RITS Special Issue, Spring 2006, 13(1):
New Directions in Mixed Methods Research
Guest Editor, R. Burke Johnson
Note: All files are in Adobe Acrobat format. Need acrobat reader? Click here.
Front cover / Table of Contents
Foreword, Michael Q. Patton
Foreword, James E. McLean
Editorial: Note From the Guest Editor, R. Burke Johnson
Philosophical Assumptions and Stances
How interpretive
qualitative research extends mixed methods research. 13(1), 1-11.
Creswell, J., Shope, R., Plano Clark, V. L., &
and Green, D. O.
Inquiry Logics
A general
typology of research designs featuring mixed methods. 13(1),
12-28.
Teddlie, C., & Tashakkori, A.
Defining
and designing mixed methods research synthesis studies. 13(1), 29-40.
Sandelowski, M., Voils, C. I., & Barroso, J.
Mixed methods research:
Are the methods genuinely integrated or merely parallel? 13(1),
41-47.
Yin, R. K.
The validity
issue in mixed research. 13(1), 48-63.
Onwuegbuzie, A. J., & Johnson, R. B.
Guidelines for Practice
The contribution
of computer software to integrating qualitative and quantitative data
analyses. 13(1), 64-74.
Bazeley, P.
A theory-driven evaluation
perspective on mixed methods research. 13(1), 75-83.
Chen, H. T.
Sociopolitical Commitments
Enhancing the policy
process through the use of ethnography and other study frameworks: A mixed-method
strategy. 13(1), 84-92.
Caracelli, V. J.
Synthesis and Future Research
Toward a methodology
of mixed methods social inquiry. 13(1), 93-98.
Greene, J. C.
Return to MSERA home page.