![]() ![]() In the Ribbon, select the Explore tab and click 'Queries' and then click ‘Coding’. In this case, there seemed to be a relationship between water quality and the decline of the fishing industry. You will be shifting from an analysis of the text, to an analysis of the codes and relationships between them. You may have been taking notes in you Research Journal as you were coding your reflections on patterns in the data. Step 8 - Explore your data using Coding Queries You can also merge codes that are the same: right click and select ‘cut’ and then right click over the code you want to merge and select ‘merge into selected code.’.It is easy to move codes around: right click and ‘cut’ and then right click over where you want to put them and select ‘paste’.Remember that in re-organizing your codes, you are creating a catalogue of your codes, so you can access them quickly. The rules of a catalogue system are to keep like with like and you should only have one code for a topic/theme.Remember to put the Coding Stripes on to see ‘Recent Coding’ while you code. You can code in a code in the same way that you code in a transcript.You can see that finer codes are likely to involve water, quality, habitat, development, fish, etc.The Word Cloud can give you some quick ideas about how you could code the broad code more finely.įigure 7 - An example of a Word Cloud for the ‘natural environment’ Node Get a quick feel for the kinds of things covered in that code by creating a Word Cloud. ![]()
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