Mixed Methods
Mixed Methods
collecting, analyzing, and mixing both quantitative and qualitative research and methods in a single study to understand a research problem.
To utilize this design effectively, you must understand
Quantitative Research
A type of educational research in which the research
decides what to study; asks specific, narrow questions, collects quantifiable data from participants (a large number of participants); analyzes these numbers using statistics; and conducts the inquiry in an unbiased, objective manner. Postpositivism singular reality; objective; deductive
level of interaction, measured by the number of hits in the course, and students grades in an online research methods course?
Quantitative Methodology
Generally involves collecting numerical data that can
Qualitative Research
A type of educational research in which the researcher
relies on the views of participants; asks broad, general questions; collects data consisting largely of words (or text) from participants; describes and analyzes these words for themes; and conducts the inquiry in a subjective, biased manner.
Constructivism multiple realities; biased; inductive
Qualitative Methodology
Generally involves listening to the participants voice
and subjecting the data to analytic induction (e.g., finding common themes) More Exploratory in nature Examples of data collection methods
Interviews Open-ended questionnaires Observations Content analysis Focus Groups
Step 4
Step 5
Analyze data separately or concurrently
Step 6
provide a better understanding of your research problem than either type by itself. When one type of research (qualitative or quantitative) is not enough to address the research problem or answer the research questions. Pragmatism practicality; multiple view points; biased and unbiased; subjective and objective
Creswell , J. (2008). Educational research: Planning, conducting, and evaluating quantitative and qualitative research (3rd ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education.
Creswell , J. (2012). Educational research: Planning, conducting, and evaluating quantitative and qualitative research (4thed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education.
and Interviews
Mixed Methods Legend Notation QUAN QUAL quan Defined Quantitatively driven study. Qualitatively driven study. Quantitative data is secondary to qualitative data.
qual
Indicates that quantitative and qualitative data are collected concurrently. Indicates that quantitative and qualitative data are collected sequentially.
qualitative strands The priority of the strands The timing of the strands Where and how to mix the strands
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Compare or relate
Qualitative Data Collection and Analysis
Interpretation
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databases Corroborate results from different methods Compare multiple levels within a system
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Convergent Design
Philosophical assumptions: Best suited to an "umbrella" paradigm such as pragmatism
Common variants: Parallel-databases variant Data-transformation variant Data-validation variant
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25
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Follow up with
Interpretation
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results that need further exploration To use quantitative results to purposefully select best participants for qualitative study
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Explanatory Design
Philosophical assumptions: Begin from postpositivism for the quantitative phase Shift to constructivism for the qualitative phase
Common variants: Follow-up explanations variant Participant-selection variant
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Appealing to quantitative researchers Straightforward to implement two phases Final report can be written in two phases Lends itself to emergent approaches
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be specified before first phase complete Need to decide what results to follow up Must decide criteria for selecting participants Need to contact participants for a second round of data collection
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Follow up with
Interpretation
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not known To develop an instrument or typology that is not available To assess whether qualitative themes generalize to a population
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Exploratory Design
Philosophical assumptions: Begin from constructivism for the qualitative phase Shift to postpositivism for the quantitative phase
Common variants: Theory-development variant Instrument-development variant
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approach more acceptable to quantitative-biased audiences Researcher produces a product, such as an instrument Lends itself to emergent approaches
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applying for initial IRB approval; may have to apply twice Deciding the qualitative findings to use for quantitative phase Procedures for developing a valid and reliable instrument
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Interpretation
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Embedded Approach
collect qual
Experimental Between-subjects -pre- and posttest design Within-subjects -cross-over design -factorial design
Predictive design
collect qual
Correlational Design
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Embedded Design
Philosophical assumptions: Worldview may reflect the primary approach, use pragmatism for a concurrent approach, or shift in a sequential approach Common variants: Embedded experiment Embedded correlational Embedded instrument development and validation Mixed methods case study Mixed methods narrative research Mixed methods ethnography
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Need expertise in primary design and mixed methods Must specify purpose for collecting the supplemental data Must decide when to collect supplemental data Results are difficult to integrate Must consider treatment bias if qualitative data collected during experiment
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Light, G. et al. (2009). Assessing the impact of a year-long faculty development program on faculty approaches to teaching. International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 20(2), 168-181.
teachers approaches to teaching? Qualitative (Central) How did the teachers teaching strategies change in response to the FDP?
Sub - What steps did the teachers take to implement the change?
explanatory approach with an quasi-experimental design. The quantitative method was quasiexperimental between-subjects approach utilizing a pre- and posttest control group design. Qualitative data was collected at two time points post collect qual intervention.
Assignment
N = 81
n = 52 n = 29
Pretest
ATI ATI
Treatment
Posttest
ATI ATI
qual
Critical Reports Critical Reports
qual (n = 25)
NR NR
FDP -
Interviews
Chapter 1: Introduction
Statement of the Problem
The topic. The research problem. Background and justification (philosophical view points). Deficiencies in the evidence. Audience.
Definition of Terms
subheadings. Following the lit review the purpose statement then research questions should be presented. Purpose Statement -(a) the overall content aim, (b) the type of
mixed method design, (c) the forms of data collection that will be used (very general), (d) the data collection site(s), and (e) the reason for collecting both forms of data (see Creswell, 2007).
Research Questions
Quantitative
Qualitative
Mixed Methods
Chapter 3: Methodology
Participants Quantitative. Qualitative. Instruments Procedures Design
Data analysis.
Limitations