Skip to main content

Using Mixed Methods in Human-Centered Higher Education Research and Design

Lauren Storz is an Academic Experience Analyst on the Academic Technology Design Team, and a PhD student in cultural anthropology at CU Boulder. 

Namita Mehta is a Learning Experience Designer with the Office of Information Technology at CU Boulder.  She has over 15 years of experience in education and holds an Ed.D in Leadership for Educational Equity.  


Wicked problems are those that have interdependent factors to consider. To solve these complex problems in technology-mediated teaching and learning, we emphasize the importance of understanding context and the systems at play to respond to human needs in the first blog post. Developing a clear and focused problem statement is essential to guide a research project, and mixed research methods can be used to understand and continually refine problem statements throughout the research process.  In this post, we want to expand on how we use mixed research methods to achieve a human-centered approach– in other words, an approach which prioritizes the needs, perspectives, and experiences of people at every phase of research. Utilizing a diversity of methods can give us a more realistic understanding of how students, staff, and faculty are experiencing a situation, interaction, or intervention.  Context is not only about understanding the experience of each individual, but it also entails a thorough investigation of the relationship between individuals and their interaction with  sociotechnical systems.  Design-based research must account for how design(s) function in the everyday, lived experiences of those occupying a given space. It must not only document success or failure of a space, but also focus on “the interactions that refine our understanding of the learning issues involved” (DBRC, 2003).  The evolution of such accounts depends on methods that record and connect lived processes with assessment goals (DBRC, 2003).  In other words, a key element of conducting design-based research that centers relationships and embraces complexity is having a mixed-methods approach (Anderson & Shattuck, 2012). 

The Case for Mixed Methods 

Quantitative and qualitative data contribute something different to our understanding of the human experience.  Numerical data is helpful in measuring changes across time.  Quantitative methods can be used to measure if an intervention is effective or even to see the relationship between two facets of an experience.  What qualitative data offers is exploring new realms and gaining greater clarity on what those numbers mean.  These complementary methods can paint a clearer picture of the human experience by measuring  the pulse of a population and empathizing  individual stories at the same time.  

Mixed methods approaches can look a variety of ways.  One option is to use two distinct methods such as a survey and a focus group.  Some people hesitate when hearing this approach as to use two methods for every practice-engaged inquiry could be both time-consuming and exhausting.  This approach does not need to be a burden on professionals who already have so many duties to juggle.  One popular way of integrating these practices is by including both Likert scale and open-ended questions on a survey.   Another way to approach this is by offering places where students can rate certain questions within a focus group.  The main point being that expanding our method allows us to more accurately understand what the experience is and how we can improve it.  To highlight this concept further, we would like to share a recent study conducted by the Academic Technology Design Team at CU Boulder, which illustrates one of the myriad ways a complex research project can be approached by employing numerous sources and mixed methods. 

Learning Spaces Project Example

Titled the Learning Spaces Project, this project was in partnership with the Learning Spaces Technology team that is in charge of maintaining and upgrading academic technology in the classroom. While our partner team was looking for concrete recommendations concerning academic technology upgrades and/or support, we wanted to broaden our scope to better understand how academic technologies are situated within teaching and learning ecologies across campus. We decided to create case studies with courses across disciplines and in a variety of classroom types (e.g. large lecture halls, flexible classrooms, labs, etc.). For each case study we triangulated our data through a student survey, classroom observations, and contextual inquiry with instructors. Our student survey focused on students’ expectations and preferences with academic technology and classroom design. For example, we asked likert scale questions such as: To what extent do the following learning tools impact your learning? Which technology/learning tools do you generally expect to be available in a given classroom? Each question gave students the option to rate the following classroom technologies: screens and projector, blackboards and whiteboards, monitors and TVs, clickers, classroom capture, and other (fill in the blank). We also gave students two open ended questions: How does the classroom technology/learning tools and space impact your learning? And, please draw and/or describe the technology and layout in your ideal classroom and explain your design choices.  Classroom observations were conducted by a member of our team and narrowed in on classroom dynamics (student to student and instructor to student interactions, as well as the ways in which classroom technology and/or the physical classroom design influenced or mediated such interactions) as they played out in real time. Lastly, contextual inquiries with instructors delved into a given instructor’s pedagogical goals, expectations of available classroom technologies, and any difficulties they have experienced. In conjunction with these case studies we drew from pre-existing data from a campus-wide survey and anonymized Faculty Course Questionnaire responses.  

Through this mixed method approach we were able to identify evolving themes that persist across campus, as well as distill concrete recommendations that our partner team could act on right away. For instance, one theme which emerged was that instructors often have to tailor their teaching to fit within the confines of the classroom they have been assigned– which becomes more burdensome when an instructor must teach the same course in two or three different classrooms across campus. This insight has implications for pedagogy, the ways in which instructors are assigned classrooms, and classroom design, but it remains relatively abstract and in need of further investigation. In contrast, a more granular insight came from the student survey. Students from across disciplines consistently highlighted access to classroom capture recordings of weekly lectures as highly beneficial to their learning. However, some are unable to access classroom recordings because the equipment is not physically available in small classrooms for instructors to take advantage of. 

How it Applies to Other Areas of Higher Education

Although the example we used here is related to academic technology, these principles can be applied to other areas of higher education. This approach could be used to improve the residence life experience of students.  A survey with Likert-scale questions could reveal a difference in sense of belonging among different demographics when analyzed.  To further explore what could help, the survey could include open-ended questions, or a focus group could be conducted later with the students.  The combination of methods allows researchers to delve deeper into a problem of practice, and for students to contribute more of their ideas and have the ability to prioritize them.  Two benefits of this approach are that: (1) it limits the researcher bias by creating a participatory approach, and 2) it encourages an iterative approach to designing an experience that works for all students.  For example, using a mixed methods approach would help the emerging needs of students during COVID-19 and allow higher education professionals to improve and re-assess if any new approaches are responsive to these needs. Regardless of the methods used, it is important for researchers to be reflexive about their own positionality and how that will inevitably influence the research. We will be expanding on the salience of reflexivity, along with participatory approaches and the assessment cycle in future posts.

This is the second blog of a four part blog series.
For the first blog click here.


References

Anderson, T., & Shattuck, J. (2012). Design-based research:A decade of progress in education research? Educational Researcher, 41(1), 16-25. doi:10.3102/0013189X11428813
Design-Based Research Collective. (2003). Design-based research: An emerging paradigm for educational inquiry. Educational Researcher, 32(1), 5-8.



Comments

  1. It used to be that applying for business cash for a smaller business was fairly straightforward. You'd pay a visit to your local friendly banker and talk about your business needs. You'd discuss what you needed and they would help with financing a business loan - yours, to be exact. Then, the financial crisis hit, and banks closed ranks and decided that loans for small business were too risky. Life and Business Coaching

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Looking: Using Proximity-Based Dating Apps like Grindr and Scruff for Participant Recruitment in Education and the Social Sciences

Nick Havey Looking (for research participants)? Consider “the Apps”  If you’re familiar with the HBO series Looking, which explores very white queer life in San Francisco, or have used a dating app in the last 10 years, you might know “looking” as a one-word interrogative that says a lot. It mostly is meant as a lazy (or efficient) way of asking another user if they’re interested in casual sex, but you might be “looking” for research participants! Having a baseline understanding of how dating apps work is prerequisite for using them for research purposes, as understanding terms like “looking” and app-based norms can help researchers navigate confusing virtual spaces and build trust and rapport with potential participants.  I have used proximity-based dating apps as recruitment sites for two different research projects. One considers the state of queer sexual education and how queer collegians are responding to sex educations that were not inclusive of their experiences or desi...

Black Thriving and Flourishing in Higher Education: The Imperative for a New Research Agenda

By Agyemang Amofa Prempeh & Dr. Sydney Freeman, Jr. Black people continue to face significant challenges in higher education. The Underrepresentation of Black students in colleges and universities and a lack of Black faculty and administrators highlight the pressing need for targeted initiatives to foster Black thriving and flourishing on campuses. While valuable research has been conducted on concepts such as Black joy and a sense of belonging, a comprehensive research agenda on Black thriving and flourishing in higher education is still lacking. A research agenda on Black thriving and flourishing will provide a comprehensive approach to correct the existing disparities faced by Black students, faculty, staff, and administrators at predominately White institutions (PWIs). Such a research agenda may also lead to developing strategies that, when implemented, facilitate higher education campuses where Black people can reach their fullest potential academically and professio...

A Focus on Rural Student Strengths: Dismantling Deficit Thinking and Language on Rurality in Higher Education

Ty C. McNamee, Assistant Professor, University of Mississippi In recent years, issues that for decades have plagued rural areas have been front-and-center in mainstream news outlets, such as high rates of poverty, declining population, fewer white-collar job opportunities, and comparatively lower levels of educational success. Such issues impact rural students’ higher education attainment, a topic that news media have appeared to notice with headlines such as: “ Colleges Discover the Rural Student ,” “ The Rural Higher-Education Crisis ,” and “ For Colleges, A Rural Reckoning .” Each piece highlighted rural youth holding some of the lowest college attainment rates in the country , compared to other geographic locales.   These pieces put rural students at the forefront of higher education conversations for the first time in decades. Unfortunately, much of the discussion surrounding rural Americans frames their lives and educational experiences as deficient. In turn, my co-research...

Studying Development in a Time of Death - Response Piece

Alex C. Lange, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Higher education, School of Education at Colorado State University  The night I began to outline the first chapter of my (original) dissertation [1] focused on transgender students’ self-authorship capacities, something nagged at my spirit. A cowlick that would not rest comfortably. A small splinter, not even a millimeter deep in my hand. As I stared at my poster board, trying to make sense of what bothered me, cold water splashed me in the face. I grabbed a sticky note and a metallic-colored marker and wrote down the phrase to make sure I would not run away from it:   What does it mean to study student development in a time of death, division, and disease?  When I wrote that note on March 25, 2020, I thought of the Black and Latina trans women and transfeminine people, who are exponentially subject to violence compared to their cisgender counterparts and their transmasculine and non-binary siblings. The trans communit...

On the Imperative of Differentiating Between Student Experiences, Learning, and Development in the Third Wave of Development Research

Antonio Duran, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Higher and Postsecondary Education, Division of Educational Leadership and Innovation, Arizona State University             The first time I took a college student development class was as an undergraduate student at New York University as they were piloting a course titled, “Who are You and Why are You Here?” I remember feelings of excitement as I learned about the fact that there were theories describing how college students explored formative questions of the self and of their identities as they moved through life, theories that would inform one’s work in higher education settings. This enthusiasm carried over as I took another student development theory class as a master’s student at Miami University where I deepened my understanding of the development journeys of those in college. And yet, as I got deeper into this research, the questions I had grew (probably a good sign of my own learning, and perhaps...