"This book is a must-read for any researcher, even those who specialize in quantitative methods. . . .It aims to be a textbook but achieves much more."
— EPIC - Ethnographic Praxis in Industry Community
"Qualitative Literacy: A Guide to Evaluating Ethnographic and Interview Research is a wonderful book that should be required reading for all graduate students in Sociology; indeed, it is a useful guide for any social science discipline that incorporates both quantitative and qualitative training."
— Social Forces
"Qualitative Literacy… suggests a template through which scholars—building on extensive prior methodological research—might more holistically and collectively develop a framework to improve qualitative literacy across the social sciences."
— Administrative Science Quarterly
"This masterful book offers conceptually rich and pragmatic insight on an age-old question: How do we recognize high-quality, rigorous qualitative research? This text provides a clear and actionable set of criteria for evaluating qualitative research and punctuates the descriptions with illustrative examples. It is a must-read for research methods courses in the social sciences, as well as for scholars and reviewers of qualitative research."—Na'ilah Suad Nasir, President, Spencer Foundation
"The book is fantastic! I read it cover to cover in one sitting, on the Acela from NYC to DC. For a funder of research and a consumer of qualitative research, a guide like this has been sorely needed, and I predict it will become an indispensable new tool."—Adam Gamoran, President, William T. Grant Foundation
"Instead of judging qualitative research by the standards of other methods, Mario Luis Small and Jessica McCrory Calarco consider the purpose and aspirations of in-depth interviewing and ethnography and then offer criteria with which to evaluate if a piece of research hits the mark (or not). At once practical and sophisticated, Qualitative Literacy reflects the wisdom of two of the most talented qualitative researchers in the field today. It is an invaluable resource for methods teachers, funders, policy makers, and students."—Mary Pattillo, author of Black Picket Fences: Privilege and Peril among the Black Middle Class
"In this masterful synthesis of the challenges and opportunities facing qualitative researchers, Mario Luis Small and Jessica McCrory Calarco have accomplished the seemingly impossible. While acknowledging that there is no 'one right way' to conduct qualitative work, they provide state-of-the-art standards for assessing the value of its varied contributions. Regardless of your choice of method, this insightful, nuanced, and generous book will change the way you think about doing and learning from qualitative studies."—Kathleen Gerson, coauthor of The Science and Art of Interviewing
"This excellent, accessible book is written by authors with an impeccable reputation in the field. It brings focus to what we know and agree on as practitioners of qualitative research and how we should be thinking about the craft versus how it is typically taught."—D'Lane R. Compton, Full Professor of Sociology, University of New Orleans
"This is a stellar book. The authors have crafted a clearly written manuscript that will be useful both for teaching and as a handbook for practitioners. I have not seen anything quite like it, and this book helps me think reflexively about my own work and that of my students."—Tanya Golash-Boza, Professor of Sociology, University of California, Merced