Abstract
In this paper, we suggest that in most cases there is no need for a lengthy description of methodological procedures in qualitative higher education journal articles. Doing so often adds no real value beyond creating a scientific façade, and the space this requires as a proportion of the total paper word limit could be better utilized for crafting a more critical contribution for the field. With the relatively short word limits allowed for articles, there is always a trade-off between what can be covered and what might be needed. However, our preference would be to have journals and authors use the space to develop a deeper conceptual or theoretical engagement with the topic of interest, rather than writing about interview protocols and how codes and themes were identified.
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Wald, N., Harland, T., & Daskon, C. (2024). Why we should rethink the method section in higher-education qualitative research. International Journal of Research and Method in Education, 47(1), 93–98. https://doi.org/10.1080/1743727X.2023.2165642
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