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Reliability and validity in qualitative research within education in Africa
Author(s) -
Birgit BrockUtne
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
international review of education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.407
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 1573-0638
pISSN - 0020-8566
DOI - 10.1007/bf00601405
Subject(s) - expatriate , qualitative research , reliability (semiconductor) , sociology , validity , psychology , epistemology , social psychology , social science , law , political science , psychometrics , developmental psychology , power (physics) , physics , philosophy , quantum mechanics
This article discusses the problems of validity and reliability in qualitative research within education and relates this discussion to Africa. A main concern is the posing of the right research questions. The article attempts to bring into focus the voice of Africans, showing that the African researcher knows his/her environment better than any expatriate and will be more likely to ask the right questions provided that s/he is allowed to ask them and is not forced to work with questions of concern to Western donors, and provided that s/he trusts her/his own experiences and uses those to form concepts instead of merely transferring concepts formed in the West and based on experiences in the northern hemisphere. It argues for the need of secondary research to reanalyze from an Afro-centric viewpoint many of the accounts written by Western travellers and anthropologists. It further argues for the use of an autobiographical approach to secure data of high ecological validity. Validity is looked at as a more important concept than reliability and a mixing of qualitative and quantitative methods argued for.

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