My university has a great LibGuide: https://guides.library.illinois.edu/qualitative Taguette > is the open source tool I've most often heard mentioned: https://app.taguette.org For R folks, RQDA as been around for awhile: https://rqda.r-forge.r-project.org A colleague recently tweeted about some of his favorite books: https://twitter.com/MereSophistry/status/1561416900424392709 I'd love to learn from what others are doing! -Jodi On Fri, Sep 9, 2022 at 5:43 PM Barnes, Heather <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > We use Maxqda, which has both advantages and disadvantages. For coding, > it’s fairly intuitive, and it does enable mixed methods with its stats add > on. There is a new Team Cloud feature for collaboration. > > On Fri, Sep 9, 2022 at 11:25 AM Kimberli Kelmor < > [log in to unmask]> wrote: > > > Greetings all, > > A while back we kind of talked around qualitative analysis tools. I'd > like > > to query the group about it directly, though. > > > > What do people use for qualitative data analysis and storage? I've used > > NVivo before and liked it, but it is pricey and maybe both under and > > overkill. What else is out there? > > > > A related question, is there an open data platform that is geared toward > > qualitative data instead of quantitative data? I'm looking to find > > something already available that has a strong data/document repository > > layer, a strong analysis layer, and a strong and flexible presentation or > > publishing layer. > > > > Many thanks for any information you can share! > > Best, > > Kim > > > > Kimberli M. Kelmor | [[log in to unmask]](https://yahoo.com) > > -- > Heather L Barnes >