References
Foster, C. (2023). Methodological pragmatism in educational research: From qualitative-quantitative to exploratory-confirmatory distinctions. International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 1-16. https://doi.org/10.1080/1743727x.2023.2210063
Foster (2023) argues the unnecessary divide between qualitative and quantitative research methodologies hinders educational research because they are more similar than not. Foster further holds the implementation of methodological pragmatism and discussions of research in terms of exploratory and confirmatory research would increase rigor and collaboration. Foster establishes qualitative and quantitative methodologies create division within educational research, which may also cause researchers to miss out on critical discussions and information within their own research. He argues both qualitative and quantitative data use different analysis techniques, but have analogous issues of defining constants, context, and measurement, reduce data down to its basic form, stripping it of content, context, detail and nuance, and must provide analytic interpretation of data. Foster also points out researcher overreliance on one method over the other might call educational research into question because researchers may not read all literature on their topic or miss out on opportunities to further their knowledge. Foster presents methodological pragmatism as the solution to this problem. Foster argues that methodological pragmatism is an approach which helps researchers solve the logical problem of what methodological tools to use. The end point could be any combination of qualitative, quantitative or mixed-method approaches. Because methodological pragmatism provides more tools and requires researchers to understand their problem fully and positions researchers to better examine their own biases and assumptions, it leads to more range of methodology used in educational research and higher quality research. Foster finally shows that exploratory (source of ideas and discussions) vs confirmatory research (tests hypotheses and conjectures) is a better way to situate discussions of educational research because they emphasize why a researcher is exploring a problem and allows access to the full array of research methods available. Foster also addresses ethical questions of methodological pragmatism including the perception that the practice is about getting results at any cost by countering that no avenue which presents a risk of harm should be used. Ultimately, Foster concludes methodological pragmatism frees researchers to make progress in their research.
Foster’s argument is very well organized. His entire focus of the article remains on expanding the horizons of researchers and providing researchers with accessibility He uses very clear and illustrative examples to make his point establishing the similarities of qualitative and quantitative research. Foster is also up front about the perception of pragmatism as having less intellectual rigor than other approaches. He counters that argument with underlining the rigor having greater access to all methodologies and may force researchers to consider approaches they otherwise would not because they are inhibited by their own ingrained biases toward methodology, theoretical, or epistemological stances.
As a doctoral student preparing to complete a dissertation process, this discussion was helpful to read. I recognize that I come with biases from my previous learning experiences regarding the nature of qualitative work vs quantitative research. Foster’s work did illuminate the many similarities – positive and negative – between both methodologies. I don’t know where I stand in relationship to methodological pragmatism, but I do like the ideas of exploratory vs. conformational research and the way a researcher really needs to be aware of their own biases and theoretical, ontological, and epistemological assumptions. The idea that a method of interpretation is available, regardless of the problem at hand is exciting. I am interested in further exploration of how qualitative and quantitative work can inform each other to provide a better description of a problem in educational research. This article helped me think and resituate the ideas of qualitative and quantitative research that came up during the discussion on assigned readings. I realized I privilege qualitative research in my own mind, first because I am not fan of statistics, and second because I am biased against quantitative research because I didn’t appreciate that even statistics happen in a context and can provide a story.