Phenomenology
Phenomenology
Phenomenology
Phenomenology
• Phenomenology is both a branch of philosophy and a
family of research methods concerned with exploring and
understanding human experience (Langdridge, 2007).
• Phenomenology is the systematic study of conscious
experiences (Howitt, 2013).
• It studies the participants’ perspectives of their world;
attempts to describe in detail the content and structure of
the subjects’ consciousness, to grasp the qualitative
diversity of their experiences and to explicate their
essential meanings (Kvale, 1996).
• Phenomenological methods aim to get a better
understanding of the nature and quality of the
phenomena as they present themselves.
• Phenomenology is concerned with the study of
experience from the perspective of the individual,
‘bracketing’ taken-for-granted assumptions and usual
ways of perceiving.
• There are two major approaches to
phenomenological research in psychology,
descriptive and interpretative.
Descriptive phenomenology
• Descriptive phenomenologists believe that it is
possible to minimise interpretation and focus on that
which lies before one in phenomenological purity
(Willig, 2014).
• The aim of the researcher is to describe as accurately
as possible the phenomenon, refraining from any pre-
given framework, but remaining true to the facts.
• Researchers are required to adopt a phenomenological
attitude in which they bracket all past knowledge
about the phenomenon under investigation.
• Bracketing refers to the suspension of
preconceived notions or personal experiences
that may unduly influence what the
researcher ‘hears’ the participants saying
(Leedy & Omrod, 2014).
• The focus of research is the phenomenon as it
is experienced by the research participant.
Interpretative phenomenology
• Interpretative phenomenology does not
separate description and interpretation.
• IPA is informed by phenomenology, in the
sense that it is concerned with how
experiences appear to individuals, how
individuals perceive and talk about objects
and events (Smith et al., 2009).
Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis
• According to Smith, Larkin and Flowers (2009, pg 1)
interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) is
‘committed to the examination of how people make sense
of their major life experiences’.
• The aim of IPA is to explore in detail how participants make
sense of their personal and social world (Smith and
Osborn, 2003).
• It aims to explain people’s accounts of their experiences in
psychological terms.
• IPA accepts that it is difficult to gain direct access to
research participants’ life worlds.
• IPA is about the experiences of individuals
working from the basic assumption that the
individual who experiences something is the
expert about their experiences (Howitt, 2013).
• The main currency for an IPA study is the
meaning particular experiences, events, states
hold for participants.
• IPA emphasises that the research is a dynamic
process and the researcher plays an active role
(Willig, 2013).
• The researcher strives to get an insider
perspective but one cannot do this directly or
completely.
• Access depends on and is complicated by the
researcher’s own conceptions.
• IPA recognises that it is difficult not to
implicate the researcher’s own view of the
world as well as the nature of the interaction
between researcher and participant.
• The phenomenological analysis produced by
the researcher is always an interpretation of
the participant’s experience (Howitt, 2013).
• The analyst adds more to the interpretation
(Howitt, 2013).
• IPA is based on the assumption that people
are self-interpreting beings (Taylor, 1985).
• IPA assumes a relationship between people’s
talk, their thinking and emotional state
(Chapman & Smith, 2002).
When to use IPA
• IPA is about people’s major or significant
experiences (Howitt, 2013).
• IPA is not a finely tuned analysis of how
people talk about their experiences.
• It is a ‘what they say’ rather than ‘how they
say it’ method.
The researcher’s role in an IPA Study