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Jenny Aspling; Veronica Svärd; Lincoln Humphreys; Christine Bigby; Magnus Tideman – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2024
Background: Active Support is a staff practice that aims to increase engagement of people with intellectual disabilities. This study seeks to: (1) identify the outcomes of staff using Active Support and how these are measured; (2) identify how the views of people with intellectual disabilities have been included in Active Support research. Method:…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Participation, Staff Role, Program Effectiveness
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Kacey Beddoes – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2024
Despite their many benefits, longitudinal studies are much less common than one-time data collection or pre-post intervention designs. One reason for their scarcity is that longitudinal studies introduce requirements and challenges that non-longitudinal studies do not. One of the biggest challenges is participant attrition. In order to help…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Attrition (Research Studies), Research Problems, Research Methodology
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Roman Auriga; André Pirralha; Friederike Schlücker; Götz Lechner; Anna Passmann – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2025
Mailing campaigns are a way to keep longitudinal survey respondents engaged. While mailings usually include a survey answer request, sometimes respondents are contacted between-waves to update contact information or simply to keep respondent contact. Research on the actual impact of these between-wave contacts on response rates is scarce. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adolescents, Mail Surveys, Research Methodology
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Bibek Dahal – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2024
Ethics in research can be broadly divided into two epistemic dimensions. One dimension focuses on bureaucratic procedures (i.e., procedural ethics), while the other focuses on contextually and culturally contested practice of ethics in research (i.e., ethics in practice). Researchers experience both dimensions distinctly in their qualitative…
Descriptors: Research, Ethics, Researchers, Educational Experiments
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Lennie Barblett; Jennifer Cartmel; Leanne Lavina; Fay Hadley; Susan Irvine; Linda J. Harrison; Francis Bobongie-Harris – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2024
Involving children as stakeholders and including their voices in updating the Australian Early Years Learning Framework (for children birth to age 5) was a focus of this project design. The design was grounded in participatory approaches with a children's rights perspective, as the team prioritised seeking children's views and encouraging their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Young Children, Childrens Attitudes, Informed Consent
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Mary F. Rice – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2024
Understanding experiences in online educational settings is crucial to improving teaching and learning. The purpose of this paper is to describe "Narrative Inquiry" as a research methodology that has the potential create the relational opportunities necessary to understand experiences in online learning environments. In this article, I…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Educational Environment, Inquiry, Research Methodology
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Nicole Jamison – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2024
Despite the proliferation of play-based and arts-informed research, an under-explored area is using both with young immigrant children to hear from them about their distinctive experiences and complexities. This paper draws on an arts-informed and play-based case study with two young immigrant children in Canada to highlight specific data…
Descriptors: Play, Art, Young Children, Immigrants
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Zur, Rebecca L. – Research Ethics, 2023
Pregnancy is a frequently applied exclusion criteria for many forms of research. Common justifications for this exclusion include the potential for teratogenicity, as well as the potential for physiologic changes in pregnancy to impact the research itself. The systematic exclusion of pregnant persons from clinical studies has created a significant…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Research Methodology, Pregnancy
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Katherine Yaw; Luke Plonsky; Tove Larsson; Scott Sterling; Merja Kytö – Language Teaching, 2023
For many researchers in the social sciences, including those in applied linguistics, the term ethics evokes the bureaucratic process of fulfilling the requirements of an ethics review board (e.g., in the US, an Institutional Review Board, or IRB) as a preliminary step in conducting human subjects research. The expansion of ethics review boards…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Ethics, Research Methodology, Social Sciences
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Jennifer Jackson – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2023
While digital tools are often recommended for researchers, there is a lack of evidence around effective social media strategies among researchers to optimise participant recruitment and data collection. However, an 'add Facebook and stir' approach could create extra burden for participants or foil researchers' efforts. Participant recruitment…
Descriptors: Social Media, Researchers, Recruitment, Data Collection
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Orsola Torrisi; Jethro Banda; Georges Reniers; Stéphane Helleringer – Field Methods, 2024
Guidelines for conducting surveys by mobile phone calls in low- and middle-income countries suggest keeping interviews short (<20 minutes). The evidence supporting this recommendation is scant, even though limiting interview duration might reduce the amount of data generated by such surveys. We recruited nearly 2,500 mobile phone users in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Developing Nations, Interviews, Telephone Surveys
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Clare Carroll; Miriam Twomey – Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities, 2021
With the increasing recognition that the voices of children need to be included in matters that affect their lives, this scoping review aimed to investigate the methods that have been used in qualitative studies to support the participation of children with neurodevelopmental disorders in research. Studies were identified through a systematic…
Descriptors: Children, Neurodevelopmental Disorders, Attitudes, Empowerment
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Ellis, Sophie; Lanskey, Caroline; Markson, Lucy; Souza, Karen; Barton-Crosby, Jennifer; Lösel, Friedrich – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2023
Retaining participants in longitudinal studies is important but challenging when retracing them after a substantial gap between study phases. Utilising our nine year mixed-methods longitudinal study of 54 families affected by paternal imprisonment, we qualitatively analysed our processes and experiences of retracing participants after a seven year…
Descriptors: Field Studies, Longitudinal Studies, Research Methodology, Participation
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Reed, Kathleen J. – Journal of LGBT Youth, 2023
Transgender, non-binary, two-spirit, and other gender non-conforming (GNC) youth have been the focus of increasing scholarly attention over the past decade. A scoping review method was applied to this growing body of literature to identify good practices and important themes in conducting research with GNC youth. A body of non-clinical,…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Sexual Identity, Research Methodology, Youth
Christian Beighton; Wendy Cobb; Hilary Welland – Sage Research Methods Cases, 2021
This case study discusses how autoethnographic approaches can be used as a qualitative research tool. Based in a U.K. university Faculty of Education, it outlines a collaborative project designed to investigate barriers to engagement with academic writing development for early career researchers. After a brief overview of the project and its…
Descriptors: Discussion, Research Methodology, Ethnography, Foreign Countries
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