradictions-2014parttwo on
using NVIVO to do coding
http://www.slideshare.net/
Wendyolseninmanchester/critical-
thinking-contradictions-part-3-resolution-
conclusions on warranted arguments of
particular types: TENSIONS and
CONTRADICTING ONESELF/others
http://www.slideshare.net/
Wendyolseninmanchester/critical-
thinking-and-arguments-about-
contradictions-using-qualitative-data-
nvivo-2014 on warranted arguments in
general
Gender Norms and Labour Supply in Comparative Context
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Thank you for participating.
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