Announcements

Survey Practice – 2026 Special Issue on Mixed Methods – Call for Papers

08/19/2025

Mixed Methods Research: Deepening Our Knowledge Through Integrated Designs

Submission deadline: November 14, 2025    

Respond to the Call for Papers

Survey Practice invites papers for a cross-disciplinary special issue on mixed methods research, including exploratory, explanatory, and concurrent designs. The emphasis of this special issue is on articles that demonstrate how a mixed methods approach better informed the researcher’s understanding of the research question compared to a quantitative-only or qualitative-only design. The special issue will be published in 2026.

In that spirit, we are particularly interested in papers that focus on the methodological aspects of research design (e.g., types of designs, sampling procedures, approaches to data analysis) and how a mixed methods approach was critical to advancing methodological issues (e.g., questionnaire design, mode considerations, nonresponse, usability testing, pilot studies, experimental design) as well as an understanding of the research question under investigation.

We also seek submissions that discuss the utilization of an integrated mixed methods research design to study substantive issues including, but not limited, to:

Guest editors:

Margaret R. Roller and Doug Currivan

__________________________________________________

More information:

The deadline for manuscript submissions to this 2026 special issue on mixed methods is November 14, 2025. First round of decisions will be made by December 19, 2025, the deadline for the first round of revisions is March 6, 2026, the deadline for the second round of revisions is May 27, 2026, and authors of manuscripts accepted for final publication will be notified by July 31, 2026. The Survey Practice “For Authors” page provides general instructions and information on the review process, and link to submit. Note that full article submissions should not exceed 2,500 words of text (excluding the abstract, footnotes, figures, tables, references, and appendices). In-brief note submissions should be short (not to exceed 1,200 words), with a description of a practical problem, potential solutions, and the effectiveness of the solutions, to the extent known.

To identify your article as a candidate for this special issue, please include  “Mixed Methods Special Issue” before the title and in your cover letter.

If you have any questions, please contact Margaret Roller at rmr@rollerresearch.com and/or Doug Currivan at dcurrivan@rti.org, with a copy to surveypracticejournal@gmail.com