Post-Positivism and the Naturalistic Paradigm
Is the Naturalistic Paradigm the Genuine Article?
Constructed Realities
The Disturbing and Disturbed Observer
The Only Generalization is
There is no Generalization
Is Causality a Viable Concept?
Is Being Value-Free Valuable?
Doing What Comes Naturally
Designing a Naturalistic Inquiry
Implementing the Naturalistic Inquiry
Establishing Trustworthiness
Processing Naturalistically-Obtained Data
Case Reporting, Member Checking, and Auditing
Yvonna S. Lincoln is Professor Emerita at Texas A&M University, where she held the Ruth Harrington Chair of Educational Leadership and was Distinguished Professor of Higher Education. She is the coeditor of the journal Qualitative Inquiry, coeditor of the first through six editions of The SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Research, and coeditor of The SAGE Handbook of Critical and Indigenous Methodologies. As well, she is the coauthor, editor, or coeditor of more than a half dozen other books and volumes. She has served as the President of the Association for the Study of Higher Education and the American Evaluation Research Association, and as the Vice President for Division J (Postsecondary Education) for the American Educational Research Association. She is the author of coauthor of more than 100 chapters and journal articles on aspects of higher education or qualitative research methods and methodologies. (Retired)
"An interesting, well written, fascinating critique of positivism.
I wish this would be sufficient to put the nails in the coffin of
positivism once and for all."
*Ian I. Mitroff*
"This book provides a clear discussion of the essential elements of
positivism and post-positivism. It also provides a useful set of
guidelines for conducting research within the framework of
naturalism. Lincoln and Guba reveal the chinks in the armor of
conventional methodological ideas. Their writing draws on a vast
array of examples and provides a new vocabulary for thinking about
method."
*Shulamit Reinharz*
"This book will interest graduate students and educational
researchers as well as social scientists struggling with
qualitative and quantitative methodologies. A breath of fresh
air."
*Choice*
"Overall, this volume serves as a good introductory text in
naturalistic inquiry and field research courses."
*International Journal of Intercultural Relations*
"The book itself is a good illustration of our inclination towards
and our need of more general descriptions...If one wants to inform
oneself about the paradigmatic discussion and the development of
research methodology within the area of studies of social fields,
it is a very interesting book."
*Instructional Science*
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