Roots of a Clinical Intuition in Counseling: a Qualitative Approach
Roots of a Clinical Intuition in Counseling: a Qualitative Approach
Daley, Lauren Pasquarella
The book Roots of a Clinical Intuition in Counseling: a Qualitative Approach was written by author Daley, Lauren Pasquarella Here you can read free online of Roots of a Clinical Intuition in Counseling: a Qualitative Approach book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Roots of a Clinical Intuition in Counseling: a Qualitative Approach a good or bad book?
What reading level is Roots of a Clinical Intuition in Counseling: a Qualitative Approach book?
To quickly assess the difficulty of the text, read a short excerpt:
2002: Kirk & Miller. 1986: Lincoln & Denzin. 2000). Depending on the epistemology used by the researcher, these methods of insuring rigor can vary (Angen. 2000: Giorgi. 2002; Lincoln & Denzin. 2000) but ultimately are there to try and bring voice to the participants' stories and that the writing was not solely the author's biased interpretation (Richardson, 2000). Instead of using the terms reliability and validity, qualitative researchers discuss rigor in different terms like trustworthiness (...whether we as readers can trust the researcher's interpretations of their participants' voices) and credibility (whether we as readers find the researchers' conclusions reasonable) (Angen. 2000). To help readers trust and find results credible, different researchers are going to take different approaches (Giorgi. 2002; Denzin & Lincoln, 1994a). For example, some authors recommend triangulating data, which is a method aimed at using different ways to locate the data by 62 coming at it from multiple points of view, to increase trustworthiness and credibility in a study (Denzin.
User Reviews: