Using Qualitative Data Mining for Practice Research in Child Welfare

IF 0.8 4区 社会学 Q4 FAMILY STUDIES Child Welfare Pub Date : 2014-11-01 DOI:10.1093/oso/9780197518335.003.0010
Colleen Henry, Sarah Carnochan, M. Austin
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引用次数: 19

Abstract

In their daily practice, social service professionals routinely collect and record large quantities of data about client characteristics, practice interventions, and client outcomes (Epstein, 2002, 2009). While documentation of service activities are not new to child welfare (CW), over the last 30 years, federal legislation, including the Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act (P.L. 96-272) and the Adoption and Safe Families Act (P.L. 105-89), has promoted increased documentation in CW. Consequently, administrative CW data has proliferated and administrative data systems (ADS) have made these data more accessible to researchers.To date, the majority of studies using administrative CW data have focused on the quantitative categorical data stored in ADS (see Conn et al., 2013; Putnam-Hornstein & Needell, 2011). Quantitative data help researchers and CW administrators identify rates of reported and substantiated child maltreatment, detect corresponding risk factors, or categorize service responses. The mining of these data teaches us about the kinds of maltreatment, placements, and services children referred to CW systems experience; identifies the frequency of these experiences; and can be used to make predictions about which children will return home and which will remain in care. However, these quantitative data tell us little about how CW workers define maltreatment, why children referred to CW systems are placed in specific settings, or how children and families engage in services. These latter questions are better answered through the mining and analysis of qualitative data stored in ADS.Qualitative Data-Mining (QDM), the mining of the narrative text contained in documents stored in ADS (e.g., risk assessments, investigative narratives, court reports, and contact notes), provides CW researchers with a unique opportunity to use existing data to examine CW practice (Epstein, 2002, 2009). Use of QDM to improve CW has received limited attention (Epstein, 2002; Tice, 1998), as few CW studies have focused on the qualitative data stored in CW ADS or described how qualitative data is used by CW researchers (for exceptions see Coohey, 2007; Cordero, 2004; Cross, Koh, Rolock, & Eblen-Manning, 2013; Henry, 2014). This paper seeks to fill this gap by describing how researchers can use QDM techniques to create rich databases for qualitative CW research and answer unique questions about CW clients and practice. In a seven-step guide, the paper summarizes QDM strategies and methods, and reports on the work of the Child Welfare Qualitative Data-Mining (CWQDM) Project to illustrate these methods and strategies. The paper concludes with a discussion of how QDM can be used to enhance CW practice, research, and education.Project BackgroundThe CWQDM Project developed in the context of a longstanding practice- research partnership between a university-based research center and a regional social services consortium involving the directors of 11 county social service agencies, the deans and directors of four graduate social work programs, and executive staff representing a local foundation (Austin et al., 1999). The CWQDM Project was designed in response to agency interests in developing their capacity to engage in QDM in CW. One county agency agreed to participate as the pilot site for the project. With our agency partner, the CWQDM Project sought to (1) create a CW database that could be used to examine CW practice, client needs, and emerging issues in the field; and (2) develop QDM techniques that could be replicated by CW agencies and research partners.In the next section, we describe the specific actions and processes that we developed to carry out the CWQDM Project and, in seven steps, outline how CW researchers can use QDM to create retrospective databases for practice research. The description of each step includes a summary of major lessons learned, and the relevant literature is discussed throughout. …
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将定性数据挖掘用于儿童福利的实践研究
在他们的日常实践中,社会服务专业人员经常收集和记录大量关于客户特征、实践干预和客户结果的数据(Epstein, 2002,2009)。虽然服务活动的文件记录对儿童福利(CW)来说并不新鲜,但在过去的30年里,联邦立法,包括《收养援助和儿童福利法》(P.L. 96-272)和《收养和安全家庭法》(P.L. 105-89),促进了对CW的文件记录的增加。因此,行政CW数据激增,行政数据系统(ADS)使研究人员更容易获得这些数据。迄今为止,大多数使用行政CW数据的研究都集中在ADS中存储的定量分类数据上(参见Conn et al., 2013;Putnam-Hornstein & Needell, 2011)。定量数据可以帮助研究人员和CW管理员确定报告和证实的儿童虐待率,检测相应的风险因素,或对服务响应进行分类。对这些数据的挖掘使我们了解了儿童在CW系统中所经历的虐待、安置和服务的种类;识别这些经历的频率;并且可以用来预测哪些孩子会回家,哪些孩子会继续被照顾。然而,这些定量数据几乎没有告诉我们,儿童护理工作者是如何定义虐待的,为什么被送到儿童护理系统的儿童会被安置在特定的环境中,或者儿童和家庭是如何参与服务的。通过对存储在ADS中的定性数据的挖掘和分析,可以更好地回答后一个问题。定性数据挖掘(QDM),即对存储在ADS中的文件中包含的叙述性文本的挖掘(例如,风险评估、调查叙述、法庭报告和联系笔记),为连续作战研究人员提供了一个独特的机会,可以使用现有数据来检查连续作战实践(Epstein, 2002,2009)。使用QDM来改善连续波的关注有限(Epstein, 2002;Tice, 1998),因为很少有连续化学研究关注存储在连续化学ADS中的定性数据或描述连续化学研究人员如何使用定性数据(例外情况见Coohey, 2007;Cordero, 2004;Cross, Koh, Rolock, & Eblen-Manning, 2013;亨利,2014)。本文试图通过描述研究人员如何使用QDM技术来创建丰富的数据库,用于定性的连续研究,并回答关于连续研究客户和实践的独特问题,来填补这一空白。本文总结了QDM策略和方法,并报告了儿童福利定性数据挖掘(CWQDM)项目的工作,以说明这些方法和策略。最后,本文讨论了如何利用QDM来加强CW的实践、研究和教育。CWQDM项目是在一所大学的研究中心和一个地区社会服务联盟的长期实践研究伙伴关系的背景下发展起来的,该联盟包括11个县社会服务机构的负责人,四个研究生社会工作项目的院长和主任,以及代表当地基金会的执行人员(Austin et al., 1999)。CWQDM项目的设计是为了回应机构在发展他们在CWQDM中参与的能力方面的兴趣。一个县机构同意作为该项目的试验点参与。CWQDM项目与我们的代理伙伴合作,力求(1)创建一个化学武器数据库,可用于检查化学武器实践、客户需求和该领域的新问题;(2)开发可被CW机构和研究伙伴复制的QDM技术。在下一节中,我们将描述我们为执行CWQDM项目而开发的具体行动和过程,并通过七个步骤概述CW研究人员如何使用QDM创建用于实践研究的回顾性数据库。每个步骤的描述包括主要经验教训的总结,并在整个过程中讨论了相关文献。…
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来源期刊
Child Welfare
Child Welfare Multiple-
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