Publication | Closed Access
What Good Is Polarizing Research Into Qualitative and Quantitative?
277
Citations
15
References
2006
Year
Research Into QualitativeQualitative MethodInquiry-based LearningQualitative SociologyQualitative AnalysisEducational PsychologySocial Foundations Of EducationEducationEducational TestingResearch EthicsEducational AssessmentEducational TheoryResearch QuestionsEducation ResearchAssociated PolarizationFoundations Of EducationPolar Distinction
In education research, a polar distinction is frequently made to describe and produce different kinds of research: quantitative versus qualitative. In this article, the authors argue against that polarization and the associated polarization of the “subjective” and the “objective,” and they question the attribution of generalizability to only one of the poles. The purpose of the article is twofold: (a) to demonstrate that this polarization is not meaningful or productive for education research, and (b) to propose an integrated approach to education research inquiry. The authors sketch how such integration might occur by adopting a continuum instead of a dichotomy of generalizability. They then consider how that continuum might be related to the types of research questions asked, and they argue that the questions asked should determine the modes of inquiry that are used to answer them.
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