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Qualitative Social Work
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Using Data Triangulation of Mother and Daughter Interviews to Enhance Research about Families

Roberta G. Sands

University of Pennsylvania, USA, rgsands{at}sp2.upenn.edu

Dorit Roer-Strier

The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel, msdiri{at}mscc.huji.ac.il

Qualitative researchers use the term triangulation to describe the use of multiple strategies to study the same phenomenon. Although it is endorsed in social work research textbooks and contested in the literature, qualitative social work researchers are left on their own to determine how to ‘do’ triangulation. This article discusses triangulation, including recent debates around the concept. It describes two methods of data triangulation and illustrates them with examples from the study of mothers and daughters coping with a daughter’s religious intensification. From the first method, a comparative analysis of mother-daughter dyads, the authors identify and provide examples of five types of triangulated data: (1) same story, same meaning; (2) same story, different interpretations; (3) missing pieces; (4) unique information; and (5) illuminating. The second method, triangulation within groups and between groups, makes visible perspectives that are common and distinct to mothers and daughters as members of different cultural groups. The article discusses the advantages of systematic data triangulation for qualitative research and draws implications for social work research and practice.

Key Words: dyad • families • group • qualitative research • triangulation

Qualitative Social Work, Vol. 5, No. 2, 237-260 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1473325006064260


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