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🎓 GET 1-ON-1 HELP: https://gradcoach.com/?utm_source=YT&utm_campaign=jOTf5sj2RrM 🧰 FREE RESEARCH TOOLKIT: https://gradcoach.com/toolkit/?utm_source=YT&utm_campaign=jOTf5sj2RrM 📚 FREE EVENTS & WORKSHOPS: https://gradcoach.com/events/?utm_source=YT&utm_campaign=jOTf5sj2RrM Thinking about using a mixed methods approach in your dissertation? Before you commit, watch this. In this video, we unpack the biggest pitfalls of mixed methods research and how to avoid turning your dissertation into double the work. If you’re considering combining qualitative and quantitative methods, this will help you decide whether it’s truly necessary and, if so, how to do it properly. We discuss the time and resource demands, IRB delays, integration challenges, and the difficulty of justifying why both methods are needed. In many cases, a clean, focused single-method study is the smarter move. The goal isn’t to do everything. It’s to finish strong. ⏱️ Timestamps 00:00 Should you use mixed methods? 00:10 Why mixed methods are often discouraged 00:20 Time and resource demands 00:50 Making sure methods truly complement each other 01:05 Two instruments, two samples, two analyses 01:25 IRB delays and approval challenges 02:05 Justifying why you need both methods 02:25 You don’t have to answer everything in one study 03:05 Integration and triangulation challenges 03:30 When mixed methods feel like two dissertations 03:50 A simpler alternative: focus and expand later If you’re unsure whether mixed methods is right for your study, our PhD-qualified coaches can help you design a rigorous, realistic research plan that fits your timeline. Book a free consultation with Grad Coach here: https://gradcoach.com/dissertation-coaching/
