| name | coding-pipeline |
| description | Use when orchestrating the full open → selective → theoretical coding pipeline in grounded theory analysis. |
Grounded Theory Coding Pipeline (Open → Selective → Theoretical)
The coding pipeline is not a one-way assembly line. It is a disciplined progression where you repeatedly move between coding, comparing, sampling, and memoing until a theory fits, works, and earns relevance.
Pipeline overview
- Open coding: break data into incidents; label actions/meanings; keep comparisons tight.
- Selective coding: elevate a core category; relate other categories to it; delimit the theory’s scope.
- Theoretical coding: integrate categories using theoretical codes (families) to specify relationships among categories.
Throughout: memoing captures hypotheses about relationships; theoretical sampling targets missing variation.
Transition criteria (practical signals)
Move toward selective coding when:
- A category repeatedly explains variation and connects to many others.
- Additional data mainly densifies rather than fractures the emerging core story.
Move toward theoretical coding when:
- Major categories are stabilized enough to ask how they relate (processually, conditionally, strategically).
Return to open coding when anomalies appear—regression is healthy.
Parallel processes
Never pause memoing to “finish coding.” Memos are where theory grows. Schedule memo-first blocks after intense coding sessions.
Quality checkpoints
- Fit check: Do codes fit incidents without stretching?
- Work check: Does the emerging theory explain how problems are handled/processes unfold?
- Relevance check: Does it address the real concern in the data (not the literature’s concern)?
- Modifiability check: Can you revise categories when new data demands it?
Iteration patterns
Common loops:
- Open → memo → theoretical sampling → open.
- Selective → theoretical → return to selective when integration breaks.
Document each loop in an audit trail entry (“why we reopened category X”).
Common stalling points
- Code sprawl: too many codes at similar abstraction—schedule code consolidation sessions.
- Premature core category: excitement about a pet theme—assign a devil’s advocate debriefer.
- Analysis paralysis: set a rule—code N incidents, then write one integrative memo.
Timeline expectations
Timelines vary by data density and team size. A usable heuristic: expect many cycles; dissertations often spend months in open/selective interplay. Proposals should budget accordingly.
Software note
CAQDAS tools can help retrieval but cannot replace constant comparison discipline. Export periodic codebooks; version them.
Handoff to writing
When theoretical integration stabilizes, begin sorting memos into an outline. Writing is another pass of theoretical refinement.
Checklist
References (starting points)
- Glaser, B. G. Basics of Grounded Theory Analysis: Emergence vs. Forcing.
- Glaser, B. G. Doing Grounded Theory: Issues and Discussions.
- Holton, J. A., & Walsh, I. Classic Grounded Theory: Applications With Qualitative and Quantitative Data.