The Graduate Student Qualitative Methods Network (GSQMN) next event will be the virtual December GSQMN gathering, which will take place on December 2nd from 9:30 am to 10:30 am MST. We hope you can come and learn from Anani Vasquez (Doctoral Candidate at Arizona State University) and share your ideas, reflections, and connections. The purpose of the Graduate Student Qualitative Methods Network (GSQMN) is to create spaces for graduate students to engage in methodological discussions, collaborations, and peer and faculty mentoring across institutions of higher education. This network will offer events where students can learn and share their qualitative research projects and methodological ideas. Graduate students and faculty interested in qualitative methods are welcome to join this generative conversation and share their supportive feedback and ideas! You can register through this link: https://iu.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZEkfuqppjkqE9SVrHbxZOaG9huALtGTcJlZ.
GESIS offers a series of online talks on Social Science Methods and Research Data. The new season "Augmenting survey data by linking and harmonisation" by the "Survey Data Curation" department has started on 10 November, 2022. Each session consists of a talk and a moderated Q&A part. All talks will take place online as Zoom meetings on Thursdays, 1:00 pm to 2:00 pm CET. You can register for the sessions here.
The GESIS Panel offers researchers the opportunity to collect longitudinal and cross-sectional data in a mixed-mode (online and postal mail) panel. They offer high data quality through intensive panel management. The probabilistic sample consists of about 5,000 respondents who are interviewed every three months on a wide variety of topics. Academic researchers are welcome to submit either a Short Submission of a Regular Submission. For more information click here.
As part of its continuing education offerings, the Institute for Applied Research is organizing an online workshop on Friday, November 25, 2022 from 10:00 am to 6:00 pm CET with Christine Preiser. Ethnographies serve to research living environments with different focuses. The evaluation of ethnographic material repeatedly poses major challenges, even for experienced researchers. This workshop is about the process of analyzing ethnographic material using different analytical approaches and rounds of text production. A coding and a sequential procedure are presented as basic techniques and tried out on the material. You can register for this workshop here.