Disseminating the Findings of your Research Study
It is very important to find appropriate ways to disseminate the findings of your research – projects that sit on office or library shelves and are seldom or never read represent a tragic loss to the profession.
A key dimension of research dissemination is to be actively involved with potential audiences for your work, and help them to understand what it means to them. These dialogues also represent invaluable learning experiences for researchers, in terms of developing new ideas and appreciating the methodological limitations of their work. An inspiring example of how to do this can be found in:
Granek, L., & Nakash, O. (2016). The impact of qualitative research on the “real world” knowledge translation as education, policy, clinical training, and clinical practice. Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 56(4), 414–435.
A further key dimension of research dissemination lies in the act of writing. There are a number of challenges associated with writing counselling and psychotherapy research papers, such as the need to adhere to journal formats, and the need (sometimes) to weave personal reflective writing into a predominantly third-person standard academic style. The items in the following sections explore these challenges from a variety of perspectives.
Suggestions for becoming a more effective academic writer
Sources of advice on how to ease the pain of writing:
Gioia, D. (2019). Gioia’s rules of the game. Journal of Management Inquiry, 28(1), 113–115.
Greenhalgh, T. (2019). Twitter women’s tips on academic writing: a female response to Gioia’s rules of the game. Journal of Management Inquiry, 28(4), 484–487.
Roulston, K. (2019). Learning how to write successfully from academic writers. The Qualitative Report, 24(7), 1778–1781.
Writing tips from the student centre, University of Berkeley
'How to Write'
The transition from being a therapist to being a researcher
Finlay, L. (2020). How to write a journal article: Top tips for the novice writer. European Journal for Qualitative Research in Psychotherapy, 10, 28–40.
McBeath, A., Bager-Charleson, S., & Abarbanel, A. (2019). Therapists and academic writing: “Once upon a time psychotherapy practitioners and researchers were the same people”. European Journal for Qualitative Research in Psychotherapy, 9, 103–116.
McPherson, A. (2020). Dissertation to published article: A journey from shame to sharing. European Journal for Qualitative Research in Psychotherapy, 10, 41–52.
Journal article style requirements of the American Psychological Association (including a section on writing quantitative papers)
Writing qualitative reports
Jonsen, K., Fendt, J., & Point, S. (2018). Convincing qualitative research: What constitutes persuasive writing? Organizational Research Methods, 21(1), 30–67.
Ponterotto, J.G. & Grieger, I. (2007). Effectively communicating qualitative research. The Counseling Psychologist, 35, 404–430.
Smith, L., Rosenzweig, L. & Schmidt, M. (2010). Best practices in the reporting of participatory action research: embracing both the forest and the trees. The Counseling Psychologist, 38, 1115–1138.
Staller, K.M. & Krumer-Nevo, M. (2013). Successful qualitative articles: A tentative list of cautionary advice. Qualitative Social Work, 12, 247–253.
Clark, A.M. & Thompson, D.R. (2016). Five tips for writing qualitative research in high-impact journals: moving from #BMJnoQual. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 15, 1–3
Gustafson, D. L., Parsons, J. E., & Gillingham, B. (2019). Writing to transgress: Knowledge production in feminist participatory action research. Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung/Forum: Qualitative Social Research, 20. DOI: 10.17169/fqs-20.2.3164
Caulley, D.N. (2008). Making qualitative reports less boring: the techniques of writing creative nonfiction. Qualitative Inquiry, 14, 424–449.