Coding Data
Coding: Using labels to classify and assign meaning to pieces
of information—helps you to make sense of qualitative data, such as responses to
open-ended survey questions. Codes answer the questions, “What do I see going on
here?” or “How do I categorize the information?” Coding enables you to organize
large amounts of text and to discover patterns that would be difficult to detect
by reading alone. Steps are as follows:
Initial Coding: It’s usually best to start by generating numerous
codes as you read through responses, identifying data that are related without
worrying about the variety of categories. Because codes are not always mutually
exclusive, a piece of information might be assigned several codes.
Focused Coding: After initial coding, it is helpful to review codes
and eliminate less useful ones, combine smaller categories into larger ones, or
if a very large number of responses have been assigned the same code, subdivide
that category. At this stage you should see repeating ideas and can begin
organizing codes into larger themes that connect different codes. It may help to
spread responses across a floor or large table when trying to identify themes