The scale of a case

A topic in research methodology

An obvious question about case study work is 'what counts as a case?' and the answer is that potentially the case can be defined in many ways.

Duit and coworkers describe a case of an episode in a particular lesson: considering the “…analysis of one specific classroom discussion episode” (Duit et al., 1998, p.1060). They talk about one group working on one lesson activity, in the context of one class in one school, in the context of one lesson sequence.

However, “the [US] National Institute on Student Achievement, Curriculum, and Assessment…conducted a Case Study of the entire Japanese school system with particular reference to the teaching and learning of Mathematics and Science” (Freebody, 2003, p.80).

Britez wrote a PhD thesis: “I have conducted a case study of higher education in Paraguay in order to determine the uses and limitations of the transfer literature in explaining policy developments in the Paraguayan higher education sector since 1989.”

The case needs to be clearly bounded:

“A teacher may be a case. But her teaching lacks the specificity, the boundedness, to be a case”

“An innovative program may be a case. All the schools in Sweden can be a case… The case could be a child, it could be a classroom of children or a particular mobilization of professionals to study a childhood condition”

Stake, 1995: 2

“The case need not be a person or enterprise…An institution, a program, a responsibility, a collection, or a population can be the case. This is not to trivialize the notion of "case" but to note the generality of the case study method[ology].”

Stake, 1978: 7
Sources cited:
  • Britez, R. G. (2010). The global politics of policy circulation in higher education: A case study of Paraguay 1998-2008. PhD, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2142/17071
  • Duit, R., Roth, W.-M., Komorek, M., & Wilbers, J. (1998). Conceptual change cum discourse analysis to understand cognition in a unit on chaotic systems: towards an integrative perspective on learning in science. International Journal of Science Education, 20(9), 1059-1073.
  • Freebody, P. (2003). Qualitative Research in Education: Interaction and Practice. London: Sage.
  • Stake, R. E. (1978). The Case Study Method in Social Inquiry. Educational Researcher, 7(2), 5-8.
  • Stake, R. E. (1995). The Art of Case Study Research. Thousand Oaks, California: Sage.

My introduction to educational research:

Taber, K. S. (2013). Classroom-based Research and Evidence-based Practice: An introduction (2nd ed.). London: Sage.