skills/research/methodology/grounded-theory-guide/SKILL.md
Apply grounded theory methodology to develop theory from data
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A skill for applying grounded theory methodology (GTM) to generate theory grounded in empirical data. Covers the three major schools (Glaser, Strauss/Corbin, Charmaz), coding procedures, theoretical sampling, memo writing, and criteria for evaluating grounded theories.
| Aspect | Classic (Glaser) | Straussian (Strauss & Corbin) | Constructivist (Charmaz) | |--------|-----------------|------------------------------|-------------------------| | Ontology | Objective reality | Pragmatist | Relativist/constructivist | | Literature review | Delay until theory emerges | Early but non-constraining | Early, reflexive engagement | | Coding paradigm | Open, selective, theoretical | Open, axial, selective | Initial, focused, theoretical | | Verification | Emergent fit | Systematic validation | Co-construction with participants | | Core output | Substantive theory | Process model | Interpretive theory | | Key text | Glaser (1978) | Strauss & Corbin (1998) | Charmaz (2014) |
Use Classic GTM when:
- You want the theory to emerge with minimal preconception
- You are studying a process in a substantive area
Use Straussian GTM when:
- You need a structured, systematic coding procedure
- Your discipline values replicable analytical steps
Use Constructivist GTM when:
- You acknowledge the researcher's role in co-creating meaning
- You study experiences, identities, or social processes
- You work in health, education, or social science
def grounded_theory_coding_stages() -> dict:
"""
Describe the three stages of grounded theory coding.
"""
return {
"stage_1_initial_coding": {
"also_called": "Open coding",
"description": (
"Examine data line by line or incident by incident. "
"Generate codes that stay close to the data. "
"Use gerunds (action words ending in -ing) to capture processes."
),
"example": {
"data": "I started looking for help online because the doctor "
"did not explain anything to me.",
"codes": [
"Seeking information online",
"Experiencing communication gap with provider",
"Taking initiative in own care"
]
},
"tips": [
"Code quickly -- do not overthink individual codes",
"Stay open; do not force data into preexisting categories",
"Code actions and processes, not topics",
"Write memos about ideas that arise during coding"
]
},
"stage_2_focused_coding": {
"also_called": "Axial coding (Strauss) or Focused coding (Charmaz)",
"description": (
"Select the most frequent and significant initial codes. "
"Use them to sort and synthesize larger amounts of data. "
"Identify relationships between categories."
),
"tasks": [
"Elevate initial codes to categories",
"Identify properties and dimensions of each category",
"Compare categories across cases",
"Begin developing a conceptual framework"
]
},
"stage_3_theoretical_coding": {
"also_called": "Selective coding",
"description": (
"Identify the core category that integrates all other "
"categories into a coherent theoretical framework. "
"Specify relationships between categories."
),
"output": "A substantive theory explaining the phenomenon"
}
}
Traditional sampling: Decide sample before data collection
Theoretical sampling: Let the emerging theory guide who/what to sample next
Process:
1. Collect initial data (purposive sampling)
2. Analyze data, identify emerging categories
3. Ask: "Where should I look next to develop these categories?"
4. Sample deliberately to fill gaps in the emerging theory
5. Continue until theoretical saturation
Example:
Initial interviews: Patients with chronic illness
Emerging category: "Navigating insurance barriers"
Next sample: Interview insurance navigators and social workers
Emerging category: "Stigma in seeking help"
Next sample: Interview patients who avoided seeking help
Memos are the researcher's running commentary on codes, categories, and theoretical ideas. They are the primary mechanism for developing theory.
Memo types:
- Code memos: Define and elaborate a code or category
- Theoretical memos: Explore relationships between categories
- Operational memos: Record methodological decisions
- Reflexive memos: Examine researcher influence on the analysis
Memo example:
MEMO: "Becoming an expert patient" (2026-03-05)
Several participants describe a transition from passive
recipient of care to active manager of their condition.
This process seems to involve three phases: (1) initial
confusion and dependence, (2) information seeking and
experimentation, (3) confident self-management. The trigger
appears to be a critical incident (a misdiagnosis, a bad
interaction with a provider) that motivates the person to
take control. Compare with Corbin & Strauss's trajectory
framework. Need to sample someone early in the trajectory
to test whether the trigger is consistent.
| Criterion | Description | How to Demonstrate | |-----------|------------|-------------------| | Fit | Theory fits the data it was derived from | Show clear evidence trail from data to codes to categories | | Relevance | Theory addresses a real concern of participants | Member checking, resonance with practitioners | | Workability | Theory explains the process and enables prediction | Apply the theory to new cases | | Modifiability | Theory can be updated with new data | Show how the theory evolved during the study | | Credibility | Analysis is thorough and systematic | Audit trail, reflexive memos, theoretical saturation |
Include: a clear description of the coding process and how categories were derived, a diagram or model of the theory, representative quotes for each major category, an explanation of theoretical sampling decisions, and a discussion of how the theory relates to existing literature. Use the SRQR (Standards for Reporting Qualitative Research) checklist to ensure completeness.
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