“…Detailed data collection response approaches to overcome online transition obstacles had global reach, and were often contextualized by country, such as being specific to India (Banerjee et al, 2022), Indonesia (Mulyono, 2021), Iran (Yoosefi Lebni, 2023), Malasia (Chia, 2020), or Mexico (Cisneros-Cohernour, 2023). Some scholarship focused broadly on the transition to qualitative data collection (Coffey & Kanai, 2023;Frömming et al, 2023;Newman et al, 2021;Perry, 2023;Rahman et al, 2023;Roberts et al, 2021;Tremblay et al, 2021;Vindrola-Padros et al, 2022), while other articles narrowed to specific aspects of online data collection sources such as embodied mapping (Rieger et al, 2022;Vaughan et al, 2022;Zaragocin & Caretta, 2021), focus groups (Lathen & Laestadius, 2021), interviews (Chia et al, 2022;Heiselberg & Stępińska, 2023;Opara et al, 2023;Tomás & Bidet, 2023), online journals (Rudrum et al, 2022), or researcher reflexivity (Greene & Park, 2021). In short, the methods literature that emerged from the pandemic provided focused, contextual, and mode-specific guidance, with far less available in terms of overall considerations based on lived experiences.…”