Describe Phenomena

Clark and Springer (2007) conducted a qualitative study to examine the perceptions of faculty and students in a nursing program on incivility.

Background Information
Clark and Springer (2007) conducted a qualitative study to examine the perceptions of faculty and students in a nursing program on incivility. Their key research questions were:
How do nursing students and nurse faculty contribute to incivility in nursing education?
What are some of the causes of incivility in nursing education?
What remedies might be effective in preventing or reducing incivility?
They gathered responses from the Incivility in Nursing Education Survey (INE), which included both Likert-scale and open-ended questions from 36 nursing faculty and 168 nursing students. Each of the researchers reviewed all comments and organized them by themes.
For this PSY-850 class, you will design a ?mock? replication of the Clark and Springer (2007) study on student and faculty perceptions of incivility in a university nursing program. However, the doctoral students will investigate student and faculty perceptions in undergraduate psychology classes in one university located in the northern United States.
You will use the Incivility in Higher Education (IHE) survey, developed by Clark (2007; 2011) for the purposes of this study. Questions on the survey measure faculty and student perceptions of uncivil actions (disruptive and threatening), how often those behaviors occur and strategies for improving civil behaviors in university settings. The IHE was adapted from the INE, with minor rewording, is similar in structure to the survey used by Clark and Springer, but is appropriate for any academic discipline within higher education (Wagner, 2014).

The IHE has three parts. Part 1 collects demographic information, such as major, gender, age, and years of teaching experience for faculty. Part 2 asks individuals to rank 16 different behaviors exhibited by students that both students and faculty may perceive as disruptive. Part 3 focuses on 20 faculty behaviors that may be perceived as disruptive. Both parts 2 and 3 also investigate how often the faculty has experienced the behavior in the past 12 months (often to never on Likert scale), and if the faculty members have experienced any of the 13 threatening behaviors (yes or no) by students or other faculty respectively. Five open-ended questions give the faculty member the opportunity to add contributing factors related to student and faculty incivility, and how students or faculty in particular contribute to incivility. A final question asked if the faculty member would like to add comments. The survey is designed in a manner that allows for gathering data from faculty and students or from only faculty or only students (C. Clark, personal communication, 2013 as cited in Wagner, 2014).
Week 2 Assignment: (Read the following article and construct a 10 key points document.)
GCU doctoral learners use the 10 Key Strategic Points document to outline the key components of a research study. For the Week 2 assignment, you will use the original Clark and Springer (2007) to identify and construct a 10 key points document in preparation for the mock study on incivility in psychology classes.
Steps:
Read Clark, C. M., & Springer, P. J. (2007). Thoughts on incivility: Student and faculty perceptions of uncivil behavior. Nursing Education Perspectives, 28(2), 93-97. Retrieved from https://lopes.idm.oclc.org/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=a9h&AN=24776207&site=ehost-live&scope=site
As you read, highlight information that relates to the 10 key points, such as the purpose, problem, sample, research question, etc.
After reading and highlighting the components of the article, complete the 10 key points table based on the Clark and Springer (2007) study in nursing education.

Ten Strategic Points Comments or Feedback
Broad Topic Area
Lit Review
Problem Statement ?This study was conducted using quantitative and qualitative methodologies to investigate the problem of incivility in nursing education in a university environment from both student and faculty perspectives? (Clark and Springer, 2007, p. 94).
Rewrite this in ?GCU? format.
Research Questions
Sample Sample: identify the sample from the Clark and Springer study.

Describe Phenomena (Qualitative)
Methodology and Design
Purpose Statement ?Its purpose was to consider possible causes of incivility and to recommend potential remedies? (Clark and Springer, 2007, p.94).
Rewrite this purpose statement based on ?GCU? format.
Data Collection Instruments and Approach Describe instruments used for the Clark and Springer study.
Describe the data collection approach used in the Clark and Springer study along with informed consent procedures.
Data Analysis Approach Discuss the data analysis approach used in the Clark and Springer study.

Week 5 Assignment: In Week 2, you constructed a 10 key points document based on the Clark and Springer (2007) study conducted on incivility in nursing education. In preparation for the mock replication study to be completed by participants in undergraduate psychology classes, you now must construct a 10 key points document for your own study. This must meet GCU criteria in terms of problem, purpose, and research question format. This would be a descriptive case study at GCU.
Steps:
Review the 10 key points constructed in Week 2 and the Clark and Springer (2007) study. Additionally, review the feedback provided by the instructor.
Use the following template to develop 10 key points for your replication study in an undergraduate psychology program. Be sure to use resources in the DC network>Research/Dissertation tab> Prospectus templates to review the criteria for the purpose, problem, research questions and other key points.
Use the prompts and suggestions contained in the template to guide your work.
Ten Strategic Points Comments or Feedback
Broad Topic Area Incivility in psychology undergraduate education programs
Lit Review Include citations from studies on incivility in psychology education
Problem Statement Write a problem for the psychology study, in the GCU required format.

Research Questions Now frame questions for the study you will design for a target population of undergraduate psychology programs.
Sample Describe the sampling strategy you could use for a like study in an undergraduate psychology program. Define and justify the sampling strategy from a research source. Justify the sample size for a qualitative study from a research source and from the GCU Core Design Document.
Describe the Phenomenon
Methodology and Design Describe the method and design you would use and justify your choice of both from a research source.
Purpose Statement Develop a purpose statement for a psychology undergraduate program in the required GCU format.
Data Collection Instruments and Approach Describe the IHE instrument to be used in this study.
Describe the data collection approach you would use, including getting informed consent and how you would protect the confidentiality of participants.
Data Analysis Approach Discuss a specific data analysis strategy you would use in your replication study in an undergraduate psychology program. Cite a specific researcher?s strategy such as Hatch, Miles and Huberman, Bogden and Biklin, or Saldana.
Week 7 Assignment
You will analyze four transcribed interviews by inductively coding the data and developing themes. This will be a miniature version of what coding a large study would be like.
Directions
Perform the following tasks to conduct the analysis:
Code the data: To analyze the data, you must first identify categories or themes that appear in the data. To accomplish this, do the following:
Read the transcript of each participant?s responses and identify words that strike you as important. Mark the words in some fashion (highlight, circle, bold, underline).
When you recognize words or phrases that appear frequently, make note of them. That is, circle or highlight them in the text.
After reading all participants? responses, review the words/phrases you marked or wrote down and identify a short list of useful codes. See Table 1 below.
Collapse these codes into four or five categories or themes and name them. See Table 1, column 2, below.
List the categories or themes and substantiate them with quotations from the online focus group participant transcripts. See Tables 2 and 3, below. You could put all of these in one table, or you could use a table for each theme, and provide several examples of quotes in the right-hand column for that theme.
Present your results in a table (below) formatted according to the APA guidelines found in the ?APA Style Guide,? located in the Student Success Center.
Identify your coding process in an appendix (an example is included in the Appendix below).

Task 1: Code the transcript as described above, and color code the transcript using a color for each key code. Do this in Word.

Task 2: Create a codebook.
Code Definition of the Code Example From Transcript

Task 3: Create a table of words or phrases that appear frequently. Display as shown in Table 1.
Table 1

Words or Phrases that Appear Frequently
Word or Phrase Notes on the Words/Phrases Notes on Emerging Themes
Write down the word(s) or phrase(s) here. For example, do they appear in a transcript of one particular interview, or do they show up in several interviews? If they show up in several, there is a pattern that cross-cuts individuals.
You might want to state
Name of participant/page number of transcript (if that seems to make sense). As you review the list of words/phrases in column 1, and see some patterns, you can name the patterns. Collapse the repeating words/phrases into 4-5 (or whatever seems relevant) themes.
Write down the words or phrases here.
Keep writing down many words/phrases that appear frequently, until you have written them all down.

Task 4: Based on Table 1 and your coded transcript, create a table based on Tables 2 and 3. Create a table for each theme.

Table 2

Inductively Developed Themes
Theme Examples of Quotes From the Transcripts
Put the name of the theme here. Put a quote here that represents the theme
Place additional examples of quotes for this theme in each cell in this table.

Table 3

Inductively Developed Themes
Theme Sample Responses
Name another theme. Provide a quote that exemplifies this theme.
Provide another quote here.

Note: You would put notes here if needed. See pages 130-131 of your APA manual.

Write-up the Results
A research report is not complete without a written summary of the research findings. To complete the research report, follow the instructions below and include the components outlined. Include the table and the chart you have created to show the data graphically/visually.
Introduction
Discuss the background information and the fact that this study was modeled after a study conducted by Clark and Springer in 2007. Discuss the data Clark and Springer collected and their results. Then discuss how your ?mock or replication? study conducted in an undergraduate psychology program will add to these results.
Sample — discuss who participated in your study.
Instruments…describe the structure and purpose of instrument you used: the IHE (the interview transcript).

Data Analysis
Discuss your own initial analysis and the codes that you came up with. Collapse these codes into three to four themes as Clark and Springer did. However, this must be based on the ?mock? data you collected (and we presented in a separate document).
Results
Write a summary of the themes that you identified when analyzing the faculty comments about in-class disruptions. Include the table and the chart you have created to show the data graphically/visually.
Recommendations
Compare your results to those of Clark and Springer (2007):
Clark and Springer (2007) conducted a qualitative study to examine the perceptions of faculty and students in a nursing program on incivility. Clark and Springer used the Incivility in Nursing Education survey along with open-ended questions to collect data from 36 nursing faculty and 168 nursing students.
Each of the researchers reviewed all comments and organized them by themes. Clark and Springer noted four major themes of responses:
Faculty perceptions of in-class disruption and incivility by students
Faculty perceptions of out-of-class disruption and incivility by students
Student perceptions of uncivil behaviors by faculty
Faculty and student perceptions of possible causes of incivility in nursing education
A total of eight codes were identified among the faculty comments on types of in-class disruptions. These were the following:
Disrupting others by talking in class
Making negative remarks/disrespectful comments toward faculty
Leaving early or arriving late
Using cell phones
Sleeping/not paying attention
Bringing children to class
Wearing immodest attire
Coming to class unprepared
Based on your findings, discuss some strategies that these faculty members can use to reduce the incidences of disrespectful behaviors. Cite the recommendations from peer-reviewed sources.
Discuss how you would also use the data analysis strategy listed in your 10 key points to code and theme the open-ended comments from faculty.
Discuss the benefits and limitations of using SPSS and frequency counts in qualitative data analysis, along with why additional analysis is required.
References
Include a reference list of the sources used.
Bernard, H. R. and Ryan, G. W. (2010). Analyzing qualitative data. New York, NY: Sage Publications.
Clark, C. M., & Springer, P. J. (2007). Thoughts on incivility: Student and faculty perceptions of uncivil behavior. Nursing Education Perspectives, 28(2), 93-97. Retrieved from https://lopes.idm.oclc.org/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=a9h&AN=24776207&site=ehost-live&scope=site
Grand Canyon University. (2013). Template for coding and summary tables.
Groenewald, T. (2004). A phenomenological research design illustrated. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 3(1), 15-16
Hatch, J. A. (2002). Doing qualitative research in education settings. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
Moustakas, C. (1994). Phenomenological research methods. New York, NY: Sage Publications.
Yin, R. (2014). Case study research design and methods. New York, NY: Sage Publications.