Qualitative research gathers non-numerical evidence to explain what people do, feel, or believe, then turns that evidence into themes and meanings.
Some questions don’t live well in spreadsheets. When you’re trying to grasp how people experience a class, a workplace, a health service, or a social issue, you usually need their words and the context around them. Qualitative research is built for that kind of work.
Below you’ll get (1) a one-sentence definition you can use, (2) a clear way to tailor it to your topic, and (3) the practical pieces instructors expect: data sources, method choices, and how you report results.
What qualitative research means
Qualitative research is a set of methods that produce descriptive, non-numerical data. You collect material like interview transcripts, observation notes, open-ended survey responses, recordings, photos, and documents. Then you interpret that material to describe patterns in meaning, behavior, or experience.
If you want a short, widely used definition from a recognized authority, the APA Dictionary definition of qualitative research describes it as descriptive, non-numerical inquiry grounded in observations and personal accounts.
Qualitative Research In A Sentence for notes and papers
Here’s a sentence that works in coursework without sounding inflated:
Qualitative research is a method of inquiry that uses words, observations, and documents to interpret how people make meaning in a real setting.
How to tailor the sentence to your topic
Add one short clause that names your context. That keeps your writing specific without turning your definition into a paragraph.
- Topic: what you’re studying
- Group: who you’re learning from
- Setting: where the evidence comes from
Qualitative research is a method of inquiry that uses words and observations to interpret how first-year students make meaning of group projects in an online course.
What counts as qualitative data
Qualitative data is evidence you can read, watch, or hear, then interpret in context. It can be collected live or gathered from existing sources. The material is usually detailed enough that a short excerpt still carries meaning.
Common data sources you’ll see
- Interviews: one-to-one conversations with flexible prompts
- Focus groups: guided group talk where participants respond to each other
- Observation notes: what happened, who did what, and what you noticed
- Documents: policies, lesson plans, diaries, posts, emails, meeting minutes
- Open-ended surveys: written responses that go beyond checkboxes
“Non-numerical” doesn’t mean “loose.” You still define what you’ll collect, how you’ll store it, and what counts as evidence.
When qualitative research fits the assignment
Qualitative methods work well when your question asks about meaning, language, experience, or process. These questions often start with “how” or “why.” They ask for explanation, not a single measurement.
- You need participants’ own words, not only ratings.
- Context changes the answer, so you can’t strip it away.
- You want to describe a process step by step.
- You expect multiple viewpoints, not one average response.
Core approaches you may be asked to name
Courses often use a few labels to describe the overall shape of a study. You don’t need to force a label, yet you should understand what each one implies.
Case study
A case study examines one bounded “case” in depth, like a classroom, a program, a club, or a single event with clear boundaries. You often use multiple data sources tied to that one case.
Phenomenological study
This approach describes a shared lived experience. You look for what participants have in common in the way they describe that experience, then write a focused description of it.
Ethnographic study
This approach describes a group in its usual setting. Observation tends to be central, and the goal is a detailed account of norms, routines, and meanings within the group.
Grounded theory study
This approach builds an explanation from the data. You code in cycles, compare new data to earlier codes, then form a model that explains a process.
Picking a method that matches your question
Write your research question in one clean line. Then pick a method that produces the evidence you’ll need. If your method can’t answer the question without bending the rules, swap the method or rewrite the question.
The table below helps you match common student methods to typical question types and outputs.
| Method or source | Best-fit question type | What you end up with |
|---|---|---|
| Interviews | How people explain choices or experiences | Transcripts with excerpts you can code |
| Focus groups | How a group forms shared meanings | Group dialogue plus points of agreement and tension |
| Observation | How behavior and routines unfold in a setting | Field notes with time-ordered detail |
| Document analysis | How texts frame goals, rules, or identity | Coded excerpts from selected documents |
| Open-ended survey | What reasons people give in their own words | Written responses grouped into themes |
| Case study | How one bounded case works in real life | Multiple data types tied to one case narrative |
| Phenomenology | What a shared experience feels like | Themes that describe the experience |
| Grounded theory | What pattern explains a process over time | A data-built model with linked categories |
How to write a one-sentence study purpose
Instructors often want a purpose sentence, not only a definition. A strong purpose sentence tells the reader what you want to understand and what evidence you’ll use.
Use a draft pattern, then rewrite it
- Target: the meaning or process you’re studying
- Source: who or what you’ll study
- Evidence: your main data source
This study uses [evidence] to interpret how [source] describes [target] in [setting].
After you draft it, tighten it. Name the real setting. Name the real data source. If you did interviews, say interviews. If you used documents, say documents.
Three sample purpose sentences
- This study uses interviews to interpret how adult learners describe confidence changes during a six-week language course.
- This case study uses observation notes and lesson plans to describe how a tutoring program handles late-arriving students.
- This project uses open-ended survey responses to map the reasons students give for switching majors after the first year.
How many participants do you need
Qualitative projects often use smaller samples than quantitative studies, since each interview, observation session, or document takes time to read closely. In class assignments, your sample size is usually limited by access and time, so be upfront about what you can realistically collect.
A practical way to think about size is “enough to hear patterns, not just one-off moments.” If you interview only one person, you can describe that person’s account, yet you can’t check whether ideas repeat across people. With several participants, you can compare viewpoints and see which themes keep showing up.
When you write your paper, state your sample clearly, then connect it to your goal. If your goal is a focused case study, a small number of interviews plus documents can make sense. If your goal is to compare experiences across groups, you’ll need more sources so the comparison is fair.
How qualitative analysis works in plain steps
Analysis is where you move from raw material to patterns you can explain. The exact steps vary by method, yet many student projects follow this sequence.
Prepare the data
Transcribe recordings or clean up notes so you can read them easily. Keep the raw files unchanged. Work from copies when you edit.
Create codes
Codes are short labels you attach to segments of text. A code can name a topic (“time pressure”), an action (“asking for help”), or a feeling (“relief”). Start simple, then refine as you see what repeats.
Build themes
Themes answer your research question. A theme is a cluster of evidence that points to the same idea. When you name a theme, write a one-line definition for it, then list the excerpts that show it best.
Show your trail
Good writing shows how you reached your claims. Keep brief notes on coding decisions and theme definitions. When the data pulls in two directions, report that split and explain what it suggests in your setting.
If your course expects journal-style reporting, the APA JARS–Qual reporting standards list the elements readers expect in qualitative methods and results sections.
Table-ready checklist for writing methods and results
Use the checklist below while you draft. It keeps your paper concrete and evidence-based.
| Section element | What to include | Common slip |
|---|---|---|
| Research question | One sentence that asks about meaning, process, or experience | Using a question that needs statistics to answer |
| Participants or sources | Who/what you studied and how you selected them | Leaving selection rules vague |
| Setting | Where the data came from and what “normal” looks like there | Quoting without grounding the situation |
| Data collection | Prompts, observation plan, or document set description | Saying “I collected data” with no detail |
| Analysis steps | How you coded, grouped themes, and tracked decisions | Listing steps you didn’t do |
| Theme definitions | A one-line definition for each theme | Using labels that read like opinions |
| Evidence | Short excerpts tied to each theme | Dropping long quotes with no explanation |
| Scope limits | What your sample and setting can’t represent | Claiming your results fit everyone |
Common grading issues and how to fix them
Mixing up “qualitative” with “opinion”
Qualitative claims still need evidence. If you write “students felt stressed,” show the excerpts that led you there, then explain what those excerpts share.
Overgeneralizing
A small set of interviews can reveal strong patterns, yet it can’t represent a whole population. State your scope in plain terms and stay inside it.
Quotes with no setup
Introduce who is speaking and what the quote illustrates. Keep the quote short, then add your interpretation right after it.
Quick self-check before you submit
- Your definition sentence is accurate and placed early.
- Your purpose sentence names topic, source, evidence, and setting.
- Your method section describes real steps you took.
- Your results section uses themes, and each theme has excerpts.
- Your discussion stays inside your data and your scope.
That’s the core of qualitative research writing: clear question, real evidence, transparent steps, and careful claims.
References & Sources
- American Psychological Association (APA).“Qualitative research.”Defines qualitative research as descriptive, non-numerical inquiry grounded in observations and personal accounts.
- APA Style.“Journal Article Reporting Standards (JARS) for Qualitative Research.”Lists reporting elements commonly expected in qualitative methods and results sections.