SAGE Journal Articles and Exercises

Carefully-selected SAGE Journal articles expand upon chapter material, and accompanying exercises offer practice in applying the concepts.

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Article 1: Shehzad, W. (2011). Outlining purposes, stating the nature of present research, and listing research questions or hypotheses in academic papers. Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 41(2), 139-160.

Summary: The objective must be clear. Before setting the scene in detail, one must answer the question: Why did you do the work and what is its purpose? Along with stating the purpose of the article, rationale for the study should be summarized.

Questions to Consider

  1. What is the intent of your study? Try to summarize this into a single sentence or paragraph that readers can easily identify.
  2. Does your purpose statement use words such as aim, goals, objectives, purpose to signal attention to the central controlling idea?

Article 2: Travers, M. (2014). Using ethnographic methods to strengthen quantitative data—Explaining juvenile detention rates in three Australian states. Bulletin de Methodologie Sociologique, 124, 66-76.

Summary: Those advocating mixed methods research have long believed that ethnographic methods can strengthen quantitative data.

Questions to Consider

  1. Why did Travers (2014) decide to use a mixed methods approach? Was the purpose clear?
  2. What are some strengths and challenges in creating a purpose statement for a mixed methods approach?

Article 3: Dewasiri, N. J., Weerakoon, Y. K. B., & Azeez, A. A. (2018). Mixed Methods in Finance Research: The Rationale and Research Designs. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 17(1). https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406918801730

Summary: The authors suggest that researchers in the finance discipline should justify their research methodology in order to eliminate the biases that arise through the selection of convenient methodologies. Thus, future studies should incorporate both qualitative and quantitative aspects when formulating mixed method research questions, emphasize the rationale, and choose appropriate mixed method designs to achieve a high level of scientific rigor in mixed methods research.

Questions to Consider

  1. In this article, the first sentence of the abstract has the purpose statement. The unique part of this paper also states what is already known and what this paper adds. What are the major differences between a qualitative, quantitative, and mixed method purpose statement.