Neurological Disorders/Case Studies

 Prior to posting to this discussion, read Chapter 15 in the course text.  For this discussion you will pick one of the cases available in the Week Five Discussion – Case Studies document (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. and take on the role of the clinician. Review the patient’s symptoms and the available demographic and historical data.  Discuss your differential diagnosis and provide a thorough basis for any diagnoses you have included. Also discuss what (if any) additional testing you would order and how this would be helpful in clarifying the diagnosis. Finally, discuss recommendations for the patient/family for ongoing functioning (social, occupational and academic, if applicable). You must use a minimum of two peer-reviewed articles in your discussion to support your diagnostic conclusions.

  • Week Five Discussion – Case Studies

     

     

    1. This case is an 80-year-old male who is on an inpatient rehabilitation unit and you are being asked to see the patient to evaluate him for dementia versus delirium. The patient is a retired professor who was living alone and independently prior to his injury. He fell on the ice while retrieving his mail and sustained a right hip fracture. He underwent surgery for repair of his hip fracture two days prior to your consult. The patient has been exhibiting the following symptoms: occasional visual hallucinations, confusion about where he is, inconsistent recall as to the reason he is in the hospital, and behavioral outbursts (e.g., yelling and swearing at the staff).

     

     

    2. This case is a 65-year-old married female with 16 years of education. She works full-time as an elementary school teacher. Her symptoms began suddenly one evening; her husband noted she referred to the dog food as “Jell-O” and called the television remote a “fork.” She appears to understand conversational language and can read and write normally, but is unaware of her paraphasic errors in speech.

     

     

    3. This case is a 48-year-old male who is referred for an evaluation of behavioral and mood changes. Over the past year, his wife has noticed that he has become increasingly withdrawn and isolated. He no longer enjoys any type of social interaction and prefers to spend his time alone playing card games on his computer. He is college educated with no previous significant medical, neurological or psychiatric history. He works as an engineer and has been at the same company successfully for the past 20 years. In the past year, his supervisors have noticed that his work quality has declined and he seems less motivated and “excited” about his job. Tasks he had always completed early are now being done late or not at all, and he appears unconcerned that his job is now in jeopardy.

     

     

    4. This case is a 16-year-old female with no previous history of any psychiatric conditions, learning difficulties, or a diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. She is a high school sophomore and her parents have noticed that her mood seems to be “up and down.” She often falls asleep if not involved in a stimulating activity. Teachers at school note good performance on tests, but homework is frequently turned in late and she appears distractible and fidgety during class. She works part-time as a waitress on the weekends but is in danger of losing her job due to frequent tardiness over the past 6 months.

     

     

    5. This case is a 19-year-old male with 12 years of education who has worked in the field of construction successfully for the past 2 years. His girlfriend stated that he is often inattentive; she finds that he “spaces out” when they are talking and she frequently has to repeat information to him. He was involved in a car accident 6 months prior and sustained a very brief loss of consciousness, but his Glasgow Coma Scale at admission to the ED was 15/15. There was no evidence of pre- or post-traumatic amnesia.

    PSY625: Biological Bases of Behavior Ashford University

Psychology Short Article

Psychology Article Review Paper & Presentation 400 Points Total (200 points per article review and presentation)

Article 1 Due: Monday, February 11th 8:30am via Canvas Article 2 Due: Monday, March 18th 8:30am via Canvas

General Information: Over the course of the quarter you will need to find and read two different articles related to a topic on psychology. Based on your review, you will need to write a summary and review paper and then present your findings to the class. For your review paper and presentation, you will need to find an article that is related to a topic on psychology you find interesting. Articles must be academic in nature (peer- reviewed). To find your article:

1. Go to the BC Library and Media Center website. 2. Click on ‘Databases’ under ‘Quick Links’ 3. Click on the database you wish to search. I recommend using EBSCOhost and/or

ProQuest. a. EBSCOhost – click the ‘Select/deselect all’ box then click ‘continue’ (this will

allow you to search all of the sub-databases). i. In the search box, enter the topic you are interested in (i.e. role of

emotions in marketing). Be sure to check the boxes for ‘Full Text’ and ‘Peer Reviewed’ then click ‘search.’

b. ProQuest – In the search box, enter the topic you are interested in (i.e. role of emotions in marketing). Be sure to check the boxes for ‘Full Text,’ ‘Peer Reviewed,’ and ‘Scholarly Journals’ then click ‘search.’

4. Find an article that is of interest to you and then read it. Article Review: 100 Points Total The write-up should be:

 1 FULL page, double-spaced, & 12 point font,

 Include your name, date, and class name in the top right corner.

 The 1st½ of the paper is a summary of the article (what did you read?).

 The 2nd½ should be written from your own ‘voice’ connecting the article to your own experience (i.e. why did you choose the article and what did you learn from the article?).

 Include a link to the article you used in your review paper at the top or bottom of the paper.

To Turn In: Upload to Canvas by due date and time.

 

 

Presentation: 100 Points Total Your presentation needs to be between 2-3 minutes in length and cover the guiding questions below. You do not need to create a PowerPoint or any other formal presentation.

Guiding Questions for Presentation (Projected on the screen during your presentation)  What is the article about?  Why did you choose this article?  What did you learn from the article?

*If you have difficulty writing, you may orally record the review of your article and upload it to CANVAS. **If you have difficulty public speaking, you may give your presentation to the instructor individually on an agreed upon time.

In which case was it ruled that employment tests must measure the person for the specific job for which he or she is applying?

IMPORTANT: AFTER PURCHASE, LOG IN TO YOUR ACCOUNT AND SCROLL DOWN BELOW THIS PAGE TO DOWNLOAD FILES WITH ANSWERS.

1. As listed in your textbook, all of the following are parties to the assessment enterprise EXCEPT:

2. A case study may include

3. Which of the following is the best way to establish rapport with a testtaker?

4. According to the American Psychological Association (APA), about how many tests are developed each year?

5. The ABAP Diplomate

6. As used with reference to psychological tests, format refers to

7. The United States Office of Strategic Services (OSS) used an approach to personnel evaluation that today would be characterized as

8. By federal law, which of the following types of tests may NOT be used in schools?

9. As a tool of assessment, the interview has been characterized as “a reciprocal affair.” What this means is that

10. Testtakers differ in their approach to an assessment situation to the extent that they

11. In the Chapter 1 Meet an Assessment Professional, Dr. Stephen Finn described how a typical therapeutic assessment ends. According to Dr. Finn, therapeutic assessment ends

12. Observation of behavior in the setting in which the behavior typically occurs is referred to as

13. “Never shoot ’em in the back,” “Do not fudge data,” and “A captain goes down with his ship” are all BEST characterized as a body of

14. Which court case reaffirmed the rights of universities to use race in admissions decisions to further the educational benefits that flow from a diverse student body?

15. In which case was it ruled that employment tests must measure the person for the specific job for which he or she is applying?

16. In the 1930s, clinical psychology was synonymous with:

17. As used in the text, the term imperial examinations refers to assessment for

18. The Daubert case had implications for the role of

19. When a test must be administered with an aid of a translator,

20. In Chapter 2’s Meet an Assessment Professional, Dr. Nathaniel Mohatt made reference to the People’s Awakening Project, a community-based study dealing with problems stemming primarily from

21. In which type of culture is value placed on traits such as conformity, cooperation, and interdependence?

22. Regarding psychologists’ duty to warn in cases involving testtakers who are HIV- positive,

23. “Psychologists must use only those techniques for which they are qualified by education, training, and experience.” This quote was MOST likely taken from the pages of

24. Persons diagnosed with different psychiatric disorders may have differing capacities to provide truly informed consent. A person suffering from which of the following disorders would have the BEST probability of providing truly informed consent?

25. Which behavioral scientist viewed individual differences as a source of error in experimentation?

KDiscussion: Designing Mixed Methods Research

Mixed methods research designs refer to a set of designs that purposively mix or integrate both qualitative data and quantitative data. As with quantitative research and qualitative research, the choice to use mixed methods research is influenced by the researcher’s philosophical orientation.

This week’s readings provide an overview of various types of mixed methods research designs. As with previous discussions on design, the selection of the most appropriate mixed design is guided by the study’s purpose and research questions and/or hypotheses. The choice of design links the research questions and/or hypotheses to the data that will be collected achieving alignment among research components.

In this Discussion, you will explore the basics of mixed methods research designs, calling upon your growing understanding of both quantitative and qualitative research.

With these thoughts in mind:

By Day 4

Post your response to the question, “To what extent is mixed methods research simply taking a quantitative design and a qualitative design and putting them together?” Next, explain the types of research questions best served by mixed methods research. Then, explain one strength and one limitation of mixed methods research. Finally, provide a rationale for or against the utility of mixed methods research in your discipline.

Be sure to support your Main Issue Post and Response Post with reference to the week’s Learning Resources and other scholarly evidence in APA Style.

Read a selection of your classmates’ postings.

April 2009

Mixed methods research is a rapidly emergingresearch paradigm and, although various sources are available to assist the novice researcher in terms of books (e.g. Creswell & Plano Clark 2007; Greene 2007; Johnson & Christensen 2008; Onwuegbuzie, Collins, Leech & Slate [2009]; Ridenour & Newman 2008; Teddlie & Tashakkori 2009), methodological articles (e.g. Johnson & Onwuegbuzie 2004; Onwueg- buzie & Johnson 2006), and journal editorials (e.g. Tashakkori & Creswell 2007), it might be quite daunting for the novice researcher to stay abreast of the emerging trends in the field of mixed methods research. Therefore, our goal in writing this article is to present ten points that a novice researcher should be cognizant of when designing a mixed methods study in accordance to the following three phases: research formulation,

research planning, and research implementation. Additionally, we present rationales for why these points are important, and a brief description of selective typologies that novice researchers might access when conducting mixed methods research.

RESEARCH FORMULATION PHASE

1. Importance of a definition

Individuals who share a profession develop and use a professional language or lexicon. An impor- tant component of a lexicon is definitions. Shared definitions provide precision when researchers are communicating to an audience and collaborating with peers when designing a study or program of research. Because mixed methods research is an emerging paradigm, ‘new’ definitions also are emerging. In this article, we use the term ‘mixed

Copyright © eContent Management Pty Ltd. International Journal of Multiple Research Approaches (2009) 3: 2–7.

INTRODUCTION Ten points about mixed methods research to be considered by the

novice researcher

KATHLEEN MT COLLINS Associate Professor, Department of Curriculum & Studies, College of Education and Health Professions, University of Arkansas at Fayetteville AR, USA

ALICIA O’CATHAIN Senior Research Fellow, Medical Care Research Unit, ScHARR, University of Sheffield, UK

ABSTRACT Our goal in writing this article is to present ten points that a novice researcher should be cognizant of when formulating, planning, and implementing a mixed methods study. We provide rationales for why these points are important and a brief description of selective typologies that novice researchers might access to address these points when conducting mixed methods research.

Keywords: mixed methods design, research planning, research formulation

 

 

methods research’ to be consistent with the title of this special issue; however, other terms such as mixed research and integrative methods also are used by researchers when conducting this form of research (Onwuegbuzie & Johnson 2006; Teddlie & Tashakkori 2009). Mixed methods studies have been defined as studies that ‘combine qualitative and quantitative approaches into the research methodology of a single study or multi-phased study’ (Tashakkori & Teddlie 1998: 17-18) and ‘as a research design in which QUAL [i.e. qualitative] and QUAN [i.e. quantitative] approaches are used in types of questions, research methods, data col- lection and analysis procedures, and /or inferences’ (Tashakkori & Teddlie 2003: 711). Mixed meth- ods designs have been defined as designs which include at least one quantitative method (designed to collect numbers) and one qualitative method (designed to collect words), where neither type is linked to a particular inquiry paradigm (Greene, Caracelli & Graham 1989). Similarly, mixed methods have been defined as quantitative and qualitative data collection, data analysis and the mixing of quantitative and qualitative approaches within a single study, with data integrated at some stage (Creswell & Plano Clark 2007; Creswell, Plano Clark, Gutmann & Hanson 2003). A defi- nition is useful to the novice researcher because it can be used to facilitate his or her awareness and understanding of mixed methods research as a research paradigm distinct from other monomethod approaches (quantitative and quali- tative) and provide useful terminology for report- ing research findings across various venues (e.g. conference presentations, technical and govern- ment reports, and published articles).

2. Importance of a mental model for mixing A researcher approaches a mixed methods investi- gation by initiating and completing a series of steps focused on delineating the process of mixing in a study or a program of research. Collins, Onwuegbuzie and Sutton (2006) have conceptu- alized the mixed methods research process as com-

prising 13 distinct steps (cf. Onwuegbuzie and Leech, this issue, for an identification of each step). Although similar to the research process in general, the intent of this 13-step process is to facilitate novice researcher decisions pertaining to the process of mixing at each step and it represents a recursive process. Additionally, it is important that the novice researcher recognize that decisions made at each of these steps are shaped by the researcher’s mental model (Greene 2007). Greene (2007) conceptualizes a mental model ‘as a com- plex, multifaceted lens through which a social inquirer perceives and makes sense of the social world’ ….and it is the ‘inquirer’s’ mental models that importantly frame and guide social inquiry’ (p.13). A mental model consists of the researcher’s personal assumptions, experiences, values, and beliefs about what constitutes an effective mode of inquiry (Greene 2007). Therefore, it is important that the novice researcher is cognizant of his or her mental model and also aware of the degree that this model shapes his or her interpretation of what constitutes rigor within an investigation.

3. Utilizing typologies of designs Although we advocate that the novice researcher access typologies of designs when conducting mixed methods research, we also caution the novice researcher to be aware that typologies do not offer a panacea. Indeed, given the breath of mixed meth- ods studies, typologies have been criticized because they cannot address sufficiently the wide range of mixed methods designs implemented in various fields (Maxwell & Loomis 2003); in some cases, typologies delineate only minimally the informa- tion required by the researcher, or give inconsistent information, or present overly complex informa- tion (Leech & Onwuegbuzie 2009). However, we agree with Teddlie and Tashakkori (2006) who note that, although typologies are not exhaustive, they can provide to researchers distinct guidelines that serve to differentiate mixed methods as a research paradigm from other paradigms, namely quantitative and qualitative, thereby legitimating mixed methods research as a unique research para-

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digm (Johnson & Onwuegbuzie 2004). Typologies also provide to researchers an organizational struc- ture to design and to implement studies, and a lexi- con to utilize when interpreting and disseminating information (Teddlie & Tashakkori 2009). Lastly, typologies facilitate learning by providing to researchers opportunities to compare and to con- trast various typologies, consequently expanding their levels of understanding of the mixed methods research process (Teddlie & Tashakkori 2006). In our later points we recommend selective typologies that the novice researcher might find useful when conducting mixed methods research.

4. Selecting the reason, rationale, and purpose for mixing

The decisions pertaining to the reason, the ration- ale, and the purpose for mixing serve to differenti- ate the mixed methods research process from other research processes and it is these decisions that lead the novice researcher to develop the study’s research question(s) (Teddlie & Tashakkori 2009). Teddlie and Tashakkori (2009) have developed a typology comprising the following three general categories for identifying various reasons for con- ducting mixed methods research: (a) personal rea- sons for conducting the study, (b) reasons associated with advancing knowledge, and (c) soci- etal reasons associated with improving or empow- ering society, institutions, and oppressed groups. Adhering to this three-component process leads the novice researcher to develop research objectives followed by the development of research question(s) and hypotheses. It is the research ques- tion that drives the methods that will be imple- mented in the study (Tashakkori & Teddlie 1998). The typology developed by Greene et al. (1989) offers the novice researcher five options for deter- mining the purpose for mixing approaches: trian- gulation (i.e. comparison of findings derived from different methods to interpret the phenomenon); complementarity (different methods utilized to assess various dimensions of the phenomena); development (methods implemented sequentially, thereby allowing results of one method [e.g. quali-

tative] to inform development of the other method [e.g. quantitative]); expansion (different methods utilized to measure different phenomena); and ini- tiation (to address the goal of divergence, different methods used to assess various dimensions of the phenomena of interest). These five purposes relate to the data analysis step of the mixed methods research process. Collins, Onwuegbuzie and Sut- ton (2006) developed a typology that presents the novice researcher with four rationales for mixing and 65 purposes that are applicable to multiple steps of the mixed methods research process.

5. Determining the research question Teddlie and Tashakkori (2009) define mixed meth- ods research questions as questions ‘concerned with the unknown aspects of a phenomena and are answered with information that is presented in both narrative and numerical forms’ (p.129). They recommend developing one mixed methods ques- tion that serves as an overarching question and this question can be extended into qualitative and quantitative sub-questions. Formulating one over- arching question provides a justification for mixing and guides the novice researcher’s processes of mix- ing methods and integrating findings. Creswell and Plano Clark (2007) offer an alternative approach to developing research questions. They advocate separate quantitative and qualitative ques- tions, followed by development of a mixed meth- ods question framing integration of the findings from both phases of the study. Onwuegbuzie and Leech (2006) provide to novice researchers specific examples of how to write quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods research questions and they also provide a framework connecting research questions to various data analytical techniques.

RESEARCH PLANNING PHASE

6. Selecting a mixed methods research design

The novice researcher can select a preexistent mixed methods design or develop a specific design to address the study’s particular research

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Kathleen MT Collins and Alicia O’Cathain

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objectives, purposes and research questions. Ted- dlie and Tashakkori (2006, 2009) provide to the novice researcher a typology called the Methods- Strands Matrix. This matrix facilitates a novice researcher’s decisions by presenting design options that are organized by: (a) choosing the type of approach that will be

utilized in the study (i.e. monomethod [qual- itative or quantitative approach used across all stages of the study] or mixed methods [qualitative and quantitative approaches mixed across the stages of the study); and

(b) selecting the number of strands or phases that will be implemented in the study (Ted- dlie & Tashakkori 2009).

The two types of mixed methods designs are designs with one strand (monostrand) and designs with more than one strand (multistrand). When utilizing mixed methods multistrand designs, the novice researcher can select from the following five families of mixed methods research designs: paral- lel, sequential, conversion, multilevel, and fully integrated (Teddlie & Tashakkori 2009). The Methods-Strands Matrix also can guide the novice researcher in the process of deciding the stage(s) that mixing will occur (i.e. conceptualization, experimental, inferential stages) within the study (Ridenour & Newman 2008; Teddlie & Tashakkori 2009). Additionally, the novice researcher also can access other typologies to guide the design process (e.g. Creswell et al. 2003; John- son & Onwuegbuzie 2004; Leech & Onwueg- buzie 2009; Maxwell & Loomis 2003).

7. Determining the sampling design The researcher’s choice of a sampling design impacts the legitimation of the researcher’s infer- ences and the appropriate generalization of results (Collins, Onwuegbuzie & Jiao 2006, 2007; Onwuegbuzie & Collins 2007; Teddlie & Yu 2007). A sampling scheme represents the strategies used by the novice researcher to select the unit of analysis (individuals, cases, groups, contexts in terms of settings and events) accompanied by a decision pertaining to the size of the sample (the

number of units chosen for the study). When con- ducting mixed methods research, a novice researcher’s sampling decisions must pertain to both the quantitative and qualitative phases of the study. The typology developed by Teddlie and Yu (2007) presents to the novice researcher sampling schemes that are categorized into four types: probability, purposive sampling, convenience sampling, and mixed methods sampling. Relevant to mixed meth- ods sampling, four schemes are introduced, namely: basic sampling strategies, sequential sampling, con- current sampling, and multilevel sampling. An alternative typology developed by Onwuegbuzie and Collins (2007) presents to the novice researchers sampling schemes and sample size guidelines appropriate for the quantitative and qualitative of the mixed methods study. Additional- ly, they present a matrix comprising two dimen- sions. Dimension one matches the time orientation of the quantitative and qualitative phases of the study (the novice researcher’s decision to administer the quantitative and qualitative phase at the same or approximately the same point in time) or sequen- tially (one phase is initiated and informs delivery of the second phase) to the purpose of mixing (cf. Greene et al. 1989). Dimension two provides guidelines to identify clearly the relationship of the study’s participants in the quantitative and qualita- tive samples, namely: identical (the same individu- als participate in both phases); parallel (different individuals participate in the phases but are drawn from the same population); nested (individuals for one phase represent a subset of individuals who par- ticipated in the other phase); multilevel (different individuals participate in the phases and represent different levels of the population as exemplified by selecting corporate personnel as one sample versus consumers of a product as the other sample).

RESEARCH IMPLEMENTATION PHASE

8. Collecting data

Johnson and Turner (2003) note that the investi- gator’s selection of data methods reflects the fun- damental principle of mixed methods research,

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such that the ‘methods should be mixed in a way that has complementary strengths and non overlap- ping weaknesses’ (Johnson & Turner 2003: 299, italics in original). Adherence to this principle enables the novice researcher to collect strategical- ly multiple forms of evidence, such that the com- bination of methods presents convergent and divergent evidence, subsequently strengthening the findings of the mixed methods study (Johnson & Turner 2003; Johnson & Christensen 2008). Johnson and Turner (2003) present a two-dimen- sional matrix outlining data collection techniques to allow the novice researcher to engage in two forms of mixing: intramethod mixing (employing a single method that includes quantitative and qualitative components [e.g. open-closed items on a single questionnaire] and intermethod mixing (mixing two or more methods [e.g. questionnaire, interview and observation]). The first dimension of the matrix is to select a research approach (i.e. pure quantitative, pure qualitative or mixed) and the second is to select a method of data collection (questionnaire, interviews, focus groups, tests, observations secondary data [archival data]).

9. Conducting data analysis A mixed methods analysis entails the use of quali- tative and quantitative analytical techniques that are implemented either concurrently (at the same time or in a relatively close time frame) or sequen- tially (one form of analysis is conducted first and it informs the other type of analysis) from which interpretations are made in a parallel or an integra- tive or an iterative manner (Onwuegbuzie & Ted- dlie 2003; Teddlie & Tashakkori 2009). When analyzing data, a novice researcher can utilize a combination of the following seven phases of the mixed methods analysis process: (a) data reduction (e.g. quantitative data are analyzed using descrip- tive statistics and qualitative data are categorized as descriptive themes; (b) data display (e.g. data per- taining to both strands are organized and presented visually in graphs and matrices); (c) data transfor- mation (quantitative data converted into narrative codes [qualitized] that can be analyzed using quali-

tative techniques and qualitative data converted into numerical codes [quantitized] and analyzed using quantitative techniques); (d) data correlation (correlating quantitative data with qualitized data or vice versa; (e) data consolidation (different data types merged into one data set); (f ) data compari- son (comparing data from two different sources); and (g) data integration (integrating quantitative and qualitative data into one coherent whole that will be analyzed and interpreted simultaneously as a single data set or two data sets [quantitative and qualitative] to be analyzed separately by the researcher) (Onwuegbuzie & Teddlie 2003).

10. Legitimating Inferences and formulating generalizations

Data validation refers to the implementation of appropriate steps or procedures to assure legiti- mation (Onwuegbuzie & Johnson 2006) by establishing a process to examine ‘inference qual- ity’ (Teddlie & Tashakkori 2003) in terms of the design quality and the interpretive rigor of the study’s outcomes, and, thereby leading the novice researcher to formulate appropriate generaliza- tions termed ‘inference transferability’ by Teddlie and Tashakkori (2003). Legitimation also has been defined as a recursive process in which the novice researcher evaluates the quality of the inferences drawn from the quantitative and qual- itative phases at each stage of the study and/or across a program of research (Onwuegbuzie & Johnson 2006). Subsequently, the decisions per- taining to both the quantitative and qualitative phases of the study impact the novice researcher’s ability to draw appropriate inferences and gener- alizations. Onwuegbuzie and Johnson’s (2006) legitimation model and Dellinger and Leech’s validation framework (2007) offer the novice researcher two alternatives to evaluate inferences on the basis of the study’s findings.

CONCLUSION In conclusion, we hope that consideration of the ten points above and the accompanying typolo- gies will facilitate the novice researcher’s efforts to

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formulate, plan, and implement both successful and rigorous mixed methods research.

References Collins KMT, Onwuegbuzie AJ and Jiao QG

(2006) Prevalence of mixed methods sampling in social science research. Evaluation and Research in Education, 19(2): 267-291.

Collins KMT, Onwuegbuzie AJ and Jiao, QG (2007) A mixed methods investigation of mixed methods sampling designs in social and health science research. Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 1(3): 267-294.

Collins KMT, Onwuegbuzie AJ and Sutton IL (2006) A model incorporating the rationale and purpose for conducting mixed methods research in special education and beyond. Learning Disabilities: A Contemporary Journal, 4: 67-100.

Creswell JW and Plano Clark VL (2007) Designing and conducting mixed methods research. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Creswell JW, Plano Clark VL, Gutmann M and Hanson W (2003) Advanced mixed methods research designs. In A Tashakkori & C Teddlie (Eds) Handbook of mixed methods in social and behavioral research (pp. 209-240) Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Dellinger AB and Leech NL (2007) Toward a unified validation framework in mixed methods research. Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 1: 359-375.

Greene JC (2007) Mixed methods in social inquiry. San Francisco, CA: Jossey Bass.

Greene JC, Caracelli VJ and Graham WF (1989) Toward a conceptual framework for mixed- method evaluation designs. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 11: 255– 274.

Johnson B and Christensen L (2008) Educational research quantitative, qualitative, and mixed approaches (3rd ed) Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage

Johnson RB and Onwuegbuzie AJ (2004) Mixed methods research: A research paradigm whose time has come. Educational Researcher, 33(7): 14–26.

Johnson RB and Turner LA (2003) Data collection strategies in mixed methods research. In A Tashakkori & C Teddlie (Eds) Handbook of mixed methods in social and behavioral research (pp 297–319) Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Leech NL and Onwuegbuzie AJ (2009) A typology of mixed methods research designs. Quality & Quantity International Journal of Methodology, 43: 265-275.

Maxwell JA and Loomis DM (2003) Mixed methods design: An alternative approach. In A

Tashakkori & C Teddlie (Eds) Handbook of mixed methods in social and behavioral research (pp. 241–272) Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Onwuegbuzie AJ and Collins KMT (2007). A typol- ogy of mixed methods sampling designs in social science research. The Qualitative Report, 12(2). Retrieved February 21 2009, from http://www. nova.edu/ssss/QR/QR12-2/onwuegbuzie2.pdf

Onwuegbuzie AJ, Collins KMT, Leech NL and Slate JR (2009) Mixed research: A step-by-step guide. New York: Taylor & Francis, in press.

Onwuegbuzie AJ and Johnson RB (2006) The validity issues in mixed research. Research in Schools, 13(1): 48-63.

Onwuegbuzie AJ and Leech NL (2006) Linking research questions to mixed methods data analysis procedures. The Qualitative Report, 11(3). Retrieved February 23, 2009 from http://www. nova.edu/ssss/QR/QR11-3/onwuegbuzie.pdf

Onwuegbuzie AJ and Teddlie C (2003) A framework for analyzing data in mixed methods research. In A Tashakkori & C Teddlie (Eds) Handbook of mixed methods in social and behavioral research (pp. 351-383) Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Ridenour CS and Newman I (2008) Mixed methods research: Exploring the interactive continuum. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.

Tashakkori A and Creswell JW (2007) Exploring the nature of research questions in mixed methods research. Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 1: 207-211.

Tashakkori A and Teddlie C (1998) Mixed method- ology: Combining qualitative and quantitative approaches. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage

Tashakkori A and Teddlie C (2003) Handbook of mixed methods in social and behavioral research. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Teddlie C and Tashakkori A (2003) Major issues and controversies in the issue of mixed methods in the social and behavioral sciences. In A Tashakkori & C Teddlie (Eds) Handbook of mixed methods in social and behavioral research (pp.3-50) Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Teddlie C and Tashakkori A (2006) A general typology of research designs featuring mixed methods. Research in the Schools, 13: 12-28.

Teddlie C and Tashakkori A (2009) Foundations of mixed methods research: Integrating quantitative and qualitative approaches in the social and behavioral sciences. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.