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CritQuant: School of Education Faculty and Students Join a Movement to Disrupt Traditional Research Methods

A group of faculty and graduate students are part of a growing movement in academia that is re-evaluating long-held assumptions about research design.

three individuals stand together with three people displayed on a Zoom screen
The CritQuant Research Forum meets in person and online in October 2023.

Critical Quantitative Theory seeks to disrupt the traditional dichotomy between quantitative and qualitative research methods, with the former typically assumed to be more rigorous and suited to 鈥渉ard鈥 sciences and the latter seen as more subjective and better suited for use with critical theoretical perspectives. By disrupting this dichotomy, CritQuant鈥攕ometimes called QuantCrit鈥攕eeks to use data and statistics in a more equitable way, arguing that by doing so, it might become a useful and more racially just method of examining social justice questions.

Introduced in a 2018 Race Ethnicity and Education journal article鈥斺溾濃攖his method calls on education researchers to explore inequity by examining data sets and statistics through critical analytical frameworks, such as critical race theory (CRT), intersectionality and feminism.

At the School of Education, an interdisciplinary team of faculty and graduate students has been meeting twice a month鈥攕ince spring 2023鈥攁s the Critical Quantitative Research Forum. Among its original members are , associate professor of reading and language arts; , associate professor of higher education; , associate professor of counseling and human services; , associate professor of quantitative research methodology; , associate professor of teaching and leadership; and doctoral student ParKer Bryant, a Lender Center for Social Justice Fellow.

Change and Possibility

鈥淭here is a primacy to quantitative data because it is seen as objective, so its findings have a privileged status,鈥 says Professor Johnson. 鈥淪ome people tend to trust quantitative data and see it as more valid than qualitative research methods, such as ethnographies, interviews or case studies.鈥

One reason for this paradigm, explains Johnson, is that in qualitative research, the researcher is the 鈥渋nstrument鈥 that gathers data, through an interview or by analyzing texts 鈥渁s opposed to a quantitative instrument, such as a survey that is analyzed by software.鈥 Thus, the quantitative researcher is assumed to be impartial and their experiences or beliefs irrelevant. That assumption has sometimes cloaked biased research and conclusions, as with the widely criticized 1994 study .

“If quantitative research is the privileged approach, then it needs to be transformed if we are going to work toward equity,鈥 Johnson says. 鈥淲e can’t put all the work of addressing critical equity questions on qualitative researchers, so how can we use statistics to tell the story of social justice, point out inequities and put forward ideas of change and possibility that illuminate and address structural inequalities? I’ve been thinking about this since I was a grad student.”

A Challenging Space

As a current doctoral student, Bryant is researching the impact of academic language on creative thought. It鈥檚 a topic traditionally suited to qualitative methods, such as interviews, surveys and ethnography, she says. However, she became interested in CritQuant 鈥渂ecause I wanted to explore my research question thoroughly. I’m already familiar with qualitative research, but I want to understand quantitative methods such as linear and advanced statistical models. There’s no reason not to know quantitative models.鈥

The research forum is collegial, Bryant observes. 鈥淲hat I tell my friends is that faculty really want to be there, so it feels as if you are having high intellectual conversation among colleagues. It’s a challenging space.鈥

Bryant was invited by the faculty members to join an internal grant project that continues the forum鈥檚 work.

鈥淗ow Can Educational Inequities Caused by Racial Wealth Gap Be Reduced? A Critical Quantitative Analysis of Individual, Home, and School鈥 is using quantitative methods to examine whether individual or institutional-level factors have a greater influence on 鈥渢he mediated relationships among socioeconomic status, opportunity to learn and students鈥 learning outcomes.鈥

鈥淭his study aims to contribute to advancing quantitative methods in educational research using the CritQuant framework based on critical race theory and intersectionality,鈥 writes principal investigator Jang. 鈥淲e believe that educational scholars would benefit from our work in considering CritQuant as a racially just method.鈥

Peeling Back Assumptions

Given her scholarly work focuses on the effects of campus climate on the sense of belonging of students of color in science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields, Johnson is well-situated to critique the quantitative vs. qualitative dichotomy.

The reason why qualitative research is appropriate for answering questions of social justice is that 鈥渋t can tap into communities the way that other research can’t, by asking about lived experiences or centering marginalized and minoritized voices,鈥 she says.

Conversely, quantitative research is seen as not amenable to social justice work because statistics can be used to advance and explain non-equitable conclusions, as in “The Bell Curve.” 鈥淭he history and restrictions of quantitative methods are seen as having limited value in an equity agenda. Folks like myself, trained in quantitative methods, are trying to figure out ways to use statistical research methods within critical frameworks such as CRT.鈥

One technique to make quantitative research more equity-minded鈥斺減ositionality鈥濃攄ispenses with the idea that the researcher is impartial. 鈥淐ritQuant forces researchers to position themselves in the research and asks them to consider their biases and subjectivity,鈥 Johnson says. 鈥淩esearch questions arise from somewhere, after all.鈥

Johnson says her research interests often return her to when she was director of minority student affairs at Worcester (Massachusetts) Polytechnic Institute, supporting Black, Latinx and Indigenous students. 鈥淭hat experience created lots of questions for me, and I often think back to the challenges my students had,鈥 Johnson says.

鈥淢y experiences as a Black woman working at primarily white institutions frames where I’m coming from in my research, and CritQuant makes me reckon with that,鈥 Johnson says. 鈥淨ualitative researchers are expected to do this work, so why aren’t quantitative researchers expected to do the same? We encourage our doctoral students to write out their positionality in their research design, in order to peel back assumptions of unbias and objectivity.”

Structures and Systems

Another technique is embedded in the CritQuant forum鈥檚 grant project and speaks directly to why the method has the power to transform educational research.

鈥淨uantitative research often can situate deficits on the people being studied, whereas CritQuant research can be used to examine structures,鈥 says Johnson. 鈥淚n other words, we’ve spent a lot of time trying to fix the student, but critical quantitative research has the power to examine whether outcome differences might be environmental or institutional. Maybe we don’t need to fix the student but instead look at fixing the structures and systems.鈥

As education graduate students ask more questions about how to integrate CritQuant into their research topics, the research forum is becoming a space where faculty can share their own experiences and challenges, such as how to use quantitative methods with subject groups that are small in number or how to incentivize participation ethically.

鈥淚 research groups that are already minoritized on campuses,鈥 Johnson says, 鈥渟o when researching campus climate, I have to be able to overcome survey fatigue and build relationships in order to ask questions about racism and sexism. There is an extra labor required on the part of the researcher.”

Johnson sums up the work of the research forum as enacting the 鈥渃ritical鈥 part of Critical Quantitative Theory. 鈥淚t’s exciting to engage with faculty and graduate students in an informal way to sort that out.”