
The extra good thing about this book is that it has little tidbits about how to go about research that experienced researchers may have been told, but have never read or don't have a source to cite for it.
Second, for a more advanced design book, consult Foundations of behavioral research (4th edition) by Kerlinger and Lee. This book is particularly good because it problems and hypotheses from a technical and sometimes mathematical standpoint, sometimes even using set theory. For those of us who need to talk in terms of theory and who aren't philosophically-minded, this might be a good approach to take.
If you find yourself faced with a phenomenon that you have particular difficulty in measuing, you might consider this next book. Fundamentals of measurement in applied research by UIC's own Theresa Thorkildsen is what she refers to as "a cookbook for creative measurement" and is a very practical book for innovative research designs.
And finally, I'm really excited to explore Barbara Lovitts' Making the Implicit Explicit, which is a handbook to dissertation writing. It has whole chapters dedicated to writing different kinds of dissertations, such as a Philosophy Dissertation or an English Dissertation or a Science Dissertation. This book has been recommended to me multiple times by different people, so I'm going to check it out as soon as possible.
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