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        <title>Methods</title>
        <itunes:subtitle>NCRM</itunes:subtitle>
        <link>https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
        <description>The Methods podcast brings you conversations with leading international experts on a wide range of topics related to research methods. The podcast explores methodological innovations, provides practical tips and discusses new challenges and opportunities. The latest series focuses on qualitative longitudinal and mixed methods research and was recorded as part of the EU-funded YouthLife project. The podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods (NCRM), a UK centre that delivers training and resources on research methods, supporting researchers in the social sciences and beyond.</description>
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        <language>en</language>
        <pubDate>Thu, 23 Apr 2026 20:59:55 +0100</pubDate>
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            <title>Methods</title>
            <link>https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
        </image>
        <itunes:author>National Centre for Research Methods</itunes:author>
        <itunes:category text="Education">
            <itunes:category text="How To" />
        </itunes:category>
        <itunes:category text="Science">
            <itunes:category text="Social Sciences" />
        </itunes:category>
        <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:image href="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/podcastLogo.png" />
        <itunes:keywords>methods, research</itunes:keywords>
        <itunes:owner>
            <itunes:name>NCRM</itunes:name>
            <itunes:email>info@ncrm.ac.uk</itunes:email>
        </itunes:owner>
        <itunes:summary>The Methods podcast brings you conversations with leading international experts on a wide range of topics related to research methods. The podcast explores methodological innovations, provides practical tips and discusses new challenges and opportunities. The latest series focuses on qualitative longitudinal and mixed methods research and was recorded as part of the EU-funded YouthLife project. The podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods (NCRM), a UK centre that delivers training and resources on research methods, supporting researchers in the social sciences and beyond.</itunes:summary>
                                <item>
                <title>Blurring the boundaries (NCRM) - Gareth Morrell</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/research/NMI/2012/socialmedia.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Should social science researchers embrace social media and, if they do, what are the implications for our methods and practice? Gareth Morrell from NatCen Social Research talks to Chris Garrington about the NCRM-funded network exploring this question.                    ]]>
                </description>
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                <pubDate>Thu, 18 Oct 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Gareth Morrell</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:09:47</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Research, Methods, Boundaries</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Social media research</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Should social science researchers embrace social media and, if they do, what are the implications for our methods and practice? Gareth Morrell from NatCen Social Research talks to Chris Garrington about the NCRM-funded network exploring this question.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Should social science researchers embrace social media and, if they do, what are the implications for our methods and practice? Gareth Morrell from NatCen Social Research talks to Chris Garrington about the NCRM-funded network exploring this question.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Evaluating and improving small area estimation methods (NCRM) - Adam Whitworth</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/research/NMI/2012/smallarea.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Small area estimation methodologies are widely used across a variety of disciplines and there is growing interest and demand from policy makers in making more effective use of them. Adam Whitworth from the University of Sheffield talks to Chris Garrington about the NCRM-funded network set up to try to improve consensus and increase understanding in this important area.                    ]]>
                </description>
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                <pubDate>Wed, 28 Nov 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Adam Whitworth</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:09:12</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Research, Methods, small area estimation methods</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Small area estimation</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Small area estimation methodologies are widely used across a variety of disciplines and there is growing interest and demand from policy makers in making more effective use of them. Adam Whitworth from the University of Sheffield talks to Chris Garrington about the NCRM-funded network set up to try to improve consensus and increase understanding in this important area.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Small area estimation methodologies are widely used across a variety of disciplines and  there is growing interest and demand from policy makers in making more effective use of them. Adam Whitworth from the University of Sheffield talks to Chris Garrington about the NCRM-funded network set up to try to improve consensus and increase understanding in this important area. Read a methodological review paper 'Evaluations and improvements in small area estimation methodologies' by Whitworth et al or find out more about the network on the Evaluating and improving small area estimation methods project website.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>What are Qualitative Research Ethics (NCRM) - Rose Wiles</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/news/show.php?article=5303</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    From the arguments for and against undercover research to  an explosion in interest in online research, these are exciting but challenging time for researchers undertaking qualitative research. Increasing ethical regulation of social research also means it is crucial that researchers understand and engage with ethical issues as they emerge throughout the process of their work. In a new book, What are Qualitative Research Ethics? Dr Rose Wiles from NCRM offers an accessible overview of the field, identifying the key issues that researchers are likely to face, and the everyday ethical dilemmas that researchers encounter. In our latest NCRM podcast Dr Wiles talks to Chris Garrington about ethics and discusses the framework proposed in her book to help researchers deal with those dilemmas.                    ]]>
                </description>
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                <pubDate>Thu, 29 Nov 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Rose Wiles</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:12:39</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Research, Methods, Qualitative, Ethics</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Ethics</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>From the arguments for and against undercover research to  an explosion in interest in online research, these are exciting but challenging time for researchers undertaking qualitative research. Increasing ethical regulation of social research also means it is crucial that researchers understand and engage with ethical issues as they emerge throughout the process of their work. In a new book, What are Qualitative Research Ethics? Dr Rose Wiles from NCRM offers an accessible overview of the field, identifying the key issues that researchers are likely to face, and the everyday ethical dilemmas that researchers encounter. In our latest NCRM podcast Dr Wiles talks to Chris Garrington about ethics and discusses the framework proposed in her book to help researchers deal with those dilemmas.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>From the arguments for and against undercover research to   an explosion in interest in online research, these are exciting but  challenging time for researchers undertaking qualitative research. Increasing  ethical regulation of social research also means it is crucial that researchers  understand and engage with ethical issues as they emerge throughout the process  of their work. 
In a new book, What  are Qualitative Research Ethics? Dr Rose Wiles from NCRM offers  an accessible overview of the field, identifying the key issues that  researchers are likely to face, and the everyday ethical dilemmas that  researchers encounter.
In our latest NCRM podcast Dr Wiles talks to Chris  Garrington about ethics and discusses the framework proposed in her book to  help researchers deal with those dilemmas.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Understanding support for Complementary and Alternative Medicine in general populations (NCRM) - Patrick Sturgis</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/news/show.php?article=5305</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    The appropriate place for Complementary and Alternative Medicines (CAM) in modern healthcare continues to be a hot topic in policy circles as well as amongst health practitioners. In this NCRM podcast Patrick Sturgis talks to Chris Garrington about new research funded by the Wellcome Trust, which appears to show widespread public belief that homeopathic remedies are effective.                    ]]>
                </description>
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                <pubDate>Thu, 13 Dec 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Patrick Sturgis</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:11:05</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Research, Methods, Homeopathy, Alternative Medicine</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Survey methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>The appropriate place for Complementary and Alternative Medicines (CAM) in modern healthcare continues to be a hot topic in policy circles as well as amongst health practitioners. In this NCRM podcast Patrick Sturgis talks to Chris Garrington about new research funded by the Wellcome Trust, which appears to show widespread public belief that homeopathic remedies are effective.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>The appropriate place for Complementary and Alternative Medicines (CAM) in modern healthcare continues to be a hot topic in policy circles as well as amongst health practitioners. In this NCRM podcast Patrick Sturgis talks to Chris Garrington about new research funded by the Wellcome Trust, which appears to show widespread public belief that homeopathic remedies are effective. 
A working paper 'Understanding support for Complementary and Alternative Medicine in general populations: Use and perceived efficacy'  is available, and a journal article is forthcoming: Stoneman, P. Sturgis, P. and Allum, N. (in press) Understanding
        Support for Complementary and Alternative Medicine in General
        Populations: Use and Perceived Efficacy. PLOSone.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Digital Methods (NCRM) - Digital Methods Researchers</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    In an era in which social life is increasingly played out online, innovative digital research methods are providing new ways of asking questions and generating data. But with exciting new opportunities come a number of complex challenges. In this podcast researchers from the NCRM-funded project Digital Methods as Mainstream Methodologies talk to Christine Garrington about a new network that is trying build capacity in the research community to address the opportunities and challenges that digitally inspired methods present for social research.                    ]]>
                </description>
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                <pubDate>Tue, 22 Jan 2013 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Digital Methods Researchers</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:11:02</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Research, Methods, Digital Methods</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Digitally inspired methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>In an era in which social life is increasingly played out online, innovative digital research methods are providing new ways of asking questions and generating data. But with exciting new opportunities come a number of complex challenges. In this podcast researchers from the NCRM-funded project Digital Methods as Mainstream Methodologies talk to Christine Garrington about a new network that is trying build capacity in the research community to address the opportunities and challenges that digitally inspired methods present for social research.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>In an era in which social life is increasingly played out online, innovative digital research methods are providing new ways of asking questions and generating data. But with exciting new opportunities come a number of complex challenges. In this podcast researchers from the NCRM-funded project Digital Methods as Mainstream Methodologies talk to Christine Garrington about a new network that is trying build capacity in the research community to address the opportunities and challenges that digitally inspired methods present for social research.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Digital technologies in the operating theatre (NCRM) - Jeff Bezemer</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    How do surgical trainees learn to operate on real patients without increasing patient risks? How do surgeons come to make critical decisions during operations? How have new technologies changed learning and decision making? These are some of the questions being addressed in one research project at the NCRM-funded node, MODE based at the Institute of Education. Dr Jeff Bezemer talks to Christine Garrington how digital technology is being used to look at these questions and ultimately how he believes it could improve the decision-making and training processes in the operating theatre.                    ]]>
                </description>
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                <pubDate>Fri, 08 Mar 2013 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Jeff Bezemer</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:11:27</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>multimodal, digital, research methods, surgery</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Multimodal methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>How do surgical trainees learn to operate on real patients without increasing patient risks? How do surgeons come to make critical decisions during operations? How have new technologies changed learning and decision making? These are some of the questions being addressed in one research project at the NCRM-funded node, MODE based at the Institute of Education. Dr Jeff Bezemer talks to Christine Garrington how digital technology is being used to look at these questions and ultimately how he believes it could improve the decision-making and training processes in the operating theatre.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>How do surgical trainees learn to operate on real patients without increasing patient risks? How do surgeons come to make critical decisions during operations? How have new technologies changed learning and decision making? These are some of the questions being addressed in one research project at the NCRM-funded node, MODE multimodal methodologies based at the Institute of Education. Dr Jeff Bezemer talks to Christine Garrington how digital technology is being used to look at these questions and ultimately how he believes it could improve the decision-making and training processes in the operating theatre.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Big Data challenges for social scientists (NCRM) - Mark Birkin</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    The advent of a wide range of new data sources and digital research methods has created a plethora of opportunities for social science researchers to undertake innovative and impactful research. At the NCRM-funded node TALISMAN, researchers are using new data and technologies to look at a range of geography-related real world issues, with the aim of generating new and powerful methods to help address key policy questions. In this podcast TALISMAN Director Professor Mark Birkin talks about some of the node's work and explains why he wants more researchers to seize the new research opportunities available to them.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Birkin.mp3" length="10131398" type="audio/mpeg" />
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                <pubDate>Mon, 08 Apr 2013 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Mark Birkin</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:10:33</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>geography, TALISMAN, research methods, policy questions, Mark Birkin</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Geoinformatics</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>The advent of a wide range of new data sources and digital research methods has created a plethora of opportunities for social science researchers to undertake innovative and impactful research. At the NCRM-funded node TALISMAN, researchers are using new data and technologies to look at a range of geography-related real world issues, with the aim of generating new and powerful methods to help address key policy questions. In this podcast TALISMAN Director Professor Mark Birkin talks about some of the node's work and explains why he wants more researchers to seize the new research opportunities available to them.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>The advent of a wide range of new data sources and digital research methods has created a plethora of opportunities for social science researchers to undertake innovative and impactful research. At the NCRM-funded node TALISMAN, researchers are using new data and technologies to look at a range of geography-related real world issues, with the aim of generating new and powerful methods to help address key policy questions.
    In this podcast TALISMAN Director Professor Mark Birkin talks about some of the node's work and explains why he wants more researchers to seize the new research opportunities available to them.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Relationship between employment transitions and mental health among British men (NCRM) - Fiona Steele</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    The links between losing a job and and a person's mental health is of considerable interest not just to the individuals affected but to health professionals, researchers and policy makers. For researchers, there are interesting opportunities to use panel studies, where people are interviewed repeatedly over time, to look more closely at the links between the two. But along with the opportunities come challenges in measuring and analysing those links accurately. In this podcast Professor Fiona Steele talks to Christine Garrington about new research by the LEMMA 3 node of the NCRM examining at the issue of selection bias when analysing panel data to look at the links between unemployment and mental health.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Steele.mp3" length="9774456" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">80F1540A-E224-4C3A-80BD-0A8928888E7C</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 30 Apr 2013 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Fiona Steele</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:10:10</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>LEMMA, employment transitions, mental health, Fiona Steele</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Selection bias</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>The links between losing a job and and a person's mental health is of considerable interest not just to the individuals affected but to health professionals, researchers and policy makers. For researchers, there are interesting opportunities to use panel studies, where people are interviewed repeatedly over time, to look more closely at the links between the two. But along with the opportunities come challenges in measuring and analysing those links accurately. In this podcast Professor Fiona Steele talks to Christine Garrington about new research by the LEMMA 3 node of the NCRM examining at the issue of selection bias when analysing panel data to look at the links between unemployment and mental health.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>The links between losing a job and and a person's mental health is of considerable interest not just to the individuals affected but to health professionals, researchers and policy makers. For researchers, there are interesting opportunities to use panel studies, where people are interviewed repeatedly over time, to look more closely at the links between the two. But along with the opportunities come challenges in measuring and analysing those links accurately. 
    In this podcast Professor Fiona Steele talks to Christine Garrington about new research by the LEMMA 3 node of the NCRM examining at the issue of selection bias when analysing panel data to look at the links between unemployment and mental health.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>How many interviews is enough? (NCRM) - Rosalind Edwards</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Just how many interviews is enough? That is a question that students conducting a piece of qualitative research frequently ask. It is also a big question for early career researchers and established academics when they are designing research projects. Dr Sarah Baker from Middlesex University and Professor Rosalind Edwards from NCRM decided to address this question in an NCRM working paper that has since been downloaded more than 20,000 times. In this podcast Rosalind Edwards from NCRM talks about how they went about answering how many qualitative interviews is enough?                    ]]>
                </description>
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                <pubDate>Wed, 05 Jun 2013 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Rosalind Edwards</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:09:59</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Rosalind Edwards, interviews, qualitative</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Qualitative interview</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Just how many interviews is enough? That is a question that students conducting a piece of qualitative research frequently ask. It is also a big question for early career researchers and established academics when they are designing research projects. Dr Sarah Baker from Middlesex University and Professor Rosalind Edwards from NCRM decided to address this question in an NCRM working paper that has since been downloaded more than 20,000 times. In this podcast Rosalind Edwards from NCRM talks about how they went about answering how many qualitative interviews is enough?</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Just how many interviews is enough? That is a question that students conducting a piece of qualitative research frequently ask. It is also a big question for early career researchers and established academics when they are designing research projects. Dr Sarah Baker from Middlesex University and Professor Rosalind Edwards from NCRM decided to address this question in an NCRM working paper that has since been downloaded more than 20,000 times. In this podcast Rosalind Edwards from NCRM talks about how they went about answering "How many qualitative interviews is enough?"</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Biosocial pathways to health (NCRM) - George Ploubidis</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Although the 20th century witnessed significant improvements in health in most countries including people living longer, older people in developed countries still account for the large majority of people in poor health. There are also clear inequalities in health and a growing body of research has demonstrated the persistence of health inequalities at older ages. It's a subject that the team at the NCRM-funded node Pathways have been looking at in recent months and in this podcast, Dr George Ploubidis explains more about the research and findings, the implications for policy makers and the importance of further robust evidence in this area to ensure effective policy interventions.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Ploubidis.mp3" length="12203071" type="audio/mpeg" />
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                <pubDate>Thu, 18 Jul 2013 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>George Ploubidis</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:08:28</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>George Ploubidis, Biosocial, methods, health</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Biosocial methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Although the 20th century witnessed significant improvements in health in most countries including people living longer, older people in developed countries still account for the large majority of people in poor health. There are also clear inequalities in health and a growing body of research has demonstrated the persistence of health inequalities at older ages. It's a subject that the team at the NCRM-funded node Pathways have been looking at in recent months and in this podcast, Dr George Ploubidis explains more about the research and findings, the implications for policy makers and the importance of further robust evidence in this area to ensure effective policy interventions.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Although the 20th century witnessed significant improvements in health in most countries including people living longer, older people in developed countries still account for the large majority of people in poor health. There are also clear inequalities in health and a growing body of research has demonstrated the persistence of health inequalities at older ages. It's a subject that the team at the NCRM-funded node Pathways have been looking at in recent months and in this podcast, Dr George Ploubidis explains more about the research and findings, the implications for policy makers and the importance of further robust evidence in this area to ensure effective policy interventions.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Simulation of daily patterns of commuting and social activity (NCRM) - David Martin</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    A unique collaboration between two NCRM nodes - Talisman and the Hub is working on new methods for the simulation of 'social networks' in UK cities in order to show how individual people move around and are brought together within different residential and non-residential environments. The aim is to produce a simulation which maps individuals not just by their place of usual residence (as in the Census for example) but traces their movement patterns around the city in small parcels of elapsed time. The research could ultimately have useful applications in a range of areas from flood defence to emergency planning. In this podcast NCRM's Co-Director Professor David Martin explains the background to the project, the opportunities and challenges around using phones and Twitter in the research and talks about some of the innovative ideas being explored by early career researchers using the models created in the project.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_DavidMartin.mp3" length="8954138" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">9E0D16FF-16AD-4322-88F8-8F4A5D984CFF</guid>
                <pubDate>Mon, 05 Aug 2013 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>David Martin</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:12:26</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>David Martin, Spatial, data analysis, commuting</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Spatial data analysis</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>A unique collaboration between two NCRM nodes - Talisman and the Hub is working on new methods for the simulation of 'social networks' in UK cities in order to show how individual people move around and are brought together within different residential and non-residential environments. The aim is to produce a simulation which maps individuals not just by their place of usual residence (as in the Census for example) but traces their movement patterns around the city in small parcels of elapsed time. The research could ultimately have useful applications in a range of areas from flood defence to emergency planning. In this podcast NCRM's Co-Director Professor David Martin explains the background to the project, the opportunities and challenges around using phones and Twitter in the research and talks about some of the innovative ideas being explored by early career researchers using the models created in the project.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>A unique collaboration between two NCRM nodes - Talisman and the Hub is working on new methods for the simulation of 'social networks' in UK cities in order to show how individual people move around and are brought together within different residential and non-residential environments. The aim is to produce a simulation which maps individuals not just by their place of usual residence (as in the Census for example) but traces their movement patterns around the city in small parcels of elapsed time. The research could ultimately have useful applications in a range of areas from flood defence to emergency planning. In this podcast NCRM's Co-Director Professor David Martin explains the background to the project, the opportunities and challenges around using phones and Twitter in the research and talks about some of the innovative ideas being explored by early career researchers using the models created in the project.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Ethnic diversity, segregation and the social cohesion of neighbourhoods in London (NCRM) - Patrick Sturgis</title>
                <link>http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01419870.2013.831932</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    The effect of ethnic diversity on communities has become an increasingly hot topic. Many academics and policy makers believe that ethnically diverse communities are characterised by distrust and low levels of social cohesion, while numerous studies show an apparent negative link between the ethnic diversity of local communities and the extent to which residents express trust in, and a sense of cohesion with, one another. In this podcast NCRM Director Patrick Sturgis discusses new research that shows a different and more complex picture.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_ethnicdiv.mp3" length="9132472" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">BA2C8C58-2H65-47Q2-BA4D-1F0011A0EAD8</guid>
                <pubDate>Fri, 25 Oct 2013 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Patrick Sturgis</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:09:30</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Patrick Sturgis, Ethnic, diversity, segregation</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Ethnic Diversity</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>The effect of ethnic diversity on communities has become an increasingly hot topic. Many academics and policy makers believe that ethnically diverse communities are characterised by distrust and low levels of social cohesion, while numerous studies show an apparent negative link between the ethnic diversity of local communities and the extent to which residents express trust in, and a sense of cohesion with, one another. In this podcast NCRM Director Patrick Sturgis discusses new research that shows a different and more complex picture.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>The effect of ethnic diversity on communities has become an increasingly hot topic. Many academics and policy makers believe that ethnically diverse communities are characterised by distrust and low levels of social cohesion, while numerous studies show an apparent negative link between the ethnic diversity of local communities and the extent to which residents express trust in, and a sense of cohesion with, one another.
    In this podcast NCRM Director Patrick Sturgis discusses new research that shows a different and more complex picture.

The podcast is based on a  new article Ethnic diversity, segregation and the social cohesion of  neighbourhoods in London by Patrick Sturgis (NCRM, Univ. Southampton), Ian Brunton-Smith (University of  Surrey), Jouni Kuha (LSE) and Jonathan Jackson (LSE) has been published in  Ethnic and Racial Studies journal. The BBC News home editor Mark Easton covered this research in his article 'Is diversity good or bad for community cohesion?' (31 Oct 2013)</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Narrative imagination and everyday life (NCRM) - Molly Andrews</title>
                <link>http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199812394.do</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    From the challenge of envisioning our own futures to the storytelling skills of Barack Obama, a new book from the Professor Molly Andrews (NOVELLA node) explores how the links between stories and imagination affect the way we live. Narrative Imagination and Everyday Life by Professor Molly Andrews is published by Oxford University Press.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Andrews.mp3" length="13840272" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">D4331B2D-7910-49AE-BFAB-E55430C1E12D</guid>
                <pubDate>Mon, 25 Nov 2013 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Molly Andrews</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:14:25</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Molly Andrews, Narrative, analysis</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Narrative analysis</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>From the challenge of envisioning our own futures to the storytelling skills of Barack Obama, a new book from the Professor Molly Andrews (NOVELLA node) explores how the links between stories and imagination affect the way we live. Narrative Imagination and Everyday Life by Professor Molly Andrews is published by Oxford University Press.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>From  the challenge of envisioning our own futures  to the storytelling skills of Barack Obama, a new book from the Professor Molly Andrews (NOVELLA node) explores how the links between stories and imagination affect the way we live. Narrative Imagination and Everyday Life by Professor Molly Andrews is published by Oxford University Press.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Web surveys for the general population: How, why and when? (NCRM) - Gerry Nicolaas</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Cultural and technological change has made the web a possible and even desirable mode for complex social surveys, but the financial challenges faced by the Research Councils and the UK Government has accelerated this shift, creating an urgent need to explore both its potential and hazards for a range of studies. While progress has been made, there has been no real consensus about how this can best be achieved while maintaining population representativeness and preserving data quality. In this podcast Gerry Nicolaas from NatCen Social Research talks about GenPopWeb, a network of experts and professionals looking to change that.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_genpopweb.mp3" length="10368704" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">DA2C2C58-AH65-4H32-BA4D-1F001189EAD8</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 22 Jan 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Gerry Nicolaas</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:10:48</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Gerry Nicolaas, survey, methodology</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Survey Methodology</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Cultural and technological change has made the web a possible and even desirable mode for complex social surveys, but the financial challenges faced by the Research Councils and the UK Government has accelerated this shift, creating an urgent need to explore both its potential and hazards for a range of studies. While progress has been made, there has been no real consensus about how this can best be achieved while maintaining population representativeness and preserving data quality. In this podcast Gerry Nicolaas from NatCen Social Research talks about GenPopWeb, a network of experts and professionals looking to change that.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Cultural and technological change has made the web a possible and even desirable mode for complex social surveys, but the financial challenges faced by the Research Councils and the UK Government has accelerated this shift, creating an urgent need to explore both its potential and hazards for a range of studies. While progress has been made, there has been no real consensus about how this can best be achieved while maintaining population representativeness and preserving data quality. In this podcast Gerry Nicolaas from NatCen Social Research talks about GenPopWeb, a network of experts and professionals looking to change that.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Mobile research tools for social sciences: Integrating genetic, environmental and behavioural data (NCRM) - Alex Kogan</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    The NCRM funded project 'Integrating emerging smartphone and genetic initiatives to produce cost-effective, innovative methodology' hopes to produce an unprecedented research tool and data source to transform the ability of social scientists to look at the interaction of hereditary factors, and people's daily environment and behaviour. Dr Alex Kogan from the University of Cambridge explains more about the project in this podcast.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Kogan.mp3" length="10134800" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">D12C2C28-AH65-4H32-BADB-1F0011896AD8</guid>
                <pubDate>Thu, 20 Feb 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Alex Kogan</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:07:02</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Alex Kogan, Mobile, research</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Mobile Research</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>The NCRM funded project 'Integrating emerging smartphone and genetic initiatives to produce cost-effective, innovative methodology' hopes to produce an unprecedented research tool and data source to transform the ability of social scientists to look at the interaction of hereditary factors, and people's daily environment and behaviour. Dr Alex Kogan from the University of Cambridge explains more about the project in this podcast.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>The NCRM funded project Integrating emerging smartphone and genetic initiatives to produce cost-effective, innovative methodology hopes to produce an unprecedented research tool and data source to transform the ability of social scientists to look at the interaction of hereditary factors, and people's daily environment and behaviour. Dr Alex Kogan from the University of Cambridge explains more about the project in this podcast.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>What is inclusive research? (NCRM) - Melanie Nind</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    What is inclusive research? How do we recognize it, understand it, do it, and know when it is done well? It’s a much-talked about topic among the research and policy communities alike and one that’s now been addressed in a book 'What is inclusive research?' by NCRM co-director Professor Melanie Nind at the University of Southampton. As well as looking at how and why more inclusive approaches to research have evolved, the book explores how inclusive research fits into the key debates and policy shifts. Professor Nind concludes with an overview of how far inclusive research has come, the next challenges, and the emergent understandings of what quality means and looks like in inclusive research, something she hopes will become evident at this year’s Research Methods Festival.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_nind.mp3" length="13486624" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">D16C2C28-AH95-4HA2-BADB-1F0011891AD8</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 15 Apr 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Melanie Nind</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:14:03</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Melanie Nind, inclusive, research</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Inclusive research</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>What is inclusive research? How do we recognize it, understand it, do it, and know when it is done well? It’s a much-talked about topic among the research and policy communities alike and one that’s now been addressed in a book 'What is inclusive research?' by NCRM co-director Professor Melanie Nind at the University of Southampton. As well as looking at how and why more inclusive approaches to research have evolved, the book explores how inclusive research fits into the key debates and policy shifts. Professor Nind concludes with an overview of how far inclusive research has come, the next challenges, and the emergent understandings of what quality means and looks like in inclusive research, something she hopes will become evident at this year’s Research Methods Festival.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>What is inclusive research? How do we recognize it, understand it, do it, and know when it is done well? It’s a much-talked about topic among the research and policy communities alike and one that’s now been addressed in a book 'What is inclusive research?' by NCRM co-director Professor Melanie Nind at the University of Southampton. 
    As well as looking at how and why more inclusive approaches to research have evolved, the book explores how inclusive research fits into the key debates and policy shifts. Professor Nind concludes with an overview of how far inclusive research has come, the next challenges, and the emergent understandings of what quality means and looks like in inclusive research, something she hopes will become evident at this year’s Research Methods Festival.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>The 'Thing-ness' problem of mixed methods research (NCRM) - Sharlene Hesse-Biber</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Is mixed methods research a turbulent environment and is innovation being stifled by an overly tightly bound concept of what it is? Sharlene Hesse-Biber, professor in the Sociology Department of Boston College  thinks so. Professor Hesse-Biber will be giving a Key Lecture at the ESRC Research Methods Festival in July where she will explain her thinking, how she has been reflecting on 20 years of mixed methods teaching and her hopes for the future. In this podcast, she gives a taster of what we can expect.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_SharleneHB.mp3" length="17196639" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">04735E77-FB3E-4BE8-8AF1-45CB8A37E7B6</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 13 May 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Sharlene Hesse-Biber</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:11:56</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Sharlene Hesse-Biber, mixed, methods</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Mixed methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Is mixed methods research a turbulent environment and is innovation being stifled by an overly tightly bound concept of what it is? Sharlene Hesse-Biber, professor in the Sociology Department of Boston College  thinks so. Professor Hesse-Biber will be giving a Key Lecture at the ESRC Research Methods Festival in July where she will explain her thinking, how she has been reflecting on 20 years of mixed methods teaching and her hopes for the future. In this podcast, she gives a taster of what we can expect.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Is mixed methods research a turbulent environment and is innovation being stifled by an overly tightly bound concept of what it is? Sharlene Hesse-Biber, professor in the Sociology Department of Boston College  thinks so. Professor Hesse-Biber will be giving a Key Lecture at the ESRC Research Methods Festival in July where she will explain her thinking, how she has been reflecting on 20 years of mixed methods teaching and her hopes for the future. In this podcast, she gives a taster of what we can expect.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Reverse engineering Chinese censorship: social media and research (NCRM) - Gary King</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Chinese social media censorship constitutes the largest selective suppression of human communication in history. It is often assumed that the Chinese Government censors any criticism of its members and policies, but research by a team at Harvard University has shown this is not quite the case. Professor Gary King, due to deliver the keynote lecture at this year’s ESRC Research Methods Festival, explains how he and students stumbled across their findings while undertaking methodological research and discusses how they might shed a new light on what the Chinese censor and why.                     ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_King.mp3" length="16503094" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">81292256-e1c0-11e3-b0d2-005056ba5d8f</guid>
                <pubDate>Fri, 23 May 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Gary King</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:17:11</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Gary King, text, mining</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Text mining</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Chinese social media censorship constitutes the largest selective suppression of human communication in history. It is often assumed that the Chinese Government censors any criticism of its members and policies, but research by a team at Harvard University has shown this is not quite the case. Professor Gary King, due to deliver the keynote lecture at this year’s ESRC Research Methods Festival, explains how he and students stumbled across their findings while undertaking methodological research and discusses how they might shed a new light on what the Chinese censor and why. </itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Chinese social media censorship constitutes the largest selective suppression of human communication in history. It is often assumed that the Chinese Government censors any criticism of its members and policies, but research by a team at Harvard University has shown this is not quite the case. Professor Gary King, due to deliver the keynote lecture at this year’s ESRC Research Methods Festival, explains how he and students stumbled across their findings while undertaking methodological research and discusses how they might shed a new light on what the Chinese censor and why. </itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Methodological innovation in digital arts and social sciences (NCRM) - Carey Jewitt</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    It has become widely accepted that it is both worthwhile and necessary for researchers from different disciplines to work together. But how to go about this may not always be obvious and there will inevitably be challenges. In the exciting and innovative NCRM-funded MIDAS project, researchers from the worlds of Social Science and the Digital Arts have come together to look at how they might synthesise methods to open up different perspectives, generate imaginative research questions, and create a wider range of research tools, for those looking to understand  the complex topic of embodiment and how we interact every day with rapidly developing technologies. Professor Carey Jewitt from the Institute of Education explains more.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Carey.mp3" length="12818032" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">1edff9fc-f085-11e3-b0d2-005056ba5d8f</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 10 Jun 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Carey Jewitt</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:13:21</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Carey Jewitt, multimodal, methods</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Multimodal methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>It has become widely accepted that it is both worthwhile and necessary for researchers from different disciplines to work together. But how to go about this may not always be obvious and there will inevitably be challenges. In the exciting and innovative NCRM-funded MIDAS project, researchers from the worlds of Social Science and the Digital Arts have come together to look at how they might synthesise methods to open up different perspectives, generate imaginative research questions, and create a wider range of research tools, for those looking to understand  the complex topic of embodiment and how we interact every day with rapidly developing technologies. Professor Carey Jewitt from the Institute of Education explains more.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>It has become widely accepted that it is both worthwhile and necessary for researchers from different disciplines to work together. But how to go about this may not always be obvious and there will inevitably be challenges. In the exciting and innovative NCRM-funded MIDAS project, researchers from the worlds of Social Science and the Digital Arts have come together to look at how they might synthesise methods to open up different perspectives, generate imaginative research questions, and create a wider range of research tools, for those looking to understand  the complex topic of embodiment and how we interact every day with rapidly developing technologies. Professor Carey Jewitt from the Institute of Education explains more.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Communicating chronic pain: Interdisciplinary methods for non-textual data (NCRM) - Dr Jen Tarr</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Chronic pain affects nearly 10 million Britons and can result in time off work and poor quality of life for many of them. Diagnosing and treating chronic pain can be particularly difficult relying heavily on the patient’s ability to communicate their symptoms to health professionals who must then listen and interpret those symptoms. New NCRM funded research by Dr Jen Tarr and colleagues from the London School of Economics have been examining innovative non-verbal ways of communicating pain to see whether pain can be expressed through more than just words.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_JenTarr.mp3" length="13816447" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">ce867374-f6dc-11e3-b0d2-005056ba5d8f</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 18 Jun 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Dr Jen Tarr</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:14:23</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Jen Tarr, non-textual, research methods, research, methods</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>non-textual research methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Chronic pain affects nearly 10 million Britons and can result in time off work and poor quality of life for many of them. Diagnosing and treating chronic pain can be particularly difficult relying heavily on the patient’s ability to communicate their symptoms to health professionals who must then listen and interpret those symptoms. New NCRM funded research by Dr Jen Tarr and colleagues from the London School of Economics have been examining innovative non-verbal ways of communicating pain to see whether pain can be expressed through more than just words.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Chronic pain affects nearly 10 million Britons and can result in time off work and poor quality of life for many of them. Diagnosing and treating chronic pain can be particularly difficult relying heavily on the patient’s ability to communicate their symptoms to health professionals who must then listen and interpret those symptoms. New NCRM funded research by Dr Jen Tarr and colleagues from the London School of Economics have been examining innovative non-verbal ways of communicating pain to see whether pain can be expressed through more than just words.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>The potential of crowdsourcing for research and funding in academia (NCRM) - Dr Andrew Hudson-Smith</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    When it comes to the commercial world, crowdfunding has become a mainstream means of accessing money for anyone with a great idea. But what about the possibilities when it comes to funding academic research? Dr Andrew Hudson-Smith at UCL have been exploring the benefits of crowdsourcing for information, resources and for funding. He will be sharing his thoughts and ideas with fellow academics and researchers at the ESRC Research Methods Festival.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Crowdsourcing.mp3" length="20584616" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">8180a59e-037b-11e4-b0d2-005056ba5d8f</guid>
                <pubDate>Fri, 04 Jul 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Dr Andrew Hudson-Smith</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:14:17</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Andrew Hudson-Smith, crowdsourcing</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Crowdsourcing</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>When it comes to the commercial world, crowdfunding has become a mainstream means of accessing money for anyone with a great idea. But what about the possibilities when it comes to funding academic research? Dr Andrew Hudson-Smith at UCL have been exploring the benefits of crowdsourcing for information, resources and for funding. He will be sharing his thoughts and ideas with fellow academics and researchers at the ESRC Research Methods Festival.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>When it comes to the commercial world, crowdfunding has become a mainstream means of accessing money for anyone with a great idea. But what about the possibilities when it comes to funding academic research? Dr Andrew Hudson-Smith at UCL have been exploring the benefits of crowdsourcing for information, resources and for funding. He will be sharing his thoughts and ideas with fellow academics and researchers at the ESRC Research Methods Festival.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Paradata in qualitative research (NCRM) - Rosalind Edwards</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    A better understanding of paradata, or the by-products of the collection of survey data, could help researchers gain insights into issues around survey quality and costs. That's according to a team of NCRM-funded researchers who have been examining the paradata around Peter Townsend’s famous Poverty in the UK study, undertaken in the late 1960s. Professor Ros Edwards explains more about what paradata is, the different ways in which it can be examined and what she and the team have learned about the study, the people involved in it and the implications of the team’s findings for survey research today.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_RosEdwards.mp3" length="20442301" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">5120a59e-036b-12e4-b0d2-005156ba5d2f</guid>
                <pubDate>Mon, 14 Jul 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Rosalind Edwards</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:14:11</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Rosalind Edwards, Paradata</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Paradata</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>A better understanding of paradata, or the by-products of the collection of survey data, could help researchers gain insights into issues around survey quality and costs. That's according to a team of NCRM-funded researchers who have been examining the paradata around Peter Townsend’s famous Poverty in the UK study, undertaken in the late 1960s. Professor Ros Edwards explains more about what paradata is, the different ways in which it can be examined and what she and the team have learned about the study, the people involved in it and the implications of the team’s findings for survey research today.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>A better understanding of paradata, or the by-products of the collection of survey data, could help researchers gain insights into issues around survey quality and costs. That's according to a team of NCRM-funded researchers who have been examining the paradata around Peter Townsend’s famous Poverty in the UK study, undertaken in the late 1960s. Professor Ros Edwards explains more about what paradata is, the different ways in which it can be examined and what she and the team have learned about the study, the people involved in it and the implications of the team’s findings for survey research today.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Telling the untellable: researching emotionally sensitive and challenging topics (NCRM) - Denise Turner</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    There can be few more emotionally sensitive and challenging research areas than looking at the deaths of children. Following the death of her own young son, social worker Denise Turner decided to investigate parents' experiences of the professional response following the death of a child. Having completed her PhD, she shared her research at the ESRC Research Methods Festival 2014, talking openly about her personal and professional take on the research and the methodological challenges she faced along the way.                     ]]>
                </description>
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                <guid isPermaLink="false">5121a59e-036b-12f4-b0d2-0151965a5d2e</guid>
                <pubDate>Mon, 11 Aug 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Denise Turner</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:14:48</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Denise Turner, Qualitative approaches</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Qualitative approaches</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>There can be few more emotionally sensitive and challenging research areas than looking at the deaths of children. Following the death of her own young son, social worker Denise Turner decided to investigate parents' experiences of the professional response following the death of a child. Having completed her PhD, she shared her research at the ESRC Research Methods Festival 2014, talking openly about her personal and professional take on the research and the methodological challenges she faced along the way. </itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>There can be few more emotionally sensitive and challenging research areas than looking at the deaths of children. Following the death of her own young son, social worker Denise Turner decided to investigate parents' experiences of the professional response following the death of a child. Having completed her PhD, she shared her research at the ESRC Research Methods Festival 2014, talking openly about her personal and professional take on the research and the methodological challenges she faced along the way. </itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Using Social Media in Research (NCRM) - Jamie Bartlett</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    An increasing number of academics and researchers are seeking to exploit the rich data available on social media platforms such as Twitter and Facebook. One organisation leading the way is the think-tank Demos, whose Centre for the Analysis of Social Media is working to produce political, social and policy insight and understanding through social media research. Its Director Jamie Bartlett was one of the presenters at the ESRC Research Methods Festival 2014 session on the challenges and opportunities of using social media for social science research.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_JamieBartlett.mp3" length="10776786" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">6a4fb70e-3e7f-11e4-b0d2-005056ba5d8f</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 17 Sep 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Jamie Bartlett</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:07:28</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Jamie Bartlett, social media</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Social media</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>An increasing number of academics and researchers are seeking to exploit the rich data available on social media platforms such as Twitter and Facebook. One organisation leading the way is the think-tank Demos, whose Centre for the Analysis of Social Media is working to produce political, social and policy insight and understanding through social media research. Its Director Jamie Bartlett was one of the presenters at the ESRC Research Methods Festival 2014 session on the challenges and opportunities of using social media for social science research.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>An increasing number of academics and researchers are seeking to exploit the rich data available on social media platforms such as Twitter and Facebook. One organisation leading the way is the think-tank Demos, whose Centre for the Analysis of Social Media is working to produce political, social and policy insight and understanding through social media research. Its Director Jamie Bartlett was one of the presenters at the ESRC Research Methods Festival 2014 session on the challenges and opportunities of using social media for social science research.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Face 2 Face: Tracing the real and the mediated in children's cultural worlds (NCRM) - Liam Berriman</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/RMF2014/programme/session.php?id=A6</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Researching children's lives ethically in order to inform critical debates around child protection, and getting a better understanding of what it's like to research children in a digital age has been the thrust of the NCRM-funded Face to Face project at the University of Sussex. The project, which  aims to develop methodological tools for researching the temporal rhythms of children's everyday lives was featured at the ESRC Research Methods Festival 2014 as part of a session looking at initiatives supporting methodological innovation in qualitative longitudinal research. Liam Berriman talks to Christine Garrington about the project.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_LiamBerriman.mp3" length="12346013" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">BB238F58-2665-1A72-B78C-1C524180E130</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 22 Oct 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Liam Berriman</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:08:34</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>temporality,Liam Berriman</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>temporality</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Researching children's lives ethically in order to inform critical debates around child protection, and getting a better understanding of what it's like to research children in a digital age has been the thrust of the NCRM-funded Face to Face project at the University of Sussex. The project, which  aims to develop methodological tools for researching the temporal rhythms of children's everyday lives was featured at the ESRC Research Methods Festival 2014 as part of a session looking at initiatives supporting methodological innovation in qualitative longitudinal research. Liam Berriman talks to Christine Garrington about the project.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Researching children's lives ethically in order to inform critical debates around child protection, and getting a better understanding of what it's like to research children in a digital age has been the thrust of the NCRM-funded Face to Face project at the University of Sussex. The project, which  aims to develop methodological tools for researching the temporal rhythms of children's everyday lives was featured at the ESRC Research Methods Festival 2014 as part of a session looking at initiatives supporting methodological innovation in qualitative longitudinal research. Liam Berriman talks to Christine Garrington about the project.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>The Collaborative Online Social Media Observatory (COSMOS): Beginnings, Emerging Findings and Possible Futures (NCRM) - Dr. Matthew Williams and Dr. Pete Burnap</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Dr. Matthew Williams and Dr. Pete Burnap from the NCRM funded Crime Sensing with Social Media project talk about the core ideas behind the founding of the ESRC supported Collaborative Online Social Media Observatory (COSMOS), highlight some of the emerging findings from the first 3 years of their projects on crime sensing, racial tension, cyberhate and Twitter user demographics, and discuss the future of the COSMOS programme and the role it has in improving our understanding of how 'online' publics' organise and react to national and global events and in democratising social media data access and big 'social' data analysis. COSMOS is a collaboration between the universities of Cardiff (Williams, Burnap, Sloan, Housley, Edwards, Rana & Morgan) Warwick (Procter) and St. Andrews (Voss).                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_COSMOS.mp3" length="28177942" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">BB238C5A-2665-48B2-BA8C-1C52418021C0</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 19 Nov 2014 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Dr. Matthew Williams and Dr. Pete Burnap</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:29:21</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>big data, Matthew Williams, Pete Burnap</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Big data</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Dr. Matthew Williams and Dr. Pete Burnap from the NCRM funded Crime Sensing with Social Media project talk about the core ideas behind the founding of the ESRC supported Collaborative Online Social Media Observatory (COSMOS), highlight some of the emerging findings from the first 3 years of their projects on crime sensing, racial tension, cyberhate and Twitter user demographics, and discuss the future of the COSMOS programme and the role it has in improving our understanding of how 'online' publics' organise and react to national and global events and in democratising social media data access and big 'social' data analysis. COSMOS is a collaboration between the universities of Cardiff (Williams, Burnap, Sloan, Housley, Edwards, Rana &amp; Morgan) Warwick (Procter) and St. Andrews (Voss).</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Dr. Matthew Williams and Dr. Pete Burnap from the NCRM funded Crime Sensing with Social Media project talk about the core ideas behind the founding of the ESRC supported Collaborative Online Social Media Observatory (COSMOS), highlight some of the emerging findings from the first 3 years of their projects on crime sensing, racial tension, cyberhate and Twitter user demographics, and discuss the future of the COSMOS programme and the role it has in improving our understanding of how 'online' publics' organise and react to national and global events and in democratising social media data access and big 'social' data analysis. COSMOS is a collaboration between the universities of Cardiff (Williams, Burnap, Sloan, Housley, Edwards, Rana &amp; Morgan) Warwick (Procter) and St. Andrews (Voss).</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>To probe or not to probe (NCRM) - Jouni Kuha</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/research/MIP/nonresponse.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    To probe or not to probe respondents' initial answers of "Don't know" is a key question when it comes to tackling the problem of nonresponse in surveys. In an NCRM funded Methodological Innovation Project on Item nonresponse and measurement error in cross-national surveys, Jouni Kuha from LSE has been working with colleagues at LSE and City University to see whether asking interviewers to probe respondents further affects both the quantity and the quality of their answers. He talks to Christine Garrington about findings from the research and what he thinks they mean for those involved in survey design and management.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Kuha.mp3" length="16980320" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">BB23C66A-2665-48B2-BA8C-1C56618021C9</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 21 Jan 2015 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Jouni Kuha</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:11:47</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>nonresponse, Jouni Kuha</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Nonresponse</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>To probe or not to probe respondents' initial answers of "Don't know" is a key question when it comes to tackling the problem of nonresponse in surveys. In an NCRM funded Methodological Innovation Project on Item nonresponse and measurement error in cross-national surveys, Jouni Kuha from LSE has been working with colleagues at LSE and City University to see whether asking interviewers to probe respondents further affects both the quantity and the quality of their answers. He talks to Christine Garrington about findings from the research and what he thinks they mean for those involved in survey design and management.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>To probe or not to probe respondents' initial answers of "Don't know" is a key question when it comes to tackling the problem of nonresponse in surveys. In an NCRM funded Methodological Innovation Project on Item nonresponse and measurement error in cross-national surveys, Jouni Kuha from LSE has been working with colleagues at LSE and City University to see whether asking interviewers to probe respondents further affects both the quantity and the quality of their answers. He talks to Christine Garrington about findings from the research and what he thinks they mean for those involved in survey design and management.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Predicting and understanding the 2015 General Election (NCRM) - Professor John Curtice</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Declining support for the main parties, allied with the rise of UKIP and the aftermath of the Scottish Independence Referendum mean that the 2015 General Election promises to be one of the most difficult to predict for many years. In addition to changes in the political landscape, the ways in which political scientists and pollsters seek to understand and predict electoral preferences have also undergone considerable transformation. At an event hosted by NCRM and the British Election Study (BES), and sponsored by the British Polling Council, Professor John Curtice from the University of Strathclyde talked through some of the key factors that might help us pick through the facts and figures and the speculation. Afterwards, he spoke to Christine Garrington for the NCRM Podcast Series.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_John_Curtice.mp3" length="21115978" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">F322BC16-A0F0-42E7-A1A0-0BF2DDDAE555</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 04 Mar 2015 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Professor John Curtice</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:21:59</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Political forecasting, General election</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Political forecasting</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Declining support for the main parties, allied with the rise of UKIP and the aftermath of the Scottish Independence Referendum mean that the 2015 General Election promises to be one of the most difficult to predict for many years. In addition to changes in the political landscape, the ways in which political scientists and pollsters seek to understand and predict electoral preferences have also undergone considerable transformation. At an event hosted by NCRM and the British Election Study (BES), and sponsored by the British Polling Council, Professor John Curtice from the University of Strathclyde talked through some of the key factors that might help us pick through the facts and figures and the speculation. Afterwards, he spoke to Christine Garrington for the NCRM Podcast Series.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Declining support for the main parties, allied with the rise of UKIP and the aftermath of the Scottish Independence Referendum mean that the 2015 General Election promises to be one of the most difficult to predict for many years. In addition to changes in the political landscape, the ways in which political scientists and pollsters seek to understand and predict electoral preferences have also undergone considerable transformation. At an event hosted by NCRM and the British Election Study (BES), and sponsored by the British Polling Council, Professor John Curtice from the University of Strathclyde talked through some of the key factors that might help us pick through the facts and figures and the speculation. Afterwards, he spoke to Christine Garrington for the NCRM Podcast Series.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Surveying UK population's political attitudes – British Election Study (NCRM) - Jane Green</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/TandE/video/podcasts.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    How we vote and why we vote the way we do has become a key part of how we look at politics in the UK. One of the best resources around to help us pick our way through those things is the well-established British Election Study. Professor Jane Green from the University of Manchester, one of a consortium of universities running the study, discusses what the study helps us understand, how it works and how researchers and other interested individuals can get their hands on this data.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Jane_Green.mp3" length="16516993" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">EA23817A-26A5-48B2-BA8C-1C52318021C0</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 24 Mar 2015 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Jane Green</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:11:25</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>survey methods, Jane Green</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Survey Methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>How we vote and why we vote the way we do has become a key part of how we look at politics in the UK. One of the best resources around to help us pick our way through those things is the well-established British Election Study. Professor Jane Green from the University of Manchester, one of a consortium of universities running the study, discusses what the study helps us understand, how it works and how researchers and other interested individuals can get their hands on this data.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>How we vote and why we vote the way we do has become a key part of how we look at politics in the UK. One of the best resources around to help us pick our way through those things is the well-established British Election Study.  Professor Jane Green from the University of Manchester, one of a consortium of universities running the study, discusses what the study helps us understand, how it works and how researchers and other interested individuals can get their hands on this data.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Using Skype in qualitative interviews with young people (NCRM) - Susie Weller</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/research/MIP/videotelephony.php</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    The way we communicate in our professional and personal lives has changed dramatically in recent years. We can now Skype our banks, receive texts from our doctor, and our politicians use Twitter to try to win over voters.

For social researchers such digital communication technologies present many new and exciting opportunities for recruiting participants, carrying out fieldwork and publicising research findings.

In this podcast Dr Susie Weller from the University of Southampton discusses her NCRM funded Methodological Innovation Project 'The potential of video telephony in qualitative longitudinal research: A participatory and interactionist approach to assessing remoteness and rapport'
                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Weller.mp3" length="18585262" type="audio/mpeg" />
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                <pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2015 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Susie Weller</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:12:54</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Qualitative, longitudinal, research</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Qualitative longitudinal research</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>The way we communicate in our professional and personal lives has changed dramatically in recent years. We can now Skype our banks, receive texts from our doctor, and our politicians use Twitter to try to win over voters.

For social researchers such digital communication technologies present many new and exciting opportunities for recruiting participants, carrying out fieldwork and publicising research findings.

In this podcast Dr Susie Weller from the University of Southampton discusses her NCRM funded Methodological Innovation Project 'The potential of video telephony in qualitative longitudinal research: A participatory and interactionist approach to assessing remoteness and rapport'
</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>The way we communicate in our professional and personal lives has changed dramatically in recent years. We can now Skype our banks, receive texts from our doctor, and our politicians use Twitter to try to win over voters.

For social researchers such digital communication technologies present many new and exciting opportunities for recruiting participants, carrying out fieldwork and publicising research findings.

In this podcast Dr Susie Weller from the University of Southampton discusses her NCRM funded Methodological Innovation Project The potential of video telephony in qualitative longitudinal research: A participatory and interactionist approach to assessing remoteness and rapport
</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Teaching and learning social research methods (NCRM) - Melanie Nind, Daniel Kilburn and Rebekah Luff</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    This is a joint podcast by the NCRM and the International Journal for Social Research Methods (IJSRM). There is little research literature about teaching and learning of advanced research methods, which is the motivation for the NCRM research project 'The pedagogy of methodological learning'. NCRM and IJSRM are collaborating on a special issue, entitled 'Teaching and learning social research methods – Developments in pedagogical knowledge'.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_audio_research_methods.mp3" length="13427215" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">4423AE58-2F65-1234-BA81-1C52A180E120</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2015 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Melanie Nind, Daniel Kilburn and Rebekah Luff</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:11:11</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>pedagogy, Teaching and learning, social research methods</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>pedagogy</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>This is a joint podcast by the NCRM and the International Journal for Social Research Methods (IJSRM). There is little research literature about teaching and learning of advanced research methods, which is the motivation for the NCRM research project 'The pedagogy of methodological learning'. NCRM and IJSRM are collaborating on a special issue, entitled 'Teaching and learning social research methods – Developments in pedagogical knowledge'.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>This is a joint podcast by the NCRM and the International Journal for Social Research Methods (IJSRM). There is little research literature about teaching and learning of advanced research methods, which is the motivation for the NCRM research project 'The pedagogy of methodological learning'. NCRM and IJSRM are collaborating on a special issue, entitled 'Teaching and learning social research methods – Developments in pedagogical knowledge'.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Data linkage: challenges and opportunities  (NCRM) - Peter Elias</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    The growth of digital information provides social scientists with unprecedented opportunities to access the personal data of people all around the world and to transform our understanding. In this podcast, Professor Peter Elias, Strategic Advisor for Data Resources to the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) explains the latest thinking around data linkage.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Elias.mp3" length="12665060" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">CBD111E4-112D-4CC4-AE7C-1E89AA71CD41</guid>
                <pubDate>Sun, 19 Jul 2015 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Peter Elias</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:08:48</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>data linkage, ethics, dataset</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>data linkage, ethics, dataset</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>The growth of digital information provides social scientists with unprecedented opportunities to access the personal data of people all around the world and to transform our understanding. In this podcast, Professor Peter Elias, Strategic Advisor for Data Resources to the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) explains the latest thinking around data linkage.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>The growth of digital information provides social scientists with unprecedented opportunities to access the personal data of people all around the world and to transform our understanding. In this podcast, Professor Peter Elias, Strategic Advisor for Data Resources to the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) explains the latest thinking around data linkage.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Care.data: the challenges of linking health service data (NCRM) - Neil Serougi</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Linking data for the benefit of individuals and wider society is an important research area, not just for social scientists, but for us all. One of the most well known and most talked about practical examples of this is the somewhat controversial care.data programmme, designed to share patients' health and social care information in order to see what works and what doesn't in the NHS. Independent researcher Neil Serougi discusses the programme's rocky road and reflects on recent discussions hosted by NCRM on the ethical and social concerns around linked data."                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Serougi.mp3" length="8777415" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">80F12C0A-E224-4C3A-80B2-0A8928128E7C</guid>
                <pubDate>Sun, 19 Jul 2015 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Neil Serougi</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:06:05</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>NHS, data linkage, dataset, GPs, patients</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Data linkage, dataset, GPs, patients, NHS</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Linking data for the benefit of individuals and wider society is an important research area, not just for social scientists, but for us all. One of the most well known and most talked about practical examples of this is the somewhat controversial care.data programmme, designed to share patients' health and social care information in order to see what works and what doesn't in the NHS. Independent researcher Neil Serougi discusses the programme's rocky road and reflects on recent discussions hosted by NCRM on the ethical and social concerns around linked data."</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Linking data for the benefit of individuals and wider society is an important research area, not just for social scientists, but for us all. One of the most well known and most talked about practical examples of this is the somewhat controversial care.data programmme, designed to share patients' health and social care information in order to see what works and what doesn't in the NHS. Independent researcher Neil Serougi discusses the programme's rocky road and reflects on recent discussions hosted by NCRM on the ethical and social concerns around linked data."</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Shared understanding between improvising musicians (NCRM) - Michael Schober</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    We often assume that great musical partnerships are just that - relationships built on a mutual understanding, intensive practice together, learning how to be totally in sync to create an incredible performance. But is it essential that musicians have this 'special relationship' to produce great music? Psychologist and pianist Michael Schober from the New School for Social Research in New York has been investigating and, in this podcast, describes an experiment he has carried out to try to find out.                     ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Schober.mp3" length="16374022" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">A1238C58-2425-4772-BB4C-1C524180C1C5</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 02 Dec 2015 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Michael Schober</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:11:22</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Creative research, methods, improvising musicians</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Creative research methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>We often assume that great musical partnerships are just that - relationships built on a mutual understanding, intensive practice together, learning how to be totally in sync to create an incredible performance. But is it essential that musicians have this 'special relationship' to produce great music? Psychologist and pianist Michael Schober from the New School for Social Research in New York has been investigating and, in this podcast, describes an experiment he has carried out to try to find out. </itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>We often assume that great musical partnerships are just that - relationships built on a mutual understanding, intensive practice together, learning how to be totally in sync to create an incredible performance. But is it essential that musicians have this 'special relationship' to produce great music? Psychologist and pianist Michael Schober from the New School for Social Research in New York has been investigating and, in this podcast, describes an experiment he has carried out to try to find out. </itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Is it possible to use creative methods to research migration and citizenship (NCRM) - Umut Erel</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Is it possible to use creative methods such as theatre work shops to research important topics such as migration and citizenship? Are these methods a good way to get information from study participants that other methods maybe can’t and can they be used effectively to engage policymakers and practitioners with research in this area? 

In this podcast Dr Umut Erel from the Open University discusses work with Professors Tracy Reynolds and Maggie O'Neill and research fellow and theatre practitioner Erene Kaptani using participatory theatre workshops to explore the challenges faced by migrant women in becoming active citizens in their new home and the role they have in helping their children become active citizens. The research is being featured a session at the Research Methods Festival 2016.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Erel.mp3" length="21795163" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">8A23817A-26A5-4A12-BA8C-1C52A5B021C0</guid>
                <pubDate>Mon, 21 Mar 2016 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Umut Erel</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:15:08</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Creative Methods, Umut Erel</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Creative Methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Is it possible to use creative methods such as theatre work shops to research important topics such as migration and citizenship? Are these methods a good way to get information from study participants that other methods maybe can’t and can they be used effectively to engage policymakers and practitioners with research in this area? 

In this podcast Dr Umut Erel from the Open University discusses work with Professors Tracy Reynolds and Maggie O'Neill and research fellow and theatre practitioner Erene Kaptani using participatory theatre workshops to explore the challenges faced by migrant women in becoming active citizens in their new home and the role they have in helping their children become active citizens. The research is being featured a session at the Research Methods Festival 2016.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Is it possible to use creative methods such as theatre work shops to research important topics such as migration and citizenship? Are these methods a good way to get information from study participants that other methods maybe can’t and can they be used effectively to engage policymakers and practitioners with research in this area?
In this podcast Dr Umut Erel from the Open University discusses  work with Professors Tracy Reynolds and Maggie O'Neill and research fellow and theatre practitioner Erene Kaptani using participatory theatre workshops to explore the challenges faced by migrant women in becoming active citizens in their new home and the role they have in helping their children become active citizens. The research is being featured a session at the Research Methods Festival 2016.
</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Inquiry into the 2015 British general election opinion polls (NCRM) - Patrick Sturgis</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    The night of the General Election 2015 was a surprising one in more ways than one! A series of opinion polls had led us all to believe that we were in for another Coalition Government, but, as we now know that turned out to be far from the case. For pollsters and statisticians it was a night of disappointment and even anger.  So what went wrong and what lessons have been learned? In this episode of the NCRM podcast, NCRM Director Patrick Sturgis, who led an inquiry into what has become known as the polling disaster of 2015, looks back at how events unfolded, the aftermath, the inquiry that follow, what it found and the recommendations made by him and his team to put things right in the future.                     ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Sturgis.mp3" length="14056249" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">A12C2C58-AH95-4HA2-CCCB-1F0011891A48</guid>
                <pubDate>Mon, 18 Apr 2016 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Patrick Sturgis</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:09:45</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Political forecasting, General election, Patrick Strugis</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Political forecasting</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>The night of the General Election 2015 was a surprising one in more ways than one! A series of opinion polls had led us all to believe that we were in for another Coalition Government, but, as we now know that turned out to be far from the case. For pollsters and statisticians it was a night of disappointment and even anger.  So what went wrong and what lessons have been learned? In this episode of the NCRM podcast, NCRM Director Patrick Sturgis, who led an inquiry into what has become known as the polling disaster of 2015, looks back at how events unfolded, the aftermath, the inquiry that follow, what it found and the recommendations made by him and his team to put things right in the future. </itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>The night of the General Election 2015 was a surprising one  in more ways than one! A series of opinion polls had led us all to believe that  we were in for another Coalition Government, but, as we now know that turned  out to be far from the case. For pollsters and statisticians it was a night of  disappointment and even anger.  So what went wrong and what lessons have  been learned? In this episode of the NCRM podcast, NCRM Director Patrick  Sturgis, who led an inquiry into what has become known as the polling disaster  of 2015, looks back at how events unfolded, the aftermath, the inquiry that  follow, what it found and the recommendations made by him and his team to  put things right in the future. 
The inquiry and the report that has been published  are the focus of a key session at the Research Methods Festival 2016 - Can We Trust  the Polls? Reflections on the 2015 Election Poll Miss. </itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Researching the oldest old and those living and dying with dementia in care homes (NCRM) - Claire Goodman</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    There are many uncertainties surrounding end of life care for people with dementia living in care homes. From who is responsible for which aspects of a person’s care to what type of care they receive in the home or in hospital, and how everyone who needs to be heard can be heard. Research, led by Professor Claire Goodman at the University of Hertfordshire and due to be presented at The ESRC Research Methods Festival 2016, has been addressing these uncertainties and has led to the development of a new framework that is helping care and health professionals give the best support and service they can to the residents and patients and their families.                     ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Goodman.mp3" length="20939396" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">C672B210-A5F0-41E7-A1A0-0AF2D4BAE628</guid>
                <pubDate>Fri, 03 Jun 2016 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Claire Goodman</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:14:32</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Dementia, Care homes</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Dementia</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>There are many uncertainties surrounding end of life care for people with dementia living in care homes. From who is responsible for which aspects of a person’s care to what type of care they receive in the home or in hospital, and how everyone who needs to be heard can be heard. Research, led by Professor Claire Goodman at the University of Hertfordshire and due to be presented at The ESRC Research Methods Festival 2016, has been addressing these uncertainties and has led to the development of a new framework that is helping care and health professionals give the best support and service they can to the residents and patients and their families. </itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>There are many uncertainties surrounding end of life care for people with dementia living in care homes. From who is responsible for which aspects of a person’s care to what type of care they receive in the home or in hospital, and how everyone who needs to be heard can be heard. Research, led by Professor Claire Goodman at the University of Hertfordshire and due to be presented at The ESRC Research Methods Festival 2016, has been addressing these uncertainties and has led to the development of a new framework that is helping care and health professionals give the best support and service they can to the residents and patients and their families. </itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Visualising social trends in 3D (NCRM) - Jon Minton</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Data visualisation has become synonymous with simple infographics in recent years, but for researchers this isn't necessarily a good thing. That's according to Dr Jonathan Minton from Glasgow University who uses data visualisation, including 3D printouts of data to visualise complex questions around social issues such as migration, fertility and mortality. In this episode of Methods he explains why and how data visualisation can help social researchers produce fascinating and important evidence for research and policy and makes the case that 'simple' isn't always best. Dr Minton will be presenting some of his work at the Research Methods Festival 2016.                     ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Minton.mp3" length="20749111" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">D12B2C2A-A335-4HE2-BA1B-1F0411896BD8</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 21 Jun 2016 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Jon Minton</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:17:17</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Visualisation, 3D, Social trends</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Social trends in 3D</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Data visualisation has become synonymous with simple infographics in recent years, but for researchers this isn't necessarily a good thing. That's according to Dr Jonathan Minton from Glasgow University who uses data visualisation, including 3D printouts of data to visualise complex questions around social issues such as migration, fertility and mortality. In this episode of Methods he explains why and how data visualisation can help social researchers produce fascinating and important evidence for research and policy and makes the case that 'simple' isn't always best. Dr Minton will be presenting some of his work at the Research Methods Festival 2016. </itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Data visualisation has become synonymous with simple infographics in recent years, but for researchers this isn't necessarily a good thing. That's according to Dr Jonathan Minton from Glasgow University who uses data visualisation, including 3D printouts of data to visualise complex questions around social issues such as migration, fertility and mortality. In this episode of Methods he explains why and how data visualisation can help social researchers produce fascinating and important evidence for research and policy and makes the case that 'simple' isn't always best. Dr Minton will be presenting some of his work at the Research Methods Festival 2016. </itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>'Statistics Anxiety' A Fairy Tale For Our Times? (NCRM) - John MacInnes</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    <p>It is typically assumed that social science students are anxious, confused or intimidated by numbers. However this is far more 'common wisdom' than anything that any robust empirical research has demonstrated. Professor John MacInnes from the University of Edinburgh has been reviewing the evidence and carrying out some preliminary research to see whether so-called 'stats anxiety' is something of a myth. After presenting early findings at the Research Methods Festival 2016, he recorded this interview with Chris Garrington for our Methods Podcast.</p>                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Macinnes.mp3" length="13615596" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">C632B2C0-A5F0-41E7-A1A7-0AF2D4BAE128</guid>
                <pubDate>Mon, 25 Jul 2016 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>John MacInnes</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:11:20</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Statistics, Anxiety, John MacInnes</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Statistics Anxiety</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;It is typically assumed that social science students are anxious, confused or intimidated by numbers. However this is far more 'common wisdom' than anything that any robust empirical research has demonstrated. Professor John MacInnes from the University of Edinburgh has been reviewing the evidence and carrying out some preliminary research to see whether so-called 'stats anxiety' is something of a myth. After presenting early findings at the Research Methods Festival 2016, he recorded this interview with Chris Garrington for our Methods Podcast.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>It is typically assumed that social science students are anxious, confused or intimidated by numbers. However this is far more 'common wisdom' than anything that any robust empirical research has demonstrated. Professor John MacInnes from the University of Edinburgh has been reviewing the evidence and carrying out some preliminary research to see whether so-called 'stats anxiety' is something of a myth. After presenting early findings at the Research Methods Festival 2016, he recorded this interview with Chris Garrington for our Methods Podcast.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Using visual diaries to capture the everyday lives of people in mid to later life (NCRM) - Wendy Martin</title>
                <link>http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13645579.2015.1086199</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    The use of visual methods in research on ageing has become increasingly popular. Not a great deal of it, however, has looked at people in mid to later life. A team at Brunel University, London, however, has been doing just that, using photography to document every day lives. The research, presented at the ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2016, has also resulted in some innovative engagement in the form of a hugely successful photographic exhibition. Project Principal Investigator, Dr Wendy Martin explains more to Chris Garrington in this episode of the Methods Podcast.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Martin.mp3" length="14626532" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">CBDFF6E4-4D22-4FD4-AE7C-1E89BB71CD41</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 27 Jul 2016 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Wendy Martin</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:12:11</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>visual, methods, Wendy Martin</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Visual Methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>The use of visual methods in research on ageing has become increasingly popular. Not a great deal of it, however, has looked at people in mid to later life. A team at Brunel University, London, however, has been doing just that, using photography to document every day lives. The research, presented at the ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2016, has also resulted in some innovative engagement in the form of a hugely successful photographic exhibition. Project Principal Investigator, Dr Wendy Martin explains more to Chris Garrington in this episode of the Methods Podcast.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>The use of visual methods in research on ageing has become increasingly popular. Not a great deal of it, however, has looked at people in mid to later life. A team at Brunel University, London, however, has been doing just that, using photography to document every day lives. The research, presented at the ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2016, has also resulted in some innovative engagement in the form of a hugely successful photographic exhibition. Project Principal Investigator, Dr Wendy Martin explains more to Chris Garrington in this episode of the Methods Podcast.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Introduction to time use diaries (NCRM) - Jonathan Gershuny</title>
                <link>http://www.timeuse.org/home.html</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    How we spend our time has long been of interest to researchers around the world. How we can most accurately capture that information is key and of particular interest to survey methodologists. A popular research method since the early 1960s has been the use of Time Use diaries, which have been used to provide new answers to pressing questions about changes in our work and home lives. It's a topic that Professor Jonathan Gershuny, Director of the Centre for Time Use Research at the University of Oxford knows a great deal about, having established the Multinational Time Use Study in the mid-1980s and worked with time use data for many years. Following a presentation by him and some of his research team at the ESRC Research Methods Festival 2016, he spoke to Chris Garrington for the Methods Podcast about Time Use diaries, how they work, what they tell us and how new technology is providing exciting new ways to clock how we spend our days.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Gershuny.mp3" length="12783856" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">DA27717A-26CC-4A12-1A8C-1C52A5B721C0</guid>
                <pubDate>Thu, 28 Jul 2016 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Jonathan Gershuny</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:10:39</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>time use, diaries, Jonathan Gurshuny</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Time use diaries</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>How we spend our time has long been of interest to researchers around the world. How we can most accurately capture that information is key and of particular interest to survey methodologists. A popular research method since the early 1960s has been the use of Time Use diaries, which have been used to provide new answers to pressing questions about changes in our work and home lives. It's a topic that Professor Jonathan Gershuny, Director of the Centre for Time Use Research at the University of Oxford knows a great deal about, having established the Multinational Time Use Study in the mid-1980s and worked with time use data for many years. Following a presentation by him and some of his research team at the ESRC Research Methods Festival 2016, he spoke to Chris Garrington for the Methods Podcast about Time Use diaries, how they work, what they tell us and how new technology is providing exciting new ways to clock how we spend our days.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>How we spend our time has long been of interest to researchers around the world. How we can most accurately capture that information is key and of particular interest to survey methodologists. A popular research method since the early 1960s has been the use of Time Use diaries, which have been used to provide new answers to pressing questions about changes in our work and home lives. It's a topic that Professor Jonathan Gershuny, Director of the Centre for Time Use Research at the University of Oxford knows a great deal about, having established the Multinational Time Use Study in the mid-1980s and worked with time use data for many years. Following a presentation by him and some of his research team at the ESRC Research Methods Festival 2016, he spoke to Chris Garrington for the Methods Podcast about Time Use diaries, how they work, what they tell us and how new technology is providing exciting new ways to clock how we spend our days.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Reproducing social science research: give up your code (NCRM) - Vernon Gayle</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    While there is now an unprecedented amount of large-scale social science data suitable for sociological research, in reality it is impossible to ‘reproduce’ the results of most of the analyses that are published because information on how the work is undertaken in seldom made available. The statistical analysis of large-scale social science data is far from transparent and a culture of 'trust me’ rather than a culture of 'show me’ currently exists. Those are arguments being made by Professor Vernon Gayle from the University of Edinburgh who, in a recent presentation,  makes an appeal to his fellow researchers to routinely provide enough information so that others can check that results are accurate, and that correct inferences and conclusions are reported in published work.                     ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Gayle.mp3" length="13378506" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">DA24517A-26BC-4A12-1A2C-1C52A5B72BC0</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 06 Dec 2016 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Vernon Gayle</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:09:17</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>code, social science</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Social science research</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>While there is now an unprecedented amount of large-scale social science data suitable for sociological research, in reality it is impossible to ‘reproduce’ the results of most of the analyses that are published because information on how the work is undertaken in seldom made available. The statistical analysis of large-scale social science data is far from transparent and a culture of 'trust me’ rather than a culture of 'show me’ currently exists. Those are arguments being made by Professor Vernon Gayle from the University of Edinburgh who, in a recent presentation,  makes an appeal to his fellow researchers to routinely provide enough information so that others can check that results are accurate, and that correct inferences and conclusions are reported in published work. </itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>While there is now an unprecedented amount of large-scale social science data suitable for sociological research, in reality it is impossible to ‘reproduce’ the results of most of the analyses that are published because information on how the work is undertaken in seldom made available. The statistical analysis of large-scale social science data is far from transparent and a culture of 'trust me’ rather than a culture of 'show me’ currently exists. Those are arguments being made by Professor Vernon Gayle from the University of Edinburgh who, in a recent presentation,  makes an appeal to his fellow researchers to routinely provide enough information so that others can check that results are accurate, and that correct inferences and conclusions are reported in published work. </itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>How are we influenced by the information we are exposed to? (NCRM) - Iulia Cioroianu </title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/research/ExpoNet/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    The media environment, including the way we consume our news has been radically changed by the advent of the Internet. What does this mean for the type of content we look at and how we share it with our off-  and online networks? And how does it influence our opinions? Iulia Cioroianu from the University of Exeter discusses research undertaken as part of the NCRM-funded ExpoNet project which is producing a set of tools to make it possible to examine these ideas more closely.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Iulia.mp3" length="18692439" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">A3F19BD2-BA4A-4304-11EF-8050DF7A571E</guid>
                <pubDate>Mon, 19 Dec 2016 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Iulia Cioroianu </itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:12:59</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Media, New, Internet</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Media Environment</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>The media environment, including the way we consume our news has been radically changed by the advent of the Internet. What does this mean for the type of content we look at and how we share it with our off-  and online networks? And how does it influence our opinions? Iulia Cioroianu from the University of Exeter discusses research undertaken as part of the NCRM-funded ExpoNet project which is producing a set of tools to make it possible to examine these ideas more closely.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>The media environment, including the way we consume our news has been radically changed by the advent of the Internet. What does this mean for the type of content we look at and how we share it with our off-  and online networks? And how does it influence our opinions? Iulia Cioroianu from the University of Exeter discusses research undertaken as part of the NCRM-funded ExpoNet project which is producing a set of tools to make it possible to examine these ideas more closely.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Questions of disclosure: a synthetic answer (NCRM) - David Martin</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    In a rapidly changing linked data environment, there is much excitement about its potential, but still plenty of concern around the need to understand and mitigate any risk of disclosure of personal information. In this episode of our Podcast, Professor David Martin talks about NCRM funded research which is looking at how the creation and use of synthetic data sets could help.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Martin2.mp3" length="14196656" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">A2D111E4-112D-4EE4-AE7C-1E895A71CD41</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 15 Mar 2017 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>David Martin</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:14:47</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>disclosure, david martin, synthetic</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Questions of disclosure</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>In a rapidly changing linked data environment, there is much excitement about its potential, but still plenty of concern around the need to understand and mitigate any risk of disclosure of personal information. In this episode of our Podcast, Professor David Martin talks about NCRM funded research which is looking at how the creation and use of synthetic data sets could help.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>In a rapidly changing linked data environment, there is much excitement about its potential, but still plenty of concern around the need to understand and mitigate any risk of disclosure of personal information. In this episode of our Podcast, Professor David Martin talks about NCRM funded research which is looking at how the creation and use of synthetic data sets could help.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Telling a longitudinal story (NCRM) - Vernon Gayle </title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Across the social sciences, there is widespread agreement that quantitative longitudinal research designs offer analysts powerful scientific data resources. However, a large number of texts on social survey analysis are written from a statistical, rather than a social science data analysis perspective with little or no focus on common practical challenges. In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Professor Vernon Gayle from the University of Edinburgh talks about longitudinal data and his soon-to-be published book, What is Quantitative Longitudinal Data Analysis? which provides those interested in longitudinal research with a practical and accessible guide.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Gayle2.mp3" length="14341486" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">A2D112E4-112D-4EE4-AE7C-1E895A71CD43</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 06 Jun 2017 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Vernon Gayle </itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:15:57</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>vernon gayle,longitudinal data analysis, longitudinal story</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Longitudinal Data Analysis</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Across the social sciences, there is widespread agreement that quantitative longitudinal research designs offer analysts powerful scientific data resources. However, a large number of texts on social survey analysis are written from a statistical, rather than a social science data analysis perspective with little or no focus on common practical challenges. In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Professor Vernon Gayle from the University of Edinburgh talks about longitudinal data and his soon-to-be published book, What is Quantitative Longitudinal Data Analysis? which provides those interested in longitudinal research with a practical and accessible guide.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Across the social sciences, there is widespread agreement that quantitative longitudinal research designs offer analysts powerful scientific data resources. However, a large number of texts on social survey analysis are written from a statistical, rather than a social science data analysis perspective with little or no focus on common practical challenges. In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Professor Vernon Gayle from the University of Edinburgh talks about longitudinal data and his soon-to-be published book, What is Quantitative Longitudinal Data Analysis? which provides those interested in longitudinal research with a practical and accessible guide.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Using mobile devices to understand spending (NCRM) - Annette Jackle </title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    The development of mobile technology has brought with it some exciting opportunities for those interested in collecting data from households about their finances. Researchers based at the University of Essex who run the UK Household Longitudinal Study have been working to gain a better understanding of household finances through better measurement. In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Professor Annette Jäckle talks about the opportunities and challenges that mobile technology brings researchers involved in the collection and use of household survey data. She also outlines an experiment that she and colleagues have been running in which survey participants were asked to download and use an app on a phone or tablet to collect and record information about their household spending.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Annette.mp3" length="21938102" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">A2D112E4-112D-4EE4-AE7C-1E895A71CD44</guid>
                <pubDate>Thu, 10 Aug 2017 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Annette Jackle </itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:15:13</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>mobile devices, understanding spendings, household survey data</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Mobile devices for understanding spendings</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>The development of mobile technology has brought with it some exciting opportunities for those interested in collecting data from households about their finances. Researchers based at the University of Essex who run the UK Household Longitudinal Study have been working to gain a better understanding of household finances through better measurement. In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Professor Annette Jäckle talks about the opportunities and challenges that mobile technology brings researchers involved in the collection and use of household survey data. She also outlines an experiment that she and colleagues have been running in which survey participants were asked to download and use an app on a phone or tablet to collect and record information about their household spending.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>The development of mobile technology has brought with it some exciting opportunities for those interested in collecting data from households about their finances. Researchers based at the University of Essex who run the UK Household Longitudinal Study have been working to gain a better understanding of household finances through better measurement. In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Professor Annette Jäckle talks about the opportunities and challenges that mobile technology brings researchers involved in the collection and use of household survey data. She also outlines an experiment that she and colleagues have been running in which survey participants were asked to download and use an app on a phone or tablet to collect and record information about their household spending.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Having a family: what can our genes tell us about fertility? (NCRM) - Melinda Mills </title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Researchers have access to a fantastic array of information about people and their lives. Large scale household and biological surveys have collected data not just about people's environment and circumstances, but also physical samples of blood and saliva from which detailed information about their genes and what’s going on inside their bodies can be extracted. But how can these two types of information be brought together for the benefit of society? In this episode of the Methods podcast, Professor Melinda Mills from the University of Oxford and Nuffield College discusses research from the NCRM funded SOCGEN project, which hopes to encourage more and better use of the data, whilst looking to see what our genes can tell us about having children and other human behaviours.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_Melinda_Mills.mp3" length="18014614" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">A2D112E4-112D-4EE4-AE7C-1E895A71CD45</guid>
                <pubDate>Mon, 02 Oct 2017 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Melinda Mills </itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:15:00</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>family genes, genes fertility, Melinda Mills</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Family genes and fertility</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Researchers have access to a fantastic array of information about people and their lives. Large scale household and biological surveys have collected data not just about people's environment and circumstances, but also physical samples of blood and saliva from which detailed information about their genes and what’s going on inside their bodies can be extracted. But how can these two types of information be brought together for the benefit of society? In this episode of the Methods podcast, Professor Melinda Mills from the University of Oxford and Nuffield College discusses research from the NCRM funded SOCGEN project, which hopes to encourage more and better use of the data, whilst looking to see what our genes can tell us about having children and other human behaviours.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Researchers have access to a fantastic array of information about people and their lives. Large scale household and biological surveys have collected data not just about people's environment and circumstances, but also physical samples of blood and saliva from which detailed information about their genes and what’s going on inside their bodies can be extracted. But how can these two types of information be brought together for the benefit of society? In this episode of the Methods podcast, Professor Melinda Mills from the University of Oxford and Nuffield College discusses research from the NCRM funded SOCGEN project, which hopes to encourage more and better use of the data, whilst looking to see what our genes can tell us about having children and other human behaviours.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Multi-sited ethnography: a researcher’s story (NCRM) - Pauline von Hellermann</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Travelling to different locations to undertake ethnographic research undoubtedly provides some interesting and exciting opportunities to extend and deepen a researcher’s analysis. But what are the real benefits and challenges around multi-sited ethnography as a research method? In this episode of our  Methods Podcast, Dr Pauline von Hellermann from Goldsmiths, University of London, explains more about the method, describes some of  her own work making use of it and offers some useful tips for researchers who might be interested to use it in the future.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_vonHellermann.mp3" length="19298698" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">B2D333E4-112D-EEE4-AE7C-1E895A71CD45</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 15 Nov 2017 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Pauline von Hellermann</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:13:24</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Multi-sited, ethnography</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Multi-Sited  Ethnography</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Travelling to different locations to undertake ethnographic research undoubtedly provides some interesting and exciting opportunities to extend and deepen a researcher’s analysis. But what are the real benefits and challenges around multi-sited ethnography as a research method? In this episode of our  Methods Podcast, Dr Pauline von Hellermann from Goldsmiths, University of London, explains more about the method, describes some of  her own work making use of it and offers some useful tips for researchers who might be interested to use it in the future.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Travelling to different locations to undertake ethnographic research undoubtedly provides some interesting and exciting opportunities to extend and deepen a researcher’s analysis. But what are the real benefits and challenges around multi-sited ethnography as a research method? In this episode of our  Methods Podcast, Dr Pauline von Hellermann from Goldsmiths, University of London, explains more about the method, describes some of  her own work making use of it and offers some useful tips for researchers who might be interested to use it in the future.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Digging deep! The archaeological metaphor helping researchers get into Big Qual (NCRM) - Susie Weller</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Working across qualitative data sets is a relatively new but nevertheless exciting proposition, but can it be done well and with integrity? In this episode of the Methods Podcast, we talk to Dr Susie Weller from the University of Southampton who, with colleagues (Prof Rosalind Edwards, Prof Lynn Jamieson and Dr Emma Davidson) and as part of an NCRM funded research project, has developed an archeological metaphor to do just that.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Weller2.mp3" length="16303197" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">53F16BD2-BD4A-4304-11EF-8050DF7AE71E</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 19 Dec 2017 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Susie Weller</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:11:19</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Archaeological Metaphor, researcher, Big Qual</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Helping researchers get into Big Qual</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Working across qualitative data sets is a relatively new but nevertheless exciting proposition, but can it be done well and with integrity? In this episode of the Methods Podcast, we talk to Dr Susie Weller from the University of Southampton who, with colleagues (Prof Rosalind Edwards, Prof Lynn Jamieson and Dr Emma Davidson) and as part of an NCRM funded research project, has developed an archeological metaphor to do just that.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Working across qualitative data sets is a relatively new but nevertheless exciting proposition, but can it be done well and with integrity? In this episode of the Methods Podcast, we talk to Dr Susie Weller from the University of Southampton who, with colleagues (Prof Rosalind Edwards, Prof Lynn Jamieson and Dr Emma Davidson) and as part of an NCRM funded research project, has developed an archeological metaphor to do just that.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Understanding poverty using visual participatory methods: can it work? (NCRM) - Daniel McCulloch </title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Actively engaging study participants in research to give them a voice is a method that has grown in popularity in recent years. But does this approach really give people a voice and if so how? In his research project "Do Participatory Visual Methods Give 'Voice'?" Dr Daniel McCulloch from the Open University investigates participatory visual methods to see if they can shine a light on how best to help people in poverty.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Daniel_McCulloch.mp3" length="12991798" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">53F16BD2-BD4A-4304-11EF-8050DF7AE72F</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 06 Mar 2018 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Daniel McCulloch </itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:10:50</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Understanding poverty, visual participatory methods, Daniel McCulloch</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Understanding poverty using visual participatory methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Actively engaging study participants in research to give them a voice is a method that has grown in popularity in recent years. But does this approach really give people a voice and if so how? In his research project "Do Participatory Visual Methods Give 'Voice'?" Dr Daniel McCulloch from the Open University investigates participatory visual methods to see if they can shine a light on how best to help people in poverty.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Actively engaging study participants in research to give them a voice is a method that has grown in popularity in recent years. But does this approach really give people a voice and if so how? In his research project "Do Participatory Visual Methods Give 'Voice'?" Dr Daniel McCulloch from the Open University investigates participatory visual methods to see if they can shine a light on how best to help people in poverty.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Changing the world with mixed methods (NCRM) - Donna Mertens</title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    From climate change to water security - there are some problems facing the world that often seem unsolvable. So how can researchers stay positive about the role they have in tackling these huge challenges and which research methods should they consider using? In this episode of our podcast, Dr Donna Mertens, Professor Emeritus at Gallaudet University in Washington DC, and keynote speaker at the 2018 Research Methods Festival, calls on researchers to stay optimistic about the role they have in beating the world's ‘wicked’ problems and explains why she believes a mixed methods is key to doing research in troubling times.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Mertens.mp3" length="17004199" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">53F16BD2-BD4A-4304-11EF-8050DF7AE73G</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 17 Apr 2018 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Donna Mertens</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:14:10</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>mixed methods, climate change, gallaudet university, donna mertens</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Changing the world with mixed methods</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>From climate change to water security - there are some problems facing the world that often seem unsolvable. So how can researchers stay positive about the role they have in tackling these huge challenges and which research methods should they consider using? In this episode of our podcast, Dr Donna Mertens, Professor Emeritus at Gallaudet University in Washington DC, and keynote speaker at the 2018 Research Methods Festival, calls on researchers to stay optimistic about the role they have in beating the world's ‘wicked’ problems and explains why she believes a mixed methods is key to doing research in troubling times.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>From climate change to water security - there are some problems facing the world that often seem unsolvable. So how can researchers stay positive about the role they have in tackling these huge challenges and which research methods should they consider using? In this episode of our podcast, Dr Donna Mertens, Professor Emeritus at Gallaudet University in Washington DC, and keynote speaker at the 2018 Research Methods Festival, calls on researchers to stay optimistic about the role they have in beating the world's ‘wicked’ problems and explains why she believes a mixed methods is key to doing research in troubling times.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Diary of a participant: using apps for qualitative research. (NCRM) - Laura Radcliffe and Leighann Spencer </title>
                <link>http://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Researchers have been using diaries to capture the experiences and thoughts of their participants for some time, but the advent and growth of new technology has opened up exciting opportunities to use mobile devices in the same way. In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Dr Laura Radcliffe and PhD student, Leighann Spencer from the University of Liverpool School of Management, talk about their experiences of developing diary apps in their research.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_poscast_Radcliffe.mp3" length="21343670" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">53F16BD2-BD4A-4304-11EF-8050DF7AE74H</guid>
                <pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2018 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Laura Radcliffe and Leighann Spencer </itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:17:47</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>participant diary, apps for qualitative research, mobile devices</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Apps for qualitative research</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Researchers have been using diaries to capture the experiences and thoughts of their participants for some time, but the advent and growth of new technology has opened up exciting opportunities to use mobile devices in the same way. In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Dr Laura Radcliffe and PhD student, Leighann Spencer from the University of Liverpool School of Management, talk about their experiences of developing diary apps in their research.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Researchers have been using diaries to capture the experiences and thoughts of their participants for some time, but the advent and growth of new technology has opened up exciting opportunities to use mobile devices in the same way. In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Dr Laura Radcliffe and PhD student, Leighann Spencer from the University of Liverpool School of Management, talk about their experiences of developing diary apps in their research.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Using satellites to slash survey costs (NCRM) - Marco Haenssgen and Ern Charoenboon</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Carrying out surveys on hard to reach populations in far flung parts of the world can be challenging and expensive. But researchers from the Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health at the University of Oxford have used freely available satellite images to help identify and sample households in Thailand and Laos, as part of a research project looking at medicine and health behaviours. Ahead of their presentation at the 2018 Research Methods Festival, we catch up with Marco Haenssgen and Ern Charoenboon in the middle of their field work to discuss how their work will help other researchers save money whilst gathering data that could help the global health crisis of our growing resistance to antibiotics.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Marco_Ern.mp3" length="15517854" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">81F16ED2-BD4A-4304-22EF-8050DF7AE733</guid>
                <pubDate>Fri, 15 Jun 2018 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Marco Haenssgen and Ern Charoenboon</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:12:55</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>survey costs, satellites</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Satellites to slash survey costs</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Carrying out surveys on hard to reach populations in far flung parts of the world can be challenging and expensive. But researchers from the Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health at the University of Oxford have used freely available satellite images to help identify and sample households in Thailand and Laos, as part of a research project looking at medicine and health behaviours. Ahead of their presentation at the 2018 Research Methods Festival, we catch up with Marco Haenssgen and Ern Charoenboon in the middle of their field work to discuss how their work will help other researchers save money whilst gathering data that could help the global health crisis of our growing resistance to antibiotics.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Carrying out surveys on hard to reach populations in far flung parts of the world can be challenging and expensive. But researchers from the Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health at the University of Oxford have used freely available satellite images to help identify and sample households in Thailand and Laos, as part of a research project looking at medicine and health behaviours. Ahead of their presentation at the 2018 Research Methods Festival, we catch up with Marco Haenssgen and Ern Charoenboon in the middle of their field work to discuss how their work will help other researchers save money whilst gathering data that could help the global health crisis of our growing resistance to antibiotics.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Mind the gap: why skills are key to data re-use (NCRM) - Richard Welpton</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    When it comes to making more data from government departments more readily available to researchers, there has for some time been a will, but not always a way.  When the way is found, it can be painstaking and time-consuming for all concerned. Ahead of his presentation at the 2018 Research Methods Festival, Richard Welpton (Cancer Research UK Data Liaison Manager) explains how a focus on skills and career opportunities could provide a way forward, and how a framework that he and his colleagues have developed is helping.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Welpton.mp3" length="16499022" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">B2D11244-112D-4FF4-AE7C-1E895A71DC66</guid>
                <pubDate>Mon, 25 Jun 2018 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Richard Welpton</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:13:45</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>gap, data re-use, Welpton</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Mind the Gap</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>When it comes to making more data from government departments more readily available to researchers, there has for some time been a will, but not always a way.  When the way is found, it can be painstaking and time-consuming for all concerned. Ahead of his presentation at the 2018 Research Methods Festival, Richard Welpton (Cancer Research UK Data Liaison Manager) explains how a focus on skills and career opportunities could provide a way forward, and how a framework that he and his colleagues have developed is helping.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>When it comes to making more data from government departments more readily available to researchers, there has for some time been a will, but not always a way.  When the way is found, it can be painstaking and time-consuming for all concerned. Ahead of his presentation at the 2018 Research Methods Festival, Richard Welpton (Cancer Research UK Data Liaison Manager) explains how a focus on skills and career opportunities could provide a way forward, and how a framework that he and his colleagues have developed is helping.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Food for thought: using fitness bracelet technology to tackle poor nutrition in low-income countries (NCRM) - Giacomo Zanello</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Many of us use fitness watches to get fitter, but could the technology behind these devices help the millions of people across the world who don’t have enough food to eat? In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Dr Giacomo Zanello from the University of Reading discusses research presented at the ESRC Research Methods Festival, looking at how the technology is being used to tackle poor nutrition among farmers and their families in low-income countries.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Zanello.mp3" length="13912868" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">E2D11844-112D-4F24-AE7C-1E89BA71DC66</guid>
                <pubDate>Mon, 06 Aug 2018 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Giacomo Zanello</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:11:36</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>fitness bracelet, low-income countries, Giacomo Zanello</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>fitness bracelet, poor nutrition, low-income countries</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Many of us use fitness watches to get fitter, but could the technology behind these devices help the millions of people across the world who don’t have enough food to eat? In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Dr Giacomo Zanello from the University of Reading discusses research presented at the ESRC Research Methods Festival, looking at how the technology is being used to tackle poor nutrition among farmers and their families in low-income countries.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Many of us use fitness watches to get fitter, but could the technology behind these devices help the millions of people across the world who don’t have enough food to eat? In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Dr Giacomo Zanello from the University of Reading discusses research presented at the ESRC Research Methods Festival, looking at how the technology is being used to tackle poor nutrition among farmers and their families in low-income countries.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Transforming lives with storytelling (NCRM) - Joanna Wheeler</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    Getting participants to tell their stories can be both moving and powerful, but can it transform lives?  In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Research Method Festival presenter Joanna Wheeler - from the University of Western Cape in South Africa - talks about how using storytelling in her research is helping transform lives in troubled communities, and the impact it has had on her own life and work.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_wheeler.mp3" length="16023059" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">31F16EDB-BD4A-4303-22EF-8052DF7AE733</guid>
                <pubDate>Mon, 06 Aug 2018 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Joanna Wheeler</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:13:21</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Transforming lives, storytelling, Joanna Wheeler</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Transforming lives, storytelling</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>Getting participants to tell their stories can be both moving and powerful, but can it transform lives?  In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Research Method Festival presenter Joanna Wheeler - from the University of Western Cape in South Africa - talks about how using storytelling in her research is helping transform lives in troubled communities, and the impact it has had on her own life and work.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>Getting participants to tell their stories can be both moving and powerful, but can it transform lives?  In this episode of the Methods Podcast, Research Method Festival presenter Joanna Wheeler - from the University of Western Cape in South Africa - talks about how using storytelling in her research is helping transform lives in troubled communities, and the impact it has had on her own life and work.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>A short introduction to the Timescapes Archive (NCRM) - Kahryn Hughes</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    We introduce the TimeScapes Archive, an archive designed to enable the sharing and re-use of datasets that have been generated using qualitative longitudinal research methods. Our guest is Kahryn Hughes. Kahryn is the Director of the TimeScapes Archive and co-director of the Centre for Research on Families, Lifecourse and Generations at the University of Leeds.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_timescapes.mp3" length="7077144" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">ABF16E42-BD4A-4304-11EF-8050DF7CE733</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2018 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Kahryn Hughes</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:05:57</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>TimeScapes, Kahryn Hughes, qualitative longitudinal, research methods</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Introduction to Timescapes</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>We introduce the TimeScapes Archive, an archive designed to enable the sharing and re-use of datasets that have been generated using qualitative longitudinal research methods. Our guest is Kahryn Hughes. Kahryn is the Director of the TimeScapes Archive and co-director of the Centre for Research on Families, Lifecourse and Generations at the University of Leeds.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>We introduce the TimeScapes Archive, an archive designed to enable the sharing and re-use of datasets that have been generated using qualitative longitudinal research methods. Our guest is Kahryn Hughes. Kahryn is the Director of the TimeScapes Archive and co-director of the Centre for Research on Families, Lifecourse and Generations at the University of Leeds.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Remember your body: a somatics toolkit for ethnographers (NCRM) - Eline Kieft</title>
                <link>http://somaticstoolkit.coventry.ac.uk/project/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    A researcher’s physical sensations are widely understood to contribute to their insights into people and culture. Yet there are no adequate courses that teach students how to use their body as a research instrument. It’s a gap that a group of NCRM funded researchers are trying to plug with the development of a somatics toolkit, as Eline Kieft from the University of Coventry explains in this episode of the Methods Podcast.                     ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Kieft.mp3" length="16617586" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">3BF16E4B-BD4A-43D4-11EF-80505F7CE766</guid>
                <pubDate>Thu, 11 Oct 2018 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Eline Kieft</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:13:50</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>somatics, ethnographers, body, Eline Kieft, Multimodal methods, Creative methods, Creative research methods, Qualitative approaches
</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>somatics toolkit</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>A researcher’s physical sensations are widely understood to contribute to their insights into people and culture. Yet there are no adequate courses that teach students how to use their body as a research instrument. It’s a gap that a group of NCRM funded researchers are trying to plug with the development of a somatics toolkit, as Eline Kieft from the University of Coventry explains in this episode of the Methods Podcast. </itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>A researcher's physical sensations are widely understood to contribute to their insights into people and culture. Yet there are no adequate courses that teach students how to use their body as a research instrument. It’s a gap that a group of NCRM funded researchers are trying to plug with the development of a somatics toolkit, as Eline Kieft from the University of Coventry explains in this episode of the Methods Podcast. </itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Making space for Big Qual: new ideas in research methods and teaching (NCRM) - Lynn Jamieson and Sarah Lewthwaite</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    In a special mini-series of our podcast, we discuss the secondary analysis of large-scale qualitative data as a new research method. Here Lynn Jamieson from the University of Edinburgh and Sarah Lewthwaite from the University of Southampton reflect on the method’s development and potential use in the teaching of research methods.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Jamieson_Lewthwaite.mp3" length="19381899" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">CBF14E4B-BD45-43D4-112F-80505F7AE766</guid>
                <pubDate>Thu, 20 Dec 2018 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Lynn Jamieson and Sarah Lewthwaite</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:16:09</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>big qual, teaching, research methods</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>big qual</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>In a special mini-series of our podcast, we discuss the secondary analysis of large-scale qualitative data as a new research method. Here Lynn Jamieson from the University of Edinburgh and Sarah Lewthwaite from the University of Southampton reflect on the method’s development and potential use in the teaching of research methods.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>In a special mini-series of our podcast, we discuss the secondary analysis of large-scale qualitative data as a new research method. Here Lynn Jamieson from the University of Edinburgh and Sarah Lewthwaite from the University of Southampton reflect on the method’s development and potential use in the teaching of research methods.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Teaching Big Qual: benefits and challenges for students and teachers (NCRM) - Ros Edwards and Sarah Lewthwaite</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    In a special mini-series of our podcast, we discuss the secondary analysis of large-scale qualitative data as a new research method. Here Ros Edwards and Sarah Lewthwaite from the University of Southampton talk about how the method might benefit and challenge teachers and students of research methods.                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Edwards_Lewthwaite.mp3" length="26963490" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">1BC14E4B-AD45-43D4-132F-80504F7AE766</guid>
                <pubDate>Thu, 20 Dec 2018 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Ros Edwards and Sarah Lewthwaite</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:14:15</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>big qual, teaching, research methods</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>teaching big qual</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>In a special mini-series of our podcast, we discuss the secondary analysis of large-scale qualitative data as a new research method. Here Ros Edwards and Sarah Lewthwaite from the University of Southampton talk about how the method might benefit and challenge teachers and students of research methods.</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>In a special mini-series of our podcast, we discuss the secondary analysis of large-scale qualitative data as a new research method. Here Ros Edwards and Sarah Lewthwaite from the University of Southampton talk about how the method might benefit and challenge teachers and students of research methods.</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Johnny Saldaña on qualitative longitudinal research (NCRM) - Catherine McDonald, Johnny Saldaña</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    <p>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to <a href="https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/author/johnny-saldana-0" target="_blank">Johnny Saldaña</a>, Professor Emeritus at Arizona State University’s School of Film, Dance and Theatre, and a leading authority on qualitative and qualitative longitudinal methods.<br />
<br />
Johnny discusses his research methodology model and shares advice his advice on research questions, analytical approaches and writing. He also shares his experience of an ethical dilemma he faced and tells us what his key bit of advice would be to his younger self.</p>

<p>This series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.</p>

<p>Content warning: This episode includes a reference to suicide.</p>

<p>If you have been affected by any of the issues raised in this episode, you can call Samaritans for free on 116 123, email them at <a href="mailto:jo@samaritans.org">jo@samaritans.org</a>, or visit www.samaritans.org to find your nearest branch.</p>

<p>For further information on the YouthLife project, visit <a href="https://www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk" target="_blank">www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk</a></p>
                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcasts_research_questions.mp3" length="30616588" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">2BC14E4B-AD4A-43D4-132F-80504F7AE766</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 26 Oct 2022 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Catherine McDonald, Johnny Saldaña</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:33:21</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Qualitative research, qualitative longitudinal methods, longitudinal methods, research, research methods</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Research questions, analytical approaches and writing</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to &amp;lt;a href="https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/author/johnny-saldana-0" target="_blank"&amp;gt;Johnny Saldaña&amp;lt;/a&amp;gt;, Professor Emeritus at Arizona State University’s School of Film, Dance and Theatre, and a leading authority on qualitative and qualitative longitudinal methods.&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;
&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;
Johnny discusses his research methodology model and shares advice his advice on research questions, analytical approaches and writing. He also shares his experience of an ethical dilemma he faced and tells us what his key bit of advice would be to his younger self.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;This series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;Content warning: This episode includes a reference to suicide.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;If you have been affected by any of the issues raised in this episode, you can call Samaritans for free on 116 123, email them at &amp;lt;a href="mailto:jo@samaritans.org"&amp;gt;jo@samaritans.org&amp;lt;/a&amp;gt;, or visit www.samaritans.org to find your nearest branch.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;For further information on the YouthLife project, visit &amp;lt;a href="https://www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk" target="_blank"&amp;gt;www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk&amp;lt;/a&amp;gt;&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;
</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to Johnny Saldaña, Professor Emeritus at Arizona State University’s School of Film, Dance and Theatre, and a leading authority on qualitative and qualitative longitudinal methods.

Johnny discusses his research methodology model and shares advice his advice on research questions, analytical approaches and writing. He also shares his experience of an ethical dilemma he faced and tells us what his key bit of advice would be to his younger self.

This series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.

Content warning: This episode includes a reference to suicide.

If you have been affected by any of the issues raised in this episode, you can call Samaritans for free on 116 123, email them at jo@samaritans.org, or visit www.samaritans.org to find your nearest branch.

For further information on the YouthLife project, visit www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk
</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Jane Gray on researching social change over time (NCRM) - Catherine McDonald, Jane Gray</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    <p>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talk to <a href="https://www.maynoothuniversity.ie/faculty-social-sciences/our-people/jane-gray" style="color:blue; text-decoration:underline">Jane Gray</a>, Professor of Sociology at the Social Sciences Institute at Maynooth University in Ireland. Jane is the programme leader for the Irish Qualitative Data Archive and played a key role in the development of the Digital Repository of Ireland and her research looks at families, households and social change.</p>

<p>Jane discusses her passion for looking at how individual lives intersect with macro social change and what patterns can be found within that, the range of different approaches she adopts when it comes to analysis and the importance of knowing your audience when it comes to the writing up of your research.</p>

<p>The Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.</p>

<p>For further information on the YouthLife project, visit <a href="http://www.euqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk/" style="color:blue; text-decoration:underline">www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk</a></p>
                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_McDonald_Gray.mp3" length="19507305" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">5F976D3E-A3DF-8AD2-9921-6FFF8742C2B9</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 29 Nov 2022 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Catherine McDonald, Jane Gray</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:20:19</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Qualitative research, qualitative longitudinal methods, longitudinal methods, research, research methods</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>Professor Jane Gray discusses her passion for looking at how individual lives intersect with macro social change</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talk to &amp;lt;a href="https://www.maynoothuniversity.ie/faculty-social-sciences/our-people/jane-gray" style="color:blue; text-decoration:underline"&amp;gt;Jane Gray&amp;lt;/a&amp;gt;, Professor of Sociology at the Social Sciences Institute at Maynooth University in Ireland. Jane is the programme leader for the Irish Qualitative Data Archive and played a key role in the development of the Digital Repository of Ireland and her research looks at families, households and social change.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;Jane discusses her passion for looking at how individual lives intersect with macro social change and what patterns can be found within that, the range of different approaches she adopts when it comes to analysis and the importance of knowing your audience when it comes to the writing up of your research.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;The Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;For further information on the YouthLife project, visit &amp;lt;a href="http://www.euqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk/" style="color:blue; text-decoration:underline"&amp;gt;www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk&amp;lt;/a&amp;gt;&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;
</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talk to Jane Gray, Professor of Sociology at the Social Sciences Institute at Maynooth University in Ireland. Jane is the programme leader for the Irish Qualitative Data Archive and played a key role in the development of the Digital Repository of Ireland and her research looks at families, households and social change.

Jane discusses her passion for looking at how individual lives intersect with macro social change and what patterns can be found within that, the range of different approaches she adopts when it comes to analysis and the importance of knowing your audience when it comes to the writing up of your research.

The Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.

For further information on the YouthLife project, visit www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk
</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Dan Woodman on mixed and qualitative longitudinal approaches (NCRM) - Catherine McDonald, Dan Woodman</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    <p>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to <a href="https://findanexpert.unimelb.edu.au/profile/19920-dan-woodman">Dan Woodman</a>, Associate Professor of Sociology at the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne. Dan is an internationally recognised authority on conceptualising generational change and the social conditions impacting our young adults.</p>

<p>Dan discusses explains what drew him to his area of study, why iterative models are so important in longitudinal research and how reciprocity can help reduce attrition. He also talks about his approach to writing and being wary of allowing the data to simply say what you want it to say.</p>

<p>This series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.</p>

<p>For further information on the YouthLife project, visit <a href="http://www.euqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk/">www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk</a>.</p>
                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Catherine_McDonald,_Dan_Woodman.mp3" length="24351690" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">DA849EB6-D257-3F6F-CA25-62F5A1F9B59F</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 25 Jan 2023 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Catherine McDonald, Dan Woodman</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:25:22</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Mixed methods, qualitiative methods, research methods, qualitative longitudinal research, longitudinal research</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to Dan Woodman of the University of Melbourne.</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to &amp;lt;a href="https://findanexpert.unimelb.edu.au/profile/19920-dan-woodman"&amp;gt;Dan Woodman&amp;lt;/a&amp;gt;, Associate Professor of Sociology at the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne. Dan is an internationally recognised authority on conceptualising generational change and the social conditions impacting our young adults.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;Dan discusses explains what drew him to his area of study, why iterative models are so important in longitudinal research and how reciprocity can help reduce attrition. He also talks about his approach to writing and being wary of allowing the data to simply say what you want it to say.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;This series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;For further information on the YouthLife project, visit &amp;lt;a href="http://www.euqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk/"&amp;gt;www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk&amp;lt;/a&amp;gt;.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;
</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to Dan Woodman, Associate Professor of Sociology at the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne. Dan is an internationally recognised authority on conceptualising generational change and the social conditions impacting our young adults.

Dan discusses explains what drew him to his area of study, why iterative models are so important in longitudinal research and how reciprocity can help reduce attrition. He also talks about his approach to writing and being wary of allowing the data to simply say what you want it to say.

This series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.

For further information on the YouthLife project, visit www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk.
</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Laura Camfield on undertaking cross-national mixed methods research (NCRM) - Catherine McDonald, Laura Camfield</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    <p>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to Laura Camfield, Professor of Development Research and Evaluation in the School of International Development at the University of East Anglia.</p>

<p>Laura discusses cross-country comparisons, the importance of theory in relation to mixed methods work and gives her advice around what can and can’t be compared. She also talks about the ethical challenges around presenting project work in regard to recognising younger researchers and other members of the team.</p>

<p>The series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.</p>

<p>For further information on the YouthLife project, visit <a href="https://www.euqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk/">www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk</a></p>
                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Catherine_McDonald,_Laura_Camfield.mp3" length="62385728" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">8EFEE4AC-E4A2-154F-F5CC-A8AC994CD65A</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 22 Feb 2023 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Catherine McDonald, Laura Camfield</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:26:00</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Research methods, research, qualitative research, mixed methods research, cross-national research, ethics</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to Professor Laura Camfield of the University of East Anglia.</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to Laura Camfield, Professor of Development Research and Evaluation in the School of International Development at the University of East Anglia.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;Laura discusses cross-country comparisons, the importance of theory in relation to mixed methods work and gives her advice around what can and can’t be compared. She also talks about the ethical challenges around presenting project work in regard to recognising younger researchers and other members of the team.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;The series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;For further information on the YouthLife project, visit &amp;lt;a href="https://www.euqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk/"&amp;gt;www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk&amp;lt;/a&amp;gt;&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;
</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to Laura Camfield, Professor of Development Research and Evaluation in the School of International Development at the University of East Anglia.

Laura discusses cross-country comparisons, the importance of theory in relation to mixed methods work and gives her advice around what can and can’t be compared. She also talks about the ethical challenges around presenting project work in regard to recognising younger researchers and other members of the team.

The series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.

For further information on the YouthLife project, visit www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk
</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>JD Carpentieri on qualitative research and theory (NCRM) - Catherine McDonald, JD Carpentieri</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    <p>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to JD Carpentieri, Associate Professor of Social Science and Policy in the Department of Education, Practice and Society at University College London, and an Honorary Research Associate at the Centre for Longitudinal Studies.</p>

<p>JD talks about how qualitative research can add nuance to theory, which questions he feels are best suited to mixed methods longitudinal research and he shares his top tip on keeping participants on board. He also explains how he likes to try different analytic techniques for different studies.</p>

<p>This series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.</p>

<p>For further information on the YouthLife project, visit <a href="https://www.euqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk/">www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk</a></p>
                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Catherine_McDonald,_JD_Carpentieri.mp3" length="27975193" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">75AA2A40-58C4-8056-1C29-C46D720A5B55</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 29 Mar 2023 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Catherine McDonald, JD Carpentieri</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:29:08</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Mixed methods, qualitiative methods, research methods, qualitative longitudinal research, longitudinal research</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to JD Carpentieri of University College London.</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to JD Carpentieri, Associate Professor of Social Science and Policy in the Department of Education, Practice and Society at University College London, and an Honorary Research Associate at the Centre for Longitudinal Studies.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;JD talks about how qualitative research can add nuance to theory, which questions he feels are best suited to mixed methods longitudinal research and he shares his top tip on keeping participants on board. He also explains how he likes to try different analytic techniques for different studies.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;This series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;For further information on the YouthLife project, visit &amp;lt;a href="https://www.euqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk/"&amp;gt;www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk&amp;lt;/a&amp;gt;&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;
</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to JD Carpentieri, Associate Professor of Social Science and Policy in the Department of Education, Practice and Society at University College London, and an Honorary Research Associate at the Centre for Longitudinal Studies.

JD talks about how qualitative research can add nuance to theory, which questions he feels are best suited to mixed methods longitudinal research and he shares his top tip on keeping participants on board. He also explains how he likes to try different analytic techniques for different studies.

This series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.

For further information on the YouthLife project, visit www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk
</itunes:summary>
            </item>
                                <item>
                <title>Laura Bernardi on mixed methods and research questions (NCRM) - Catherine McDonald, Laura Bernardi</title>
                <link>https://www.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/</link>
                <description>
                    <![CDATA[
                    <p>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to Laura Bernardi, Professor of Demography and Sociology of the Life Course within the LIVES Centre at the University of Lausanne. Laura is also the former Deputy Director of the Swiss National Centre of Competence in Research (LIVES), which studied the effects of the post-industrial economy and society on the development of vulnerability – using a longitudinal and comparative approach.</p>

<p>Laura discusses just how mixed mixed-methods can be, how most research questions relating to change and development over time lend themselves well to longitudinal and mixed methods research, and the importance of establishing and retaining professional parameters with study participants.</p>

<p>This series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.</p>

<p>For further information on the YouthLife project, visit www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk</p>
                    ]]>
                </description>
                <enclosure url="https://repository.ncrm.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/mp3/NCRM_podcast_Catherine_McDonald,_Laura_Bernardi.mp3" length="20545600" type="audio/mpeg" />
                <guid isPermaLink="false">63A5507F-7C21-9D0C-B697-A9F362E6108E</guid>
                <pubDate>Thu, 27 Apr 2023 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <itunes:author>Catherine McDonald, Laura Bernardi</itunes:author>
                <itunes:duration>00:21:24</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <itunes:keywords>Research methods, research, qualitative research, mixed methods research, ethics</itunes:keywords>
                <itunes:subtitle>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to Laura Bernardi of the University of Lausanne.</itunes:subtitle>
                <!-- <itunes:summary>&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to Laura Bernardi, Professor of Demography and Sociology of the Life Course within the LIVES Centre at the University of Lausanne. Laura is also the former Deputy Director of the Swiss National Centre of Competence in Research (LIVES), which studied the effects of the post-industrial economy and society on the development of vulnerability – using a longitudinal and comparative approach.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;Laura discusses just how mixed mixed-methods can be, how most research questions relating to change and development over time lend themselves well to longitudinal and mixed methods research, and the importance of establishing and retaining professional parameters with study participants.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;This series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;

&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;For further information on the YouthLife project, visit www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt;
</itunes:summary>-->
                <itunes:summary>In this episode of the Methods podcast, host Catherine McDonald talks to Laura Bernardi, Professor of Demography and Sociology of the Life Course within the LIVES Centre at the University of Lausanne. Laura is also the former Deputy Director of the Swiss National Centre of Competence in Research (LIVES), which studied the effects of the post-industrial economy and society on the development of vulnerability – using a longitudinal and comparative approach.

Laura discusses just how mixed mixed-methods can be, how most research questions relating to change and development over time lend themselves well to longitudinal and mixed methods research, and the importance of establishing and retaining professional parameters with study participants.

This series of the Methods podcast is produced by the National Centre for Research Methods as part of the EU Horizon2020 funded YouthLife project, and is looking at how researchers can do better longitudinal research on youth transitions.

For further information on the YouthLife project, visit www.EUqualimix.ncrm.ac.uk
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