Preface
Publisher’s Acknowledgments
About the Authors
Section I: Mixed Methods: The Third Methodological Movement
Chapter 1: Mixed Methods as the Third Research Community
Objectives
Three Communities of Researchers in the Social and Behavioral
Sciences
An Example of How the Three Communities Approach a Research
Problem
The Three Methodological Communities: Continuing Debates or
Peaceful Coexistence?
Differences Among Paradigms, Methodologies, and Methods
Stages of Research: A Systems Approach
More Details Regarding the Methodological Communities
Inductive-Deductive Research Cycle (Cycle of Research
Methodology)
Summary
Review Questions and Exercises
Key Terms
Chapter 2: Three Approaches to Research
Objectives
Methodological Distinctions Among the Three Communities: Continua,
Not Dichotomy
Issues Related to Mixed Methods Terms and Definitions
The Utility of Mixed Methods Research
Summary
Review Questions and Exercises
Key Terms
Chapter 3: Philosophical Foundations of Mixed Methods Research
Objectives
A Review of Philosophical Issues Relevant to Paradigms
Contemporary Points of View Regarding the Use of Paradigms
Summary
Review Questions and Exercises
Key Terms
Section II: Methods and Strategies of Mixed Methods Research
Chapter 4: Inputs to the Research Process: Mixed Methods Purposes
and Questions
Objectives
Introduction: The Initiation Stage of Research
Reasons for Conducting Research in the Social and Behavioral
Sciences
The Emergence of Researchable Ideas in Content Areas of
Interest
Conducting Literature Reviews
Generating Objectives for Mixed Methods Research
Generating Research Questions for Mixed Methods Research
Summary
Review Questions and Exercises
Key Terms
Chapter 5: Mixed Methods Research Designs
Objectives
Issues Regarding Typologies of Mixed Methods Designs
Criteria Used in Mixed Methods Research Typologies
Quasi-Mixed Methods Designs
Basic Terminology for Mixed Methods Research Designs
The Sequence-Sources Design Matrix
Popular Designs in Monomethod, Multimethod, and MM Research
Other Typologies of Mixed Methods Research Designs
Six-Step Process for Selecting or Constructing an Appropriate Mixed
Methods Design
Summary
Review Questions and Exercises
Key Terms
Chapter 6: Sampling Methods and Strategies for Mixed Methods
Research
Objectives
Sampling Methods and Strategies in the Social and Behavioral
Sciences
Traditional Probability Sampling Methods
Traditional Purposive Sampling Methods
General Considerations Concerning Mixed Methods Sampling
Mixed Methods Sampling Approaches
Guidelines for Mixed Methods Sampling
Summary
Review Questions and Exercises
Key Terms
Chapter 7: Considerations Before Collecting Your Data
Objectives
Setting the Stage: Before You Start
Introduction to Data Collection in Mixed Methods Research
Data Quality in the Quantitative and Qualitative Strands of Mixed
Methods Research
Summary
Review Questions and Exercises
Key Terms
Chapter 8: Data Collection Methods for Mixed Methods Research
Objectives
Major Data Collection Methods and Mixed Methods Research
Between-Methods Mixed Methods Data Collection
Summary
Review Questions and Exercises
Key Terms
Chapter 9: Data Analysis in Mixed Methods Research
Objectives
Analysis Strategies for Qualitative Data
Four General Types of Qualitative Data Analysis
Analysis Strategies for Quantitative Data
Strategies for Analyzing Mixed Methods Data
Applying Aspects of Analytic Frameworks of One Tradition to Data
Analysis Within Another Tradition
Summary
Review Questions and Exercises
Key Terms
Chapter 10: The Inference Process in Mixed Methods Research
Objectives
Mixed Methods Research and Inferences
What Is a Research Inference?
The Process of Making Inferences
Evaluating and Maximizing the Quality of Research Inferences
A Complementary Elaboration to Our Integrative MM Framework
Transferability of Inferences in Mixed Methods Research
Summary
Review Questions and Exercises
Key Terms
Chapter 11: From Initiation to Utilization: Planning, Implementing,
Writing, and Disseminating Mixed Methods Research
Objectives
From Initiation to Research Utilization
Conducting and Publishing Mixed Methods Studies
Politics, Challenges, and Prospects Facing Mixed Methods
Teaching and Learning of (Integrated) Research Methodology
Challenges and Future Directions
Summary
Review Questions and Exercises
Key Terms
Appendix: Implementing Integration in an Explanatory Sequential
Mixed Methods Study of Belief Bias About Climate Change With High
School Students
Glossary
References
Author Index
Subject Index
Abbas Tashakkori (Ph.D., Social Psychology, University of North
Carolina -Chapel Hill) is the Chairperson of the Department of
Educational Psychology at the University of North Texas (Denton,
Texas, USA). Previously, has has been a Professor of Research and
Evaluation Methodology at Florida International University (Miami,
Florida, USA). He has been a post-doctoral fellow at the Carolina
Population Center and the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, as well as a visiting scholar at Texas A&M University. He
has extensive experience as a program evaluator, and he has taught
research methods for more than two decades in undergraduate and
graduate programs at the University of North Carolina, Shiraz
University, Stetson University, Louisiana State University, and
Florida International University. In addition to research
methodology, his published work covers a wide spectrum of research
and program evaluation in cross-cultural and multi-cultural
contexts, including self-perceptions, attitudes, and
gender/ethnicity.
Burke Johnson is a professor in the Professional Studies
Department at the University of South Alabama. His PhD is from
the REMS (research, evaluation, measurement, and statistics)
program in the College of Education at the University of Georgia.
He also has graduate degrees in psychology, sociology, and public
administration, which have provided him with
a multidisciplinary perspective on research methodology. He
was guest editor for a special issue of Research in the
Schools focusing on mixed research (available online at
www.msera.org/rits_131.htm) and completed a similar guest
editorship for the American Behavioral Scientist. He was an
associate editor of the Journal of Mixed Methods Research. Burke is
first author of Educational Research: Quantitative,
Qualitative, and Mixed Approaches (Sage, 2014, 5th
edition); second author of Research Methods, Design, and
Analysis (Pearson, 2014, 12th edition); coeditor (with
Sharlene Hesse-Biber) of The Oxford Handbook of Multimethod and
Mixed Methods Research Inquiry (2015); coeditor (with Paul
Vogt) of Correlation and Regression Analysis (2012);
and associate editor of The SAGE Glossary of the
Social and Behavioral Sciences (2009).
Charles Teddlie (Ph.D., Social Psychology, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill) is the Jo Ellen Levy Yates Distinguished
Professor of Education at Louisiana State University (LSU). He has
also taught at the University of New Orleans and has been a
Visiting Professor at the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne (U.K.).
He has also served as Assistant Superintendent for Research and
Development at the Louisiana Department of Education. His major
writing interests are social science research methodology and
school effectiveness research. Professor Teddlie has taught
research methods courses for over twenty years, including
statistics and qualitative research methods. He has been awarded
the Excellence in Teaching Award from the LSU College of Education.
Professor Teddlie has lectured on school effectiveness research and
educational research methodology in several countries including the
United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland, the Netherlands, Norway,
Denmark, Russia, the Ukraine, and Belarus.
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