Methods Matter - Oral Histories & Story Telling

Published: Sept. 12, 2022, midnight

The Methods Matter Podcast - from Dementia Researcher & the National Centre for Research Methods. A podcast for people who don't know much about methods...those who do, and those who just want to find news and clever ways to use them in their research.\n\nIn this second series Clinical Research Fellow, Dr Donncha Mullin from The University of Edinburgh brings together leading experts in research methodology, and the dementia researchers that use them, to provide a fun introduction to five qualitive research methods in a safe space where there are no such things as dumb questions!\n\nEpisode One \u2013 Oral Histories & Story Telling\n\nIn expert corner - Dr Kahryn Hughes, from University of Leeds. Director of the Timescapes Archive, Editor in Chief of Sociological Research Online, Convenor of the MA Qualitative Research Methods and a Senior Fellow for the NCRM.\n\nIn researcher ranch - Dr Katya Sion, Postdoctoral Researcher in Living-Lab in Ageing and Long-Term Care at Maastricht University. Katya\u2019s research is focused on quality of residential elderly care from the resident\u2019s perspective and how to assess this. Her current postdoc position is aimed at the national valorisation of the narrative method \u2018Connecting Conversations\u2019, which was developed during her PhD.\n\nFurther reading referenced in the show:\n\nThe Oral History Society - https://www.ohs.org.uk\nBooks by Joanna Bornat - https://bit.ly/3RIJ9Qx \nRachel Thompson Website - https://rachelintheoc.com\nKen Plummer Documents of Life - https://kenplummer.com \n\n--\n\nRead more about our guests and listen to more great podcasts at:\nhttps://www.dementiaresearcher.nihr.ac.uk\n\nThe National Centre for Research Methods (NCRM) provides a service to learners, trainers and partner organisations in the research methods community - methodological training and resources on core and advanced quantitative, qualitive, digital, creative, visual, mixed and multimodal methods.\n\nhttps://www.ncrm.ac.uk \n\n--\nThis podcast is brought to you in association with Alzheimer's Research UK and Alzheimer's Society, who we thank for their ongoing support.