| name | academic-writing |
| description | Use when writing academic prose for qualitative research — findings, methods, discussion sections with appropriate voice and conventions. |
Academic Writing for Qualitative Research
Qualitative writing must show analytic work while remaining readable. The goal is disciplined interpretation: claims tethered to evidence, voice appropriate to genre, and structure that guides readers through complex meaning.
Conventions that matter
- Prefer precision over vague intensifiers (“very,” “extremely”) unless justified.
- Define specialized terms on first substantive use.
- Use past tense for what you did; present tense for claims you treat as stable findings in the narrative (discipline norms vary—mirror target journal).
- Keep parallel structure in lists of themes/categories.
Voice: active vs passive; first person
First person (“we/I”) is increasingly acceptable in qualitative methods writing because agency and positionality matter. Use active voice for clarity (“We analyzed transcripts”) while avoiding self-centered prose that eclipses participants’ words.
Hedging language
Qualitative claims are often probabilistic and situated. Appropriate hedges: “suggests,” “indicates,” “in this sample,” “participants described.” Avoid hedging so heavily that claims disappear; avoid over-certainty without evidence.
Paragraph structure
One main idea per paragraph; opening sentence states the claim; following sentences support with reasoning, excerpt references, or cross-case comparison; final sentence transitions or deepens significance.
Signposting
Use headings, forecasting sentences, and explicit roadmap paragraphs in long documents (dissertations). In articles, respect word limits—signpost minimally but clearly.
Integrating quotes
Introduce excerpts; avoid “quote dumping.” Trim quotes with ellipses only ethically and transparently. Follow APA block quote rules when applicable.
Presenting data extracts
Pair excerpts with analytic commentary: what the excerpt illustrates, how it varies across cases, and how it links to a category. Name the participant pseudonym and data type (interview, field note).
Analytical commentary patterns
- Excerpt → code label → interpretation → boundary condition.
- Contrast case: show two excerpts to clarify dimensional range.
Writing for different audiences
Dissertations can show process (audit trail, extensive methods). Journal articles foreground contribution and compress procedural detail into supplements. Practitioner briefs emphasize actionable insights with ethical caveats.
Common mistakes
- Theme lists without mechanisms.
- Methodological buzzwords without operational meaning.
- Ignoring disconfirming evidence.
- Conflating description with theory.
Grounded theory writing tip
Move from categories to theoretical statements about relationships among categories (conditions, strategies, consequences). Use memos as drafting scaffolding.
Checklist
References (starting points)
- Wolcott, H. F. Writing up qualitative research (3rd ed.).
- Belcher, W. L. Writing your journal article in twelve weeks — adaptable to qualitative articles.
- Glaser, B. G. Doing Grounded Theory — theory presentation discipline.