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by John W. Creswell, Ph.D. Department of Educational Psychology,

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1 Mixed Methods Research: State of the Art (What Has Developed In Mixed Methods)
by John W. Creswell, Ph.D. Department of Educational Psychology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Co-editor, Journal of Mixed Methods Research, and Co-Director, Office of Qualitative and Mixed Methods Research © Please do not duplicate or use these slides without the express permission of the author.

2 The Story of Mixed Methods in the Last 20 Years
Highlight four developments Why I can tell the story First generation mixed methods – reflect on my role in story Balanced – background in quan and qual 5 books on research methods Applied research methodologist Focused on education, social and human sciences Journal editor What I am trying not to do “Fix” the history Discourage discourse Speak for all disciplines Limit the discussion to a US perspective Cover all developments

3 Four Developments (last 20 years)
Increasing interest in and advocacy for mixed methods Evolving understanding of what is mixed methods research Emerging philosophical perspectives as a foundation for mixed methods Developing designs and innovative techniques

4 Development #1: Increasing Interest in and Advocacy for Mixed Methods
Key Developments Research “movement” Federal funding interest Discipline interest International interest Books Journals Conferences Critics

5 Mixed Methods as a “Movement” “The emergence of mixed
methods as a third methodological movement in the social and behavioral sciences began during the 1980’s.” (p. 697) -Tashakkori & Teddlie (2003)

6 New NIH Awards Using Mixed Methods

7 Development of NIH guidelines (1999)
“Combining qualitative and quantitative methods has gained broad appeal in public health research.” (1999) - Mentioned several approaches for combining qualitative and quantitative research - Advanced considerations for deciding what model to use (literature available, prior studies, realistic design, expertise) - Suggested to describe each method thoroughly

8 Social Work Summer Institute on Mixed-Methods Research
NIH Summer Institute: The Design and Conduct of Qualitative and Mixed-Method Research in Social Work and Other Health Professions August 4 -8, 2004  Table of Contents Course Objectives Dates and Location Background Concept Institute Co-Chairs Faculty/Presenters Speaker Presentations Eligibility Requirements Number of Participants Costs Application Process and Receipt Date Additional Information Social Work Summer Institute on Mixed-Methods Research Course Objectives To provide a thorough grounding in the design and conduct of qualitative and mixed method research to social work researchers and other health professionals interested in developing competence in the planning, design, and execution of these techniques and become more successful in the NIH extramural research program.

9 National Science Foundation Workshop, 2003, Includes Mixed Methods Research
Provided general guidelines for developing qualitative research projects -Several papers addressed mixed methods research

10 Books on Mixed Methods Research 14+ books on mixed methods research have been written since 1988

11 Two New Books From Sage Publications

12 A New Journal Journals Devoted to Mixed Methods: Fieldwork Quality and
Quantity Mixed Method Approaches Editors: John W. Creswell and Abbas Tashakkori Managing Editor: Vicki L. Plano Clark

13 Conferences Mixed Methods Conference, Cambridge, England, July 21-24, 2008 Proposed mixed methods conference, Sydney, Australia, 2009 Discipline conferences with mixed methods papers

14 Critics (Creswell, 2007) Is there a post-positivist leaning to mixed methods? Howe, K. R. (2004). A critique of experimentalism. Qualitative Inquiry, 10, Giddings, L. S. (2006). Mixed-methods research: Positivism dressed in drag? Journal of Research in Nursing, 11(3), Holmes, C. A. (2007). Mixed(up) methods, methodology and interpretive frameworks. Contributed paper for the Mixed Methods Conference, Cambridge, University, July 10-12, 2006. What are the limits for mixed methods research? Sale, J. E. M., Lohfeld, L. H., Brazil, K. (2002). Revisiting the quantitative-qualitative debate: Implications for mixed-methods research. Quality and Quantity, 36, Leahey, E. (2007). Convergence and confidentiality? Limits to the implementation of mixed methodology. Social Science Research, 36, Is there a dominant discourse in mixed methods research? Freshwater, D. (2007). Reading mixed methods research: Contexts for criticism. Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 1(2),

15 Development #2: Evolving Understanding of What is Mixed Methods Research
Key Developments The emergence of diverse perspectives - Two strands to “mixing” to “methodology” to “mixed methods within designs” Incorporation of perspectives into current definitions Questions arise about what is “mixing?” Recent assessment of the value of mixed methods research (or mixing)

16 Framework for Viewing Perspectives on Mixed Methods
Quantitative Data Qualitative Data Mixed Methods Method Methodology Paradigm Perspective Research Design Procedures

17 Mixed methods is… a Method, a Design, a Methodology
Identifying a research problem Reviewing the literature Identifying a purpose and stating questions Views of knowledge Assumptions Collecting data Analyzing and interpreting data Reporting and evaluating the study

18 Mixed Methods within Designs
Ethnography Case Study Research Narrative research Experimental research Qual Quan Qual----- Quan Qual-----Quan Qual---- Quan

19 What is this Method Called?
Multi-method Triangulation Integrated Combined Quantitative and qualitative methods Multi-methodology Mixed methodology Mixed-method Mixed research Mixed methods

20 A Definition Mixed methods research is a methodology for conducting research that involves collecting, analyzing, and integrating (or mixing) quantitative and qualitative research (and data) in a single study or a longitudinal program of inquiry. The purpose of this form of research is that both qualitative and quantitative research, in combination, provide a better understanding of a research problem or issue than either research approach alone. Aspects of this definition: Collecting both quantitative and qualitative data Mixing the data (from merging in which both quan and qual loses identity to keeping them distinct but connected) Single vs multiple-phase project Raises issues: how, what, where, why, value (of mixing)

21 Mixing (How) Converge data: Results Connect data: Embed the data: Qual
Quan Connect data: Qual Quan Results Embed the data: Quan data Qual data

22 Mixing What Where Data (Methods) Qualitative and quantitative research
Philosophical assumptions Where Throughout the process of research Data collection Data analysis Interpretation

23 Mixing – Why? (Bryman, Qualitative Research, 2006)
Validity – to corroborate quan and qual data Offset – offset weaknesses of quan and qual and draw on strengths Completeness – more comprehensive account that qual or quan alone Process – quan provides outcomes; qual, the processes Different question – quan and qual answer different questions Explanation – qual can explain quan results or vice-versa Unexpected results – surprising results from one, other explains Instr development – qual employed to design instr, then instr tested Sampling – one approach facilitates sampling from other approach Credibility – both approaches enhance integrity of findings Context – qual provides context; quan provides general. Illustration – qual data helps develop “depth” for quan data Utility – more useful to practitioners Confirm – quan tests qual generated hypotheses Diversity of views – relationship and meaning; researcher/participant views Enhancement – augmenting or building on one form of data with the other

24 Value of “Mixing” “What does mixed methods research provide that either quantitative or qualitative research alone does not provide?” Indicators of “yield” (O’Cathain, Murphy, & Nicholl, JMMR, 2007) Integration as a measure of “yield” Publications as a measure of “yield” My speculations: Results are useful Stronger impact on policymakers Cost-effective Better solutions through interdisciplinary input More evidence for a study

25 Development #3: Emerging Philosophical Perspectives as a Foundation for Mixed Methods Research
Key developments: There are many stances taken by researchers. “Purist” stance - Paradigms are incompatible (fixed, unmoveable), paradigms relate to methods, therefore mixing is impossible. “Dialectic” stance - Multiple paradigms are possible and can be used, but honor and make explicit the paradigms. “Single paradigm” stance - There is a single paradigm for mixed methods research: pragmatism, transformative. “Design” stance - Multiple paradigms can be used – relate them to your design. “Community” stance – source of belief systems come out of shared meanings and understanding

26 Philosophical Assumptions Behind Mixed Methods Research
Worldview or philosophy (e.g., attitudes and beliefs about knowledge, such as constructivism, post-positivism) Theoretical lens (e.g., feminist, racial) Methodological approach (e.g., experimental, survey, ethnography, mixed methods) Methods of data collection (e.g. interviews, focus groups) Worldview or philosophy – these refer to beliefs or issues regarding epistemology These are theories such as ones from the social sciences, feminist theory , racial theory This is the research approach that is used to conduct the study such as experimental research, survey, ethnography, grounded theory Examples of methods of data collection include interviews, checklists, instruments, interviews, mixed methods Adapted from Crotty M. (1998).

27 Four Worldviews Postpositivism Determination Reductionism
Empirical observation and measurement Theory verification Constructivism Understanding Multiple participant meanings Social and historical construction Theory generation Advocacy/Participatory Political Empowerment issue-oriented Collaborative Change-oriented Pragmatism Consequences of actions Problem-centered Pluralistic Real-world practice oriented

28 Purist Stance Smith & Heshusius, (1986) “Incompatibility thesis”
“The contention of this paper is that the claim of compatibility, let alone one of synthesis, cannot be sustained.” (p. 4)

29 “Dialectic Stance” Greene (2007)
Paradigms – philosophical assumptions, knowledge, methodology, values Paradigms are different – but are social constructions – not sacrosanct Differences should be respected, intentionally used together Used together, tensions achieve dialectical discovery of enhanced, reframed, or new understandings.

30 “Single” Paradigm Stance
Pragmatism (Tashakkori & Teddlie, 2003) 13 writers endorse Based on Dewey, Rorty, Pierce, others (Americans) Focus on research question What “works,” consequences Multiple methods – large toolkit Transformative (Mertens, 2003) Transform lives of underrepresented, marginalized groups Incorporate this focus into all phases of research

31 “Design” Stance (Creswell & Plano Clark, 2007)
Multiple paradigms can be used Different paradigms can provide the foundation for different phases of research Often post-positivist paradigm provides the foundation for quantitative aspects of research Often constructivist/advocacy paradigm influences qualitative aspects of research Often pragmatism paradigm influences both qualitative and quantitative aspects of research This does not suggest that certain paradigms are linked to certain methods (paradigm-method fit)

32 “Community” Stance (Morgan, 2007)
Espouses the pragmatic approach Shifts conversation to the importance of shared meanings and joint actions between researchers. “To what extent are two people (or two research fields) satisfied that they understand each other, and to what extent can they demonstrate the success of shared meaning by working together on common projects.” (Morgan, 2007, p. 67)

33 Development #4: Developing Designs and Innovative Techniques
Key Developments Evaluation designs Notation Typologies, and a parsimonious set Diagrams of procedures Complex evaluation models Reconceptualizing designs The practice of research Emergence of innovations in procedures Unusual blends Methodological issues Data analysis techniques Presentation techniques

34 Early Designs (Greene, Caracelli, & Graham, 1989) Triangulation
(convergence, corroboration) Complementarity (clarify results from one method to the other) Development (one method informs the other method) Initiation (paradox, contradiction) Expansion (extends breadth of inquiry)

35 Preliminary Design Considerations (Morse, 1991)
Approach Type Purpose Limitations Resolutions QUAL + quan Simultaneous Enrich description of sample Qualitative sample Utilize normative data for comparison of results QUAL Sequential Test emerging H, determine distribution of phenomenon in population Draw adequate random sample from same population QUAN + qual To describe part of phenomena that cannot be quantified Quantitative sample Select appropriate theoretical sample from random sample QUAN To examine unexpected results quan qual

36 Concurrent Mixed Methods Designs
Parsimonious Designs (Creswell & Plano Clark, 2007) Concurrent Mixed Methods Designs Triangulation Design QUAN Data & Results Interpretation QUAL Data & Results Embedded Design QUAN Pre-test Data & Results QUAN Post-test Data & Results Intervention qual Process Interpretation

37 Before-intervention qual After-intervention qual
Sequential Designs Mixed Methods Designs Explanatory Design QUAN Data & Results Interpretation qual Data & Results Following up Exploratory Design QUAL Data & Results quan Data & Results Interpretation Building to Sequential Embedded Design Before-intervention qual QUAN Intervention Trial After-intervention qual Interpretation

38 Helpful Tips for Drawing this Visual of the Design:
Give a title to the visual model. Choose either horizontal or vertical layout for the model. Draw boxes for quantitative and qualitative stages of data collection, data analysis and interpretation of the study results. Use capitalized (QUAN) or small letters (quan) to designate priority of quantitative and qualitative data collection and analysis. Use single-headed arrows to show the flow of procedures in the design. Specify procedures for each quantitative and qualitative data collection and analysis stage. Specify expected products or outcomes of each quantitative and qualitative data collection and analysis procedure. Use concise language. Make your visual diagram simple. Size your visual diagram to one page. Source: Ivankova, N. et al. (2006)

39 Example of A Diagram

40 Complex Mixed Methods Evaluation Designs (Nastasi, Hitchcock,
Sarkar, Burkholder, Varjas & Jayasena, 2007) Study of mental health interventions for youth in Sri Lanka

41 Concurrent, Sequential, Recursive Qual/Quan Phases (Nastasi et al., 2007)

42 Reconceptualizing Designs
Three ways to look at mixed methods designs: Typological approach (Bryman, 1988; Creswell & Plano Clark, 2007) Systems theory (Maxwell & Loomis, 2003) Synergistic approach - Hall & Howard (in press), “A Synergistic Approach: Conducting Mixed Methods Research with Typological and Systemic Design Considerations” Combined effect greater than separate parts Position of equal value of qual and quan Ideology of difference – protect paradigm differences Researcher as collaborator and relationship with design – skilled in both quan and qual or part of interdisciplinary team

43 The Practice of Conducting A Mixed Methods Study
Cordon & Hirst (in press) “Implementing a mixed methods approach to explore the financial implications of death of a life partner” – Social Policy Researchers, UK Why they chose mixed methods Reasons for their choice of design Sampling decisions Concept map Discussions among team members

44 Technique - Designing a Quantitative Survey Based on Qualitative Findings
QUAL data analysis Quotes Codes Themes Quan data analysis instrument development Items on a survey Variables on a survey Scales on a survey

45 Technique- Matrix with Quantitative and Qualitative Data
Count Adj.Count** Row Pct Column Pct Patients N=2 Physicians N=4 Medical Assistants Themes Familiarity With the Form 13 6.5 41.9 5.8 17 4.25 27.4 3.0 19 4.75 30.7 5.3 49 15.5 100.0 Reactions to the Form 23 11.5 22.2 10.2 100 25.0 48.3 17.4 61 15.3 29.5 16.9 184 51.75 Use for Managing Depression 67 33.5 38.6 29.8 177 44.25 51.0 36 9.0 10.4 10.0 280 86.75 Changes to the Form 115 57.5 37.5 51.1 196 49.0 32.0 34.0 187 46.8 30.5 51.7 498 153.3 Situational Use of the Form 7 3.5 8.9 3.1 86 21.5 54.4 14.9 58 14.5 36.7 16.1 151 39.5 225 112.5 576 144.0 361 90.3

46 Technique –Raising and Addressing Methodological Issues in Designs
Creswell, Plano Clark, Garrett (in press) Contradictory findings Data merging Sample selection Sample size Introducing bias Time

47 Technique – Unusual Blends of Data Collection
Qualitative Post-modern philosophy and Longitudinal data and Qualitative data and Qualitative themes matched Qualitative discourse data Quantitative Quantitative data Longitudinal data Secondary survey data With items on survey to produce new quan variables Survey data

48 Other Developments: International emphases Discipline differences
Research team practices The emergence of bilingual nomenclature (will employ this thinking in the workshop this afternoon as we “title” projects)

49 Four Developments (last 20 years)
Increasing interest in and advocacy for mixed methods Evolving understanding of what is mixed methods research Emerging philosophical perspectives as a foundation for mixed methods Developing designs and innovative techniques

50 References Bryman, A. (1988). Quantity and quality in social research. London: Routledge. Bryman, A. (2006). Integrating quantitative and qualitative research: How is it done? Qualitative Research 6(1), Cordon, A., & Hirst, M. (in press). Implementing a mixed methods approach to explore the financial implications of death of a life partner. Journal of Mixed Methods Research. Creswell, J. W., & Plano Clark, V. L. (2007). Designing and conducting mixed methods research. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Creswell, J. W., Plano Clark, V. L., & Garrett, A. L. (in press). Methodological issues in conducting mixed methods research designs. In M. Bergman (Ed.), Advances in mixed methods research. London: Sage. Crotty M. (1988) The foundations of social research: Meaning and perspective in the research process. London: Sage. Freshwater, D. (2007). Reading mixed methods research: Contexts for criticism. Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 1(2), Giddings, L. S. (2006). Mixed-methods research: Positivism dressed in drag? Journal of Research in Nursing, 11(3), Greene, J. C. (2007). Mixed methods in social inquiry. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Greene, J. C., Caracelli, V. J., & Graham, W. F. (1989). Toward a conceptual framework for mixed-method evaluation designs. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 11(3), 255–274. Hall, B., & Howard, K. (in press). A synergistic approach: Conducting mixed methods research with typological and systemic design considerations. Journal of Mixed Methods Research. Holmes, C. A. (2007). Mixed(up) methods, methodology and interpretive frameworks. Contributed paper for the Mixed Methods Conference, Cambridge, University, July 10-12, 2006. Howe, K. R. (2004). A critique of experimentalism. Qualitative Inquiry, 10, Ivankova, N. V., Creswell, J. W., & Stick, S. (2006). Using mixed methods sequential explanatory design: From theory to practice. Field Methods, 18(1), 3–20. Leahey, E. (2007). Convergence and confidentiality? Limits to the implementation of mixed methodology. Social Science Research, 36, Maxwell, J., & Loomis, D. (2003). Mixed methods design: An alternative approach. In A. Tashakkori & C. Teddlie (Eds.), Handbook of mixed methods in social & behavioral research (pp ). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

51 References (Cont’d) Mertens, D. M. (2003). Mixed methods and the politics of human research: The transformative-emancipatory perspective. In A. Tashakkori & C. Teddlie (Eds.), Handbook of mixed methods in social and behavioral research (pp. 135–164). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Morgan, D. L. (2007). Paradigms lost and pragmatism regained: Methodological implications of combining qualitative and quantitative methods. Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 1(1), Morse, J. M. (1991). Approaches to qualitative-quantitative methodological triangulation. Nursing Research, 40, 120–123. Nastasi, B. K., Hitchcock, J., Sarkar, S., Burkholder, G., Varjas, K., & Jayasena, A. (2007). Mixed methods in intervention research: Theory to adaptation. Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 1(2), National Institutes of Health (2004). NIH Summer Institute: The design and conduct of qualitative and mixed-method research in social work and other health professions, August 4-8, 2004. National Institutes of Health. Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research (1999). Qualitative methods in health research: Opportunities and considerations in application and review. Washington D.C.: NIH. National Science Foundation (2003). Workshop on scientific foundations of qualitative research. Washington D.C.: NSF. O’Cathain, A., Murphy, E., & Nicholl, J. (2007). Integration and publications as indicators of “yield” from mixed methods studies. Journal of Mixed Methods Research 1(2), Plano Clark, V. L., & Creswell, J. W. (2008). The mixed methods reader. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Sale, J. E. M., Lohfeld, L. H., Brazil, K. (2002). Revisiting the quantitative-qualitative debate: Implications for mixed-methods research. Quality and Quantity, 36, Smith, J. K., & Heshusius, L. (1986). Closing down the conversation: The end of the quantitative-qualitative debate among educational inquirers. Educational Researcher, 15(1), 4-12. Tashakkori, A., & Teddlie, C. (Eds.). (2003a). Handbook of mixed methods in social and behavioral research. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

52 Mixed Methods Research: State of the Art (What Has Developed In Mixed Methods)
by John W. Creswell, Ph.D. Department of Educational Psychology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Co-editor, Journal of Mixed Methods Research, and Co-Director, Office of Qualitative and Mixed Methods Research © Please do not duplicate or use these slides without the express permission of the author.


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