Overview
Mixed methods analysis fails when qualitative and quantitative findings are reported in separate sections that never intersect — producing two parallel studies that happen to share a topic rather than an integrated investigation where each data stream enriches the other. The unique value of mixed methods is the integration: findings converge (both streams support the same conclusion), diverge (they contradict each other, generating a new question), or expand (one stream explains the mechanism behind the other stream's finding). Parallel reporting without integration produces none of this value.
The Mixed Methods Analysis Framework applies a systematic integration protocol — identifying convergence, divergence, and expansion between data streams — and producing integrated findings that use each stream's strengths to compensate for the other's limitations.