My name is SaraJoy Pond, and I am a doctoral candidate at Brigham Young University. I’m particularly interested in evaluation capacity-building for social change.
Cool Trick: Chances are, if you’ve worked at all with qualitative data sets, you know the feeling of “drowning in data.” The end of an evaluation engagement often leaves me swimming in reams of interview transcripts, gigabytes of video, and hours of audio (somehow always virtually inaudible) wondering “where do I even start!?” Wordle is a free web-based word cloud generator, has come to my rescue many times. Simply paste in your transcripts or notes and in seconds, you’re looking at an intuitive visualization of “themes” from the text.
Though the tool itself relies on “quantification” (as compared to true qualitative analysis, my professors inform me) I find it invaluable for wrapping my head around that first stage of qualitative data analysis.
TIPS 2 TRY:
- Sort the responses to a question by stakeholder group, then compare the resulting wordle images to see differences in how each group responded.
- Make periodic wordles of your own field notes to see how your impressions, interpretations and judgments varied or evolved over the course of a study.
- Include a wordle image in your evaluation report to help stakeholders see how the themes you discuss “emerged.”
Wordle is available at http://www.wordle.net/
This contribution is from the aea365 Daily Tips blog, by and for evaluators, from the American Evaluation Association. Please consider contributing – send a note of interest to aea365@eval.org.



Related posts:
- Jacquelyn Christensen on Wordle and Survey Anchors
- Sue Griffey on Wordle
- Susan Kistler on Making the Most of a Blog
- Bianca Montrosse on Innovative Data Displays
- Robert Brunger on Practical Tips for Focus Groups
8 Comments for Sarajoy Pond on Wordle
SaraJoy | January 15, 2010 at 10:34 am
Thanks Susan!
Combine that tip about the putting in a URL to analyze all the text on a blog with the one suggesting a blog for project notes, updates, and even reports, and you’ve just saved yourself a LOT of time–and become much more transparent and open in the process. Great tip.
Also, in the more advanced settings of wordle, you can set it to exclude certain words from the cloud–sometimes handy if you need to show finer discrimination.
Tweets that mention Sarajoy Pond on Wordle - AEA365 -- Topsy.com | January 16, 2010 at 4:32 am
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Evaluation Headlines, SNV. SNV said: Un programma x cominciare a concettualizzare dati qualitativi RT @aeaweb Pond Using Wordle for Evaluation Tip-a-Day blog http://ow.ly/WK73 [...]
Nicole Cundiff | January 18, 2010 at 7:21 pm
Thanks SaraJoy,
I believe that this tip will come in handy over the next few months for me and my colleagues. We are completing an assessment of a social justice leadership institute and decided that we would put an “experience wall” up for participants to reflect on each of the days activities. We are hoping that this would give us good feedback on their experiences and the pro’s and con’s of the institute. However, we were worried about the large amount of qualitative data that this would leave us (50 participants over a semester of workshops). Additionally, we wanted at the end of the semester to reveal to the participants the overall themes that emerged, and I feel that this program will allow us to be successful.
Thanks again!
Susan Kistler on Making the Most of a Blog - AEA365 | January 23, 2010 at 3:11 am
[...] to the original content and see if others have added comments – and to add comments of your own. Sarajoy Pond’s post on Wordle from 1/15 now has 6 follow-up comments noting features and uses. The comments add value to the original post. [...]


Sarajoy,
Thanks for sharing about such a great tool – I love wordle!
Another tip: If you have a blog – or want to analyze a blog, you can just put the URL from the blog directly into wordle and it will create a wordcloud from your blog’s posts. Here’s the one from the aea365 blog that I popped in this morning.
You can see it full size here: http://www.wordle.net/show/wrdl/1542332/aea365_Blog
If you are going to post your wordcloud anywhere – on a blog or in a report, there are lots of settings you can work with to customize the colors and layout – or just use the big ‘randomize’ button at the bottom. Each time you click randomize, you get a different layout and color scheme. Click until your heart’s content!