Description
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- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- About the Authors
- Chapter 1 Research Design
- Purposes and goals of the chapter
- Introduction: What Is Research Design?
- Designing Research Is an Iterative Process
- Research Design as a Messy, Complex, and Demanding Thought-Driven Process
- Research Design: Working With the Literature
- Using Relevant Literature When Designing Research
- Working With the Literature Is Not the Same as Simply Reviewing It
- How Do You Make Decisions About Which Literature to Trust or Rely On?
- Journal Articles
- Books and Book Chapters
- Other Types of Literature That Might Be Useful if Used With Care
- Research Design: Considering Methodology and Methods
- Methods
- Research Design: Considering Theory
- The Importance of Reflexive Thinking When Designing Research
- What Does Reflexivity Mean?
- Putting Reflexive Thinking Into Practice When Designing Research
- Ethics: Much More Reflexive Thinking Still to Do
- Conclusions
- Summary of Key Points
- Key Research-Related Terms Introduced in This Chapter
- Supplemental Activities
- Further Readings
- Notes
- Chapter 2 Ethical Issues in Research Design
- Purposes and Goals of the Chapter
- What Is Research Ethics?
- Putting Informed Consent Into Practice
- Informed Consent—Who, What, and When
- Informed Consent in Relation to “Vulnerable” Populations
- Putting Confidentiality and Anonymity Into Practice
- The Use of a Pseudonym Does Not Necessarily Ensure Anonymity
- What You Need to Think About When Reusing, Repurposing, and Sharing Data
- How to Address These Types of Questions?
- What You Need to Think About When Using Information on the Internet as Data
- Blurring the Boundary Between Public and Private
- Working With Ethics Committees
- Focusing on the Principles, Not the Requirements
- Conclusions
- Summary of Key Points
- Key Research-Related Terms Introduced in This Chapter
- Supplemental Activities
- Further Readings
- Notes
- Chapter 3 Developing Your Research Questions
- Purposes and Goals of the Chapter
- Bringing Research Questions Into Focus
- Feasibility Considerations
- Putting the Idea of “Think Big, Plan Big, but Do a Small, Well-Contained Study”3 Into Practice.
- Using the Literature When Developing Research Questions
- What Is Missing in the Existing Body of Knowledge in the Literature Related to Your Problem?
- Caution: Mind the Gap
- Beyond the Gap
- Different Forms of Reasoning and How They Shape the Form That Research Questions Take
- Deductive Reasoning
- Inductive Reasoning
- Putting Iterative and Reflexive Research Question Development Into Practice—Learning From Others
- Scratching the Underbelly of Research Design: Developing Clear Research Question(s). Reflections by Maxi Miciak and Christine Daum.7
- A Bit About Us, Our Projects, and What Makes Us “Qualified” to Write This.
- In the Beginning There Was …
- Generating the Question(s)
- Embracing Rather Than Running From Critique
- Landing on a Question(s)
- Key Messages
- Conclusions
- Summary of Key Points
- Key Research-Related Terms Introduced in This Chapter
- Supplemental Activities
- Further Readings
- Notes
- Chapter 4 Why Methodology Matters When Designing Research
- Purposes and Goals of the Chapter
- Thinking Methodologically
- Data: A Concept Shaped by Methodological Assumptions
- The Importance of Bringing Methodological Considerations Related to Data Into Focus
- Paradigms: Sets of Basic Beliefs That Guide Methodological Thinking
- Onto-Epistemological Derived Assumptions Underpin Methodological Thinking
- Inquiry Paradigms and How They Connect to Methodological Thinking
- Positivism
- Critiques of Positivism
- Post-Positivism
- Constructivism
- Inquiry Paradigms Affect Thinking About Whether Research Is Credible
- Why Is Thinking About Your Paradigmatic Stance Important?
- The Importance of Asking Methodological Questions of Your Research Design
- Avoiding the Misuse of Methods
- Conclusions
- Summary of Key Points
- Key Research-Related Terms Introduced in This Chapter
- Supplemental Activities
- Further Readings
- Notes
- Chapter 5 Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches to Designing Research
- Purposes and Goals of Chapter
- Qualitative and Quantitative Research Strategies
- Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches Reflect Different Research Purposes
- A Word of Caution
- Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches Reflect Different Logic of Inquiry
- Quantitative Approaches Employ Deductive Reasoning
- Qualitative Approaches Predominantly Draw on Inductive Reasoning
- Another Word of Caution
- Rounding Off Our Introductory Discussion of Qualitative and Quantitative Research Strategies
- Common Features Associated With Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches
- Common Features Associated With Quantitative Ways of Thinking When Designing Research
- Common Features Associated With Qualitative Ways of Thinking When Designing Research
- Variation Within Quantitative and Qualitative Research Approaches
- Quantitative Inquiry as a Diverse Approach
- Quantitative Approaches Vary in the Methods That They Use
- Capturing the Variety in Quantitative Approaches
- Qualitative Research Approaches as Diverse Strategies of Inquiry
- More Specialized Forms of Qualitative Research
- Ethnography as an Example of a Specialist Qualitative Approach
- Discourse Analysis—Another Form of Specialized Qualitative Inquiry
- How Many Specialist Types of Qualitative Inquiry Are There and What Are They?
- Capturing the Variety of Qualitative Approaches
- Summing Up: Design Considerations in Light of the Variety Within Qualitative Research
- Which Are Better: Qualitative or Quantitative Research Approaches?
- Conclusions
- Summary of Key Points
- Key Research-Related Terms Introduced in This Chapter
- Supplemental Activities
- Further Readings
- Notes
- Chapter 6 Obtaining Data Using Qualitative Approaches
- Purpose and Goals of the Chapter
- Qualitative Methods Are Not Stand-Alone Data Collection Techniques
- Different Qualitative Methods Use Different Strategies of Inquiry
- Key Questions to Ask Yourself When Choosing Types of Qualitative Methods or Strategies of Inquiry
- Navigating the Diversity Between and Within Qualitative Strategies of Inquiry When Designing Your Research
- How Structured Will Your Qualitative Interviews Be and Why?
- Choices About Structure Are Choices About the Degree of Control You Have Over the Interview
- Using the Same Reflexive Thinking When Collecting Data Using Other Qualitative Methods
- Will You Interview Your Participants Individually or in Some Form of Group and Why?
- Focus Groups—A Specific Type of Interview
- Which to Choose?
- What Will You Ask Your Participants in the Interview and Why?
- Developing Lines of Inquiry
- How Many Lines of Inquiry and Associated Questions Are Ideal for an Interview Guide?
- Designing Good Interview Questions
- Ask One Question at a Time
- Avoid Asking Dichotomous and Therefore Redundant or Limiting Questions
- Don’t Ask Leading Questions or Make Leading Comments, When Interviewing
- Try Out Your Draft Lines of Inquiry and Questions Before You Do Your Interviews
- Applying the Same Type of Thinking to Other Types of Qualitative Methods
- Who Will You Interview and Why?
- Choosing Between Different Types of Purposeful Sampling Plans in Your Study Design
- Putting Purposeful Sampling Into Practice When Designing Your Research
- Conclusions
- Summary of Key Points
- Key Research-Related Terms Introduced in This Chapter
- Supplemental Activities
- Further Readings
- Notes
- Chapter 7 Analyzing and Interpreting Qualitative Data
- Purposes and Goals of the Chapter
- Analysis of Qualitative Data: An Iterative and Dynamic Strategy
- When Does Analysis “Begin” When Designing and Conducting Qualitative Research?
- Using Memos to Capture Your Analytic Thinking and Hunches
- Why You Should Not Wait to Begin Analyzing Your Qualitative Data Until All Your Data Is Collected
- Developing an Iterative Qualitatively Driven Analytic Strategy
- Strategies for Organizing the Data You Collect and Keeping Track of Your Analytical Thinking About That Data
- Strategies for Deciding What Parts of the Data You Have Collected Are Relevant for Addressing Your Research Problem
- The Process of Data Condensation
- Coding—A Strategy to Condense Your Data
- More Choices and Decisions to Make When Putting Coding Into Practice
- Methodological Choices About Whether to Employ an Inductive or Deductive Approach to Your Coding
- Choosing a Coding Strategy Congruent With the Theoretical Pillars of Your Design
- Coding in Grounded Theory
- Rounding Off Our Discussion of Coding
- The Art of Interpretation
- Ways of Establishing the Credibility of the Interpretations You Make and Therefore the Rigor and Trustworthiness of Your Research
- Collecting and Analyzing Data—When Do You Know That You Are “Done”?
- Connecting Analytical Considerations to Decisions About Sample Size
- Principles to Guide Sample Size Considerations in Your Qualitative Research Design
- Conclusions
- Summary of Key Points
- Key Research-Related Terms Introduced in This Chapter
- Supplemental Activities
- Further Readings
- Notes
- Chapter 8 Foundational Design Issues When Using Quantitative Methods
- Purposes and Goals of the Chapter
- What You Need to Think About in Order to Design Credible Quantitative Research
- Key Questions to Ask Yourself When Designing Quantitative Research
- Why You Need to Ask Yourself All These Key Questions Simultaneously
- Where to Begin? Deciding Who You Will Collect Numerical Data From and Why
- What You Will Need to Think About When Using a Sample in Your Research Design
- How Do I Design a Sampling Strategy That Enables a Representative Sample?
- Are There Other Sampling Strategies I Can Consider if Probability Sampling Is Not Feasible?
- Rounding Off: Important Things to Keep in Mind if You Decide to Use a Sample in Your Research Design
- Choosing an Analysis Procedure Suitable for Answering Your Research Question
- Research Questions About What Is Going On in a Study Population
- Descriptive Procedures
- Correlational Procedures
- Research Questions About Why Something Happens in a Study Population
- When the Research Question Takes the Form of a Hypothesis
- Aspects That Affect Whether or Not the Conclusions From Testing a Hypothesis Are Statistically Reasonable
- Still More Thinking to Do
- What Types of Data Are There?
- Nominal Data
- Ordinal Data
- Interval/Ratio Data
- How Different Types of Data Enable Different Types of Knowledge
- Why Making Sure You Collect Data of the “Right” Type Is Not Enough to Ensure That Your Research Design Is Statistically Reasonable
- Conclusions
- Summary of Key Points
- Key Research-Related Terms Introduced in This Chapter
- Supplemental Activities
- Further Readings
- Notes
- Chapter 9 Collecting Data Using Quantitative Methods
- Purposes and Goals of the Chapter
- Measuring Variables to Enable Valid Research Findings
- Are You Measuring What You Think You Are?
- Making Sure the Measurements You Make Measure What They Claim to
- Example 1
- Example 2
- What Can We Conclude From These Examples?
- Taking a Closer Look at What Enables Variables to Be Measured
- How to Make Abstract Variables Measurable
- Step 1: Clarify Your Understandings (i.e., Develop the Constructs) of the Variables
- Step 2: Identify Quantifiable Factors That Will Enable Measuring the Constructs
- Developing Measurement Items to Actually Measure the Variables
- Developing a Measurement Instrument
- Developing Measurement Items That Measure What You Intend Them to Measure
- Do Your Measurement Items Demand Too Much From the Respondents?
- Will the Measurement Items Enable Consistent Measurements of the Quantifiable Aspects They Are Intended to Measure?
- Is the Form a Measurement Item Takes in Keeping With What That Item Is Supposed to Measure?
- Takeaways From This Section
- Putting a Measurement Instrument Into Practice
- Response Rates and How They Relate to Sampling and Validity
- Ways of Collecting Data When Doing Survey Research, and Why They Matter
- Scenario 1
- Scenario 2
- Scenario 3
- Take-Home Messages From These Scenarios
- Conclusions
- Summary of Key Points
- Key Research-Related Terms Introduced in This Chapter
- Supplemental Activities
- Further Readings
- Notes
- Chapter 10 Designing Research Using Mixed Methods
- Purposes and Goals of the Chapter
- What Is a Mixed Methods Research Approach?
- Mixed Methods Research as Combining Qualitative and Quantitative Research Approaches
- Snapshot 1: Mixed Methods as a Method That Combines Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches
- Snapshot 2: Mixed Methods as a Way of Thinking That Combines Aspects of Qualitative and Quantitative Thought
- A Different Definition and View of What Mixed Methods Research Is
- Snapshot 3: Mixed Methods As a Single Study, but Where One of the Methods Is Incomplete and Cannot Stand Alone
- What Can We Learn From These Snapshots About What Mixed Methods Is?
- Why Use a Mixed Methods Research Design?
- The Importance of Thinking About Why You Might Use a Mixed Methods Approach
- Priority and Timing of the Components in a Mixed Methods Study
- Thinking About Matters Related to Priority or Weighting of Components
- Thinking Through, and Deciding About, Matters Related to the Timing of the Components
- An Example of How to Connect Purpose, Priority, and Timing and Why This Matters
- Option One: A QUAL → Quan Design
- Option Two: A QUAN → Qual Design
- What Can We Learn From This Example?
- Mixing—A Central Consideration in Mixed Methods Research
- “Mixing” as a Concept Not Just a Procedure
- Incorporating Different Levels of Focus Into Your Thinking About Mixing
- What About Paradigmatic-Related Considerations When Mixing Methods?
- Summing Up Our Discussion of Mixing
- Strategies for Navigating the Complex and Contested Field of Mixed Methods Research
- Strategy One: Use Diagramming (Not Just Diagrams) as a Way of Keeping Track of the Decisions You Make About Your Emerging Mixed Methods Design.
- Strategy Two: Keep Folding Back Reflexively on Your Own Thinking, and the Decisions You Are Making or Have Made, When Designing and Reporting Your Mixed Methods Research.
- Strategy Three: Don’t Go It Alone. Get Help and Find Support Along the Way.
- Conclusions
- Summary of Key Points
- Key Research-Related Terms Introduced in This Chapter
- Supplemental Activities
- Further Readings
- Notes
- Chapter 11 Why Knowing and Declaring Your Research Design Hand Matters
- Purpose and Goals of the Chapter
- Knowing and Declaring What Your Research Design Related Hand Is
- Pulling Up a Chair at the Research Design Table
- Putting All of Your Cards on the Table and Declaring Your Hand: An Important Part of Research Design
- Declaring Your Hand: Missing in Action in Much of the Reporting of Research
- What Happened Along the Way?
- How to Declare Your Research Hand: Circling Back to Tell the Story of the Designing of Your Research
- How to Reflexively Circle Back to Tell the Story of Your Project When Reporting on Your Research
- Capturing All This in a Diagram of Some Sort
- Developing, and Then Diagramming, an Overview of the Process of Research Design
- The Importance of If … Then Thinking
- Conclusions
- Summary of Key Points
- Key Research-Related Terms Introduced in This Chapter
- Supplemental Activities
- Further Readings
- Notes
- Glossary
- References
- Index
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