In this widely adopted text and professional reference, leading contributors provide the knowledge needed to design strong qualitative, quantitative, and mixed-method studies; analyze the resulting data; and translate findings into improved practices and programs. Following a consistent format, user-friendly chapters thoroughly describe the various methodologies and illustrate their applications with helpful concrete examples.
Tabela de Conteúdo
I. INTRODUCTION1. Pluralism, Diversity, and Sophistication in Family Therapy Research, Douglas H. Sprenkle and Fred P. Piercy2. A Graduate Student Guide to Conducting Research in Marriage and Family Therapy, Lenore M. Mc Wey, Ebony Joy James, and Sara A. Smock II. QUALITATIVE METHODS3. Let’s Get Grounded: Family Therapy Research and Grounded Theory, Silvia Echevarria-Doan and Carolyn Y. Tubbs4. The Use of Phenomenology for Family Therapy Research: The Search for Meaning, Carla M. Dahl and Pauline Boss5. Focus Groups in Family Therapy Research, Fred P. Piercy and Katherine M. Hertlein6. Action Research Methods in Family Therapy, Tai J. Mendenhall and William J. Doherty7. Computer-Aided Qualitative Data Analysis Software: General Issues for Family Therapy Researchers, Jennifer L. Matheson8. Bridging Research: Using Ethnography to Inform Clinical Practice, Carolyn Y. Tubbs and Linda M. Burton9. Feminist Autoethnography, Katherine R. Allen and Fred P. Piercy10. Performance Methodology: Constructing Discourses and Discursive Practices in Family Therapy Research, Saliha Bava11. Future Directions for Qualitative Methods, Ronald J. Chenail III. MIXED METHODS12. Survey Research, Thorana S. Nelson and David D. Allred13. The Delphi Method, Linda Stone Fish and Dean M. Busby14. Task Analysis of Couple and Family Change Events, Brent Bradley and Susan M. Johnson15. Program Evaluation Science and Family Therapy, Jay A. Mancini, Angela J. Huebner, Eric E. Mc Collum, and Lydia I. Marek IV. QUANTITATIVE METHODS16. Clinical Trials in Marriage and Family Therapy Research, Kevin P. Lyness, Stephanie R. Walsh, and Douglas H. Sprenkle17. Meta-Analysis in Family Therapy Research, Karen S. Wampler, Alan Reifman, and Julianne M. Serovich18. Economic Evaluation Methodology for Family Therapy Outcome Research, David P. Mackinnon19. Approaches to Prediction: Correlation, Regression, and Classification Techniques, Douglas K. Snyder and Laurel F. Mangrum V. ADVANCED QUANTITATIVE METHODS20. Multilevel Growth Modeling in the Context of Family Research, Margaret K. Keiley, Nina C. Martin, Ting Liu, and Megan Dolbin-Mac Nab21. Covariance Structure Analysis: From Path Analysis to Structural Equation Modeling, Margaret K. Keiley, Mary Dankoski, Megan Dolbin-Mac Nab, and Ting Liu
Sobre o autor
Douglas H. Sprenkle, Ph D, is professor and director of the doctoral program in marriage and family therapy at Purdue University. He is a former editor of the Journal of Marital and Family Therapy. Dr. Sprenkle has received three major career honors from the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy (AAMFT): the Cumulative Career Contribution in Family Therapy Research Award, the Training Award, and the Significant Contribution to Family Therapy Award. He has also received the Osborne Award for excellence in teaching from the National Council on Family Relations. Among his seven books, Dr. Sprenkle is the editor of Effectiveness Research in Marriage and Family Therapy.Fred P. Piercy, Ph D, is professor and head of the Department of Human Development at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. He has served two times on the Board of Directors of AAMFT, and as the chair of the Commission on Accreditation for Marriage and Family Therapy Education. Dr. Piercy is also a member and fellow of both AAMFT and the American Psychological Association. He has written over 160 published articles, 5 books, and 35 funded grants. Most recently, he is the coeditor of the Handbook of the Clinical Treatment of Infidelity (with Katherine Hertlein and Joseph Wetchler). Dr. Piercy has won both national and university teaching awards. He has also collaborated extensively with colleagues from the University of Indonesia and Atma Jaya University (in Jakarta, Indonesia) and was the principal investigator of a World AIDS Foundation-funded project in Indonesia.