Use when conducting peer debriefing or external audit processes to enhance the dependability and confirmability of qualitative research.
Peer debriefing is a structured dialog with a knowledgeable colleague who challenges your assumptions, probes alternative interpretations, and helps surface researcher bias. It supports dependability and confirmability by externalizing decision-making without surrendering analytic responsibility.
Regular sessions where you present: data excerpts, coding decisions, emerging categories, sampling rationale, and sticky analytic problems. The debriefer asks probing questions, suggests counter-interpretations, and notes blind spots.
Choose someone who:
Avoid debriefers with conflicts of interest (e.g., stakeholders who need a particular outcome).
Keep debrief logs: date, topics, challenges raised, decisions made (or deferred), and whether the session changed coding rules or sampling. Store logs in your audit trail folder with access controls.
An external auditor reviews process documentation (field notes, coding memos, audit trail) to assess whether interpretations are traceable to data. This is heavier than informal peer debriefing but similar in spirit. Provide the auditor a clear scope—what they are/not judging.
Dependability is not “the same code every time without thinking”—it is traceable process. Peer debriefing makes methodological moves visible and revisable.
Early debriefs reduce compounding errors; mid-study debriefs test emerging categories; late debriefs stress-test near-final claims. Aim for regularity (e.g., monthly) rather than crisis-only debriefs.
Use debriefing to guard against forcing preconceived frameworks and to test whether categories earn their relevance. The debriefer should press for constant comparison discipline.