Respondent Centred Surveys
Collaboration is the Methodspace focus for October 2022. Ways researchers and participants relate can be collaborative, as Laura Wilson and Emma Dickinson discussed in this SAGE Methodspace interview. To learn more, check out their new book, Respondent Centred Surveys: Stop, Listen and then Design. Use the code MSPACEQ422 for a 20% discount, valid from 1 October – 31 December.
Anna CohenMiller helps us drawing on the 4C's of research: Compassion, Community, Care and Collaboration into our research praxis to develop as individuals and researchers.
This collection of open-access SAGE journal articles includes a variety of perspectives on collaborative research and writing.
Julie Reeves discusses some important points about internal and external collaborations in this interview and post.
Getting started with a new collaborative project? Think about approaches for working with others within a group, intra-group collaboration, or across groups, inter-group collaboration.
Research and writing can be solitary activities. This post from Natalia Reinoso Chávez follows one by Janet Salmons about how two independent researchers have found value in collaborative friendship.
Some barriers to collaboration identified in business relationships can help us think about how to prepare for potential obstacles to success in collaborative research or writing projects.
Dr. Majbritt Lyck-Bowen offers suggestions for collaborative research assignments that include everyone in an online class.
The Director and Assistant Director of the Bass Connections program at Duke University share lessons learned and open access resources for team success in interdisciplinary collaborative research.
Big Data can mean the research is too big to conduct on your own. In this post, find four types of research collaborations involving Big Data, with open-access examples.
Researchers often collaborate with community partners, as discussed in this guest post from PhD candidates from Duke University’s Cultural Anthropology and African American Studies programs.
The focus for October 2022 is on collaboration. What do we mean when we use this term?
In this post Becky De Oliveira discusses lessons learned and practical tips based on her recent doctoral research with older research participants.
Emma Geen, Matthew Lariviere, and Helen Manchester discuss speculative storytelling workshops as a way to use creativity and collaboration to study attitudes towards ageing.
Read this guest post about collaboration and action research by Melissa Parenti.
Interdependence counters isolation some feel as indie researchers and scholars. Friendship helps, as discussed in this video conversation.
What does "Interdisciplinarity" mean for researchers? Key principles are outlined in this post.
How can you learn to be a researcher, particularly in emerging fields of study? Hear this student panel discuss what and how they learned through hands-on research projects.
How can you use comics in research?
Reflections about co-creation in research.
Hear John Creswell and daughter Johanna Creswell Báez discuss their new book, 30 Essential Skills for the Qualitative Researcher.
Want to edit a book? Learn more about the role of the editor.
Enjoy this collaborative post about creative thinking for research and academic writing by Jane Shore, Narelle Lemon, and Janet Salmons.
Collaboration is essential to the work of academic researchers and writers. Learn more from this selection of presentations.
This comic you can use illustrates positive strategies research teams can use to create good working relationships.
Learning while doing: collaborating on a book about collaboration.