Design and conduct mixed methods research using convergent, explanatory sequential, or exploratory sequential strategies with genuine integration of qualitative and quantitative strands. Use this skill when the user needs to choose a mixed methods design, integrate qualitative and quantitative data at design, methods, or interpretation levels, justify mixing on pragmatist grounds, or when they ask 'which mixed methods design should I use', 'how do I integrate qual and quant findings', or 'is running both qual and quant enough to be mixed methods'.
Mixed methods research combines qualitative and quantitative approaches within a single study or program of inquiry to leverage the strengths of both. Grounded in pragmatism, it selects methods based on what works best for the research question. The defining feature is not merely using both approaches but genuinely integrating them at design, methods, or interpretation levels to produce insights neither approach could achieve alone.
IRON LAW: Mixed methods requires GENUINE INTEGRATION — running qual
and quant in parallel without connecting findings is NOT mixed methods,
it is two separate studies stapled together. Integration must occur at
design, methods, or interpretation level.
Key assumptions:
| Design | Structure | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Convergent | QUAL + QUANT simultaneously | Compare and merge findings for completeness or validation |
| Explanatory Sequential | QUANT → qual | Use qual to explain, elaborate, or contextualize quant results |
| Exploratory Sequential | QUAL → quant | Use qual to develop instruments, variables, or typologies tested by quant |
| Embedded | qual within QUANT (or vice versa) | One strand supports the other within a larger design |
Use uppercase to indicate the dominant strand; lowercase for the supporting strand.
Apply full methodological rigor to each strand independently. Qualitative strand follows qualitative quality criteria (credibility, transferability). Quantitative strand follows quantitative criteria (validity, reliability). Do not compromise one strand for the other.
Integration strategies by level:
| Level | Strategy | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Design | Embedding one strand within the other | Qual interviews within an RCT |
| Methods | Building one strand from the other | Qual themes become survey items |
| Interpretation | Joint display, merging, or narrative weaving | Side-by-side comparison table |
Synthesize findings from both strands into meta-inferences that transcend what either strand alone could produce. Address convergence, complementarity, or divergence between strands.
## Mixed Methods Analysis: [Context]
### Design
- Type: [convergent / explanatory sequential / exploratory sequential / embedded]
- Priority: [QUAL+QUANT / QUANT→qual / QUAL→quant]
- Rationale: [why this design fits the research question]
### Quantitative Strand
- Method: [survey / experiment / secondary data]
- Sample: [N, sampling strategy]
- Key findings: [statistical results]
### Qualitative Strand
- Method: [interviews / focus groups / observations]
- Sample: [N, sampling strategy]
- Key findings: [themes or categories]
### Integration (Joint Display)
| Quantitative Finding | Qualitative Finding | Meta-Inference |
|---------------------|--------------------|--------------------|
| [statistical result] | [theme/quote] | [integrated insight] |
### Convergence Assessment
- Confirmed: [where qual and quant agree]
- Complementary: [where one strand adds to the other]
- Divergent: [where findings conflict — and how resolved]
### Meta-Inferences
1. [Integrated conclusion that neither strand alone could produce]
2. [Integrated conclusion that neither strand alone could produce]