ABSTRACT

This volume provides a comprehensive and in-depth handbook of qualitative research in the field of communication disorders. It introduces and illustrates the wide range of qualitative paradigms that have been used in recent years to investigate various aspects of communication disorders.

The first part of the Handbook introduces in some detail the concept of qualitative research and its application to communication disorders, and describes the main qualitative research approaches. The contributions are forward-looking rather than merely giving an overview of their topic. The second part illustrates these approaches through a series of case studies of different communication disorders using qualitative methods of research.

This Handbook is an essential resource for senior undergraduate and graduate students, researchers and practitioners, in communication disorders and related fields.

part |170 pages

Qualitative Approaches to Research

chapter |14 pages

Case Studies and Their Frameworks

Positivist, Interpretive, and Emancipatory

chapter |15 pages

Ethnography

chapter |14 pages

Conversation Analysis

chapter |19 pages

Phenomenology

chapter |17 pages

Pragmatics as Interaction

part |158 pages

Case Studies in Qualitative Research

chapter |12 pages

“Life Is Hard, But I'm Trying”

Understanding the Lives of the Families Speech-Language Pathologists Serve

chapter |26 pages

Intercultural Health Communication

Why Qualitative Methods Matter

chapter |14 pages

It Was 20 Years Ago Today

What We Can Learn from a 20-Year Case Study

chapter |14 pages

Using Thematic Network Analysis

An Example Using Interview Data from Parents of Children Who Use AAC

chapter |18 pages

Interactional Phonetics

Background and Clinical Application

part |28 pages

Epilogue

chapter |14 pages

Aiming for Explication

Reflections on the Qualitative Research Process