Qualitative research is the systematic study of meaning. Rather than measuring how much or how many, it asks how and why — how people understand their experiences, and why they act as they do. It produces rich, descriptive data in the form of words, images, and observations rather than numbers.
Qualitative researchers work from the assumption that reality is interpreted, not simply measured. People make sense of their lives through language, culture, and context, and the researcher’s task is to understand those meanings as closely as possible to how participants themselves see them.
Typical questions a qualitative study might explore include:
– How do first-time carers experience the transition into a caring role?
– Why do some patients delay seeking help for a health concern?
– What does “belonging” mean to students in their first year at university?
These questions cannot be answered with a number alone. They call for depth, nuance, and the participant’s own voice — which is exactly what qualitative methods are designed to capture.
Key idea: Qualitative research seeks understanding and meaning, not measurement.