Description
Book SynopsisMeeting a key need for qualitative researchers, this practical book presents tools for creating productive partnerships and managing each phase of a collaborative project. The authors provide guidelines for working across disciplines, status differentials (such as professor and student), and geographical locations. Collaboration within particular qualitative traditions--cross-cultural research, duoethnography, participatory action research, arts-based collaborations, and others--is described and illustrated with exemplars of published studies. Readers learn how to build research teams, formulate research questions, gather and analyze data, and assess how collaborations are working. Ethical questions are highlighted throughout: Who owns collaborative research? Who decides what aspects of the findings should be disseminated? How can inequitable power relations be redressed? Within-chapter Pedagogical Pathways sections provide practice exercises and opportunities for reflection.
Trade Review
"Finally, a book that focuses on collaborative qualitative research! I particularly appreciate the practical discussions of evaluating and analyzing collaborative studies; writing, presenting, and publishing the findings; and pedagogical issues. The 'Pedagogical Pathways' will be useful in classrooms and for newer research collaboration groups to help them navigate the process of collaboration. This book is a necessary part of every qualitative researcher's and instructor’s library."—Regina Garza Mitchell, EdD, Department of Educational Leadership, Research and Technology, Western Michigan University
"This is a wonderful introduction to collaborative qualitative research. Graduate students, early-career professionals, and others new to this area will find a comprehensive review of the theories, issues, and methods most relevant to a collaborative approach. Readers from a wide variety of backgrounds and disciplines will find this book accessible. Course instructors will find interesting and valuable activities to use in their classes."—Lori E. Koelsch, PhD, Department of Psychology, Duquesne University
"A storehouse of information and practical guidance, starting with what collaboration is and moving through thoughtful considerations of how to conduct collaborative initiatives, interdisciplinary applications, ethical issues, and future potentials. Mulvihill and Swaminathan ground the reader in arts-based and other approaches, summarize multiple views, and provide helpful exercises and reflection questions. They delve into many examples of collaborative work and go into lots of detail about crucial questions and decisions. This richly resourced and referenced book will be of critical importance to both new and more experienced collaborative researchers."—Dan Wulff, PhD, Faculty of Social Work (Emeritus), University of Calgary, Canada
"The authors lay out both theoretical foundations and practical applications for engaging in powerful, equitable qualitative inquiries that have the potential to transform communities. The topics are brought to life through pedagogical elements that will enable practicing researchers and graduate students to make sense of and conduct collaborative research."—Brian Schultz, PhD, Department of Teacher Education, Miami University-
Table of Contents1. Epistemologies of Collaboration
2. Collaborative Ecologies: Creating Collaborative Teams
3. Thinking and Designing for Collaborative Research
4. Methodologies and Methods of Collaborative Research
5. Collective Activism: Participatory Action Research
6. Collaborative Encounters: Study Circles, Communities of Practice, and Learning Communities
7. Photographic Collaborations and Digital Storytelling
8. Performance Collaborations
9. Evaluating Collaborative Research
10. Writing, Presenting, and Publishing Collaborative Research
11. Next Steps for Qualitative Researchers Engaged in Collaborative Projects
References
Index
About the Authors