ABSTRACT

This is an accessible, concise introduction to phenomenological research in education and social sciences. Mark Vagle outlines the key principles for conducting this research from leading contemporary practitioners, such as van Manen, Giorgi, and Dahlberg. He builds on their work by introducing his post-intentional phenomenology, which incorporates elements of post-structural thinking into traditional methods. Vagle provides readers with methodological tools to build their own phenomenological study, addressing such issues as data gathering, validity, and writing. Replete with exercises for students, case studies, resources for further research, and examples of completed phenomenological studies, this brief book affords the instructor an easy entrée into introducing phenomenology into courses on qualitative research, social theory, or educational research.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part |3 pages

Section 1 Exploring Philosophical Concepts and Notions in Phenomenology

chapter 1|7 pages

What is a Phenomenon in Phenomenology?

chapter 3|8 pages

The Importance of Prepositions

part |3 pages

Section 2 Phenomenological Research Approaches

part |2 pages

Section 3 A Post-Intentional Approach to Phenomenological Research

chapter 8|17 pages

Post-Intentional Methodology

chapter |5 pages

Epilogue

chapter |4 pages

Appendix Additional Resources

chapter |3 pages

Notes

chapter |7 pages

References

chapter |4 pages

Index

chapter |1 pages

About the Author