![]() I also wanted a way of looking at how the methods intersected, along with the theoretical frameworks. My research focuses on tourism and I wanted a method for sorting my articles (quickly) into: tourist, organisations, volunteers, and host communities. Nvivo allows me to categorise quotes under multiple ‘nodes’. I personally didn’t like this method, as I felt I couldn’t search and categorise things the way I wanted. The next reason I decided to use Nvivo was I had no method for organising my quotes that I liked, beyond a spreadsheet and a word document. This actually had the unintended result of allowing myself to confidently say ‘Yes! I can do that!’ when offered Research Assistant work that would involve using Nvivo. ![]() I decided this would be a fantastic, low pressure, method for familarising myself with the program. At the time, I had no experience with Nvivo, I thought how am I going to get practise with no data? Some how along the way, I discovered that some people use it for their literature review. I was reading about data analysis for my confirmation document and every book suggested familiarising yourself with the program you would use. ![]() Secondly, I wish I had started this sooner! Firstly, Nvivo doesn’t take out all of the leg work of doing a literature review, for me it is an organisational tool. Recently, I decided to use Nvivo for my literature review. ![]()
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