This document provides an overview of research methods and the typical structure of an architectural thesis. It discusses the characteristics of good research, different types of research such as descriptive and exploratory research, and the purposes of research. It also outlines the typical chapters in an architectural thesis, including the introduction chapter which states the problem and significance, and the related literature review chapter which discusses previous related studies and literature.
This document provides an overview of research methods and the typical structure of an architectural thesis. It discusses the characteristics of good research, different types of research such as descriptive and exploratory research, and the purposes of research. It also outlines the typical chapters in an architectural thesis, including the introduction chapter which states the problem and significance, and the related literature review chapter which discusses previous related studies and literature.
This document provides an overview of research methods and the typical structure of an architectural thesis. It discusses the characteristics of good research, different types of research such as descriptive and exploratory research, and the purposes of research. It also outlines the typical chapters in an architectural thesis, including the introduction chapter which states the problem and significance, and the related literature review chapter which discusses previous related studies and literature.
This document provides an overview of research methods and the typical structure of an architectural thesis. It discusses the characteristics of good research, different types of research such as descriptive and exploratory research, and the purposes of research. It also outlines the typical chapters in an architectural thesis, including the introduction chapter which states the problem and significance, and the related literature review chapter which discusses previous related studies and literature.
- Chapter I: INTRO - - (+) - Research: a process of - - understanding, better systematic inquiry that entails conclusions collection of data, - - (-) documentation and analysis - - personal interpretation/bias, - Research: evaluate validity of the sample audiences hypothesis - B. DESCRIPTIVE RESEACH - Research: a process of steps - - describe contributors or people (John W. Creswell) who take part In the study - (1) Question - (1) observational method (field - (2) Data observation) - (3) Answer - - naturalistic observation - Research: describe, predict and - - laboratory observation control (Earl Robert Babbie) - (2) case study method: study of - I. CHARACTERISTICS OF A GOOD individuals or a group of RESEARCH individuals - aims of a research: - - testable hypothesis and rare - (1) improve knowledge phenomena - (2) add to existing knowledge - (3) survey method - (3) prove/ disprove hypothesis - - questionnaires or interviews - characteristics of a good - - data research: - C. EXPLORATORY RESEARCH - (a) well-planned [pilot study – - - understanding over solution preliminary] - - only explores research questions - (b) targeted audience - - new problems - (c) well-defined objective - - (+) - (d) methodology - - adaptability - quantitative: facts and - - groundwork for future studies relationships - - (-) - qualitative: perceptions and - - qualitative and can be biased insight analysis - - not practical - (e) method of data collection - III. TYPES OF RESEARCH - (f) ethical consideration - A. APPLIED RESEARCH - (g) time-scaled - - solve practical problems - (h) reliability [triangulation – - - solutions over mere knowledge multiple methods of research] - B. BASIC RESEARCH - (i) referencing (FUNDAMENTAL OR PURE - II. PURPOSE OF RESEARCH RESEARCH) - (1) explore - - driven by curiosity - (2) describe - - expanding knowledge over - (3) explain inventions or creations - BASIC TYPES OF RESEARCH - - no commercial value - A. EXPLANATORY RESEARCH - C. CORRELATIONAL RESEARCH - - descriptive research approach - - relationship of 2 or more - - philosophy variables - - an experience - - no experimental manipulation - - subject experience and - D. DESCRIPTIVE RESEARCH motivations (STATISTICAL) - K. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH - - portrayal of characteristics - - statistical, mathematical - - everything that can be studied - - empirical investigation and counted - L. QUALITATIVE RESEARCH - - impact - - measure and analyze data - E. ETHNOGRAPHIC RESEARCH - - objective - - cultural investigation or - IV. INITIAL PARTS OF AN behavior ARCHITECTURAL THESIS - - understanding of natural events - A. CHAPTER 0 (INITIAL) or implications - (1) Abstract - F. EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH - - summary of the research - - controlled - - purpose of research - - predicting or controlling - (2) Acknowledgments phenomena - (3) Table of contents - - causality - (4) List of maps, charts, graphs - G. EXPLORATORY RESEARCH and tables - - problem is not clearly defined - (5) List of abbreviations and - H. GROUNDED THEORY RESEARCH acronyms - - problems in an environment - B. CHAPTER 1: and how people handle them - (1) HISTORICAL - - four stages: - (1A) BACKGROUND OF THE - (1) codes: anchors; gathers data PROBLEM - (2) concepts: collection; grouped - - history of problem data - - roots - (3) categories: similar concepts; - - previous studies and gaps theories - (1B) BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY - (4) theory: explanations; - - area being researched hypotheses - - current info - I. HISTORICAL RESEARCH - - relevant history - - analysis of past events - (2) STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM - - patterns - - describe issue - - add perspective - - context - - steps: - - what the research aims to - (1) research topic answer - (2) data - (3) SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY - (3) evaluation (RATIONALE) - (4) synthesis - - study’s contribution and who will - (5) exposition benefit - J. PHENOMOLOGICAL RESEARCH - - importance and potential - - books, research journals benefits - (2) SECONDARY SOURCES - (4) PURPOSE, GOALS AND - - thesis review, thesis critique OBJECTIVES - III. RELATED LITERATURE AND - - aim, purpose, intention RELATED STUDIES - - desired outcome - A. RELATED LITERATURE - (5) ASSUMPTIONS, LIMITATIONS, - - discussion of facts SCOPE OF THE STUDY - - published books, journals, etc. - - what, how, when, where - - review, outline, progress, - - limitations challenges - - criteria for data - - A. LOCAL: printed locally - (6) CONCEPTUAL/ THEORETICAL - - B. FOREIGN: printed overseas FRAMEWORK - B. RELATED STUDIES - - understanding of theories that - - unpublished material eg are relevant- dissertations, thesis, manuscripts - - relation to broader aspects - - related to study - - - actual experiments - CHAPTER II: RRL - - particular - I. INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVE - - internal review - A. Reasons - - A. LOCAL: conducted locally - (1) completed studies - - B. FOREIGN: conducted - (2) new insights overseas - (3) research strategies - IV. PRESENTING SOURCE MATERIAL - B. Provides: - (1) acknowledge author - (1) conceptual or theoretical - - not needed for common framework knowledge - (2) past research insights - (2) only essential discussion - (3) methods - - summarize - (4) past findings - (3) direct quotations include - - foreign literature after local context literature w/ in-text citations - (4) quotation marks, use if exact - II. TYPES OF RELATED LITERATURE words - (1) CONCEPTUAL LITERATURE - (5) paraphrase - - articles on books written by - (6) ellipsis authorities; what is good and - - (…) beginning bad about the problem - - (….) end - - references, books, journals, - (7) long quotations in new periodicals paragraph - (2) RESEARCH LITERATURE - (8) concept map - - published/unpublished reports - - organize points with key words of previous studies - V. WRITING A LITERATURE REVIEW - - thesis, dissertations, abstracts - (1) strengths and weaknesses - A. TYPES OF SOURCES - (2) critique - (1) PRIMARY SOURCES - (3) relevance - (4) arranged - - research strategy that outlines - (5) relationships the way in which research should - (6) from recent to early time be undertaken - (7) summarize - - broader strategy for research - (8) “direct quotation”/in-text approach - - Author-page system: in text - EXAMPLES OF METHODOLOGIES: citation - (1) Phenomenology: lived - VI. APA FORMAT experience - - American Psychological - (2) Ethnography: social world, Association culture, shared beliefs - - In-text: (author, date, page #) - (3) Participatory: participants as - - refer author in text (Acc. To Bal active researchers (2001),) - (4) Ethnomethodology: dialogue - - not (Bal, 2001) and body language to construct - - 3 authors: cite all or et. Al. world view - - 6 authors: et. Al - I. IMPORTANCE OF GOOD - - no author: (“How to Succeed”, METHODOLOGY SECTION 2010) - (1) method of data collection - - corporate author (NIMH, 2007) - (2) methodology - VII. EVALUATE RESEARCH - (3) different methods MATERIALS - (4) consistency - (1) Primary source - (5) appropriate - - works from people who directly - (6) anticipated problems and experienced the events steps for prevention - - journals, diaries, interviews - (7) sufficient information - (2) Secondary source - II. PROBLEMS TO AVOID - - written after the original event - (1) irrelevant detail - - textbooks, articles, biographies - (2) unnecessary explanation - A. CRITERIA FOR EVALUATING - (3) problem blindness BOOKS AND INTERNET SITES - (4) literature review - (1) qualification of author - (5) sources of information - (2) quality and objectivity - III. SAMPLING DESIGNS (unbiased) - - basis for survey selection sample - (3) appropriateness - - two types: - - (1) Non-probability sampling: no - CHAPTER III: METHODOLOGY basis for estimating probability - Method: - (2) Probability sampling: organizer - - tool used to answer research of inquiry; typical sample questions representative of a whole - - how you will collect your data - KINDS OF SAMPLING DESIGN: - Methodology: - A. RANDOM SAMPLING - - rationale - - purest form - - equal and known chance of selection - B. SYSTEMATIC SAMPLING - - new intervention strategies until - - often used there is sufficient understanding - - “Nth name selection technique” - - work or community situations - - required sample size; nth record - - direct and obvious relevance from selection - B. CASE STUDY DESIGN - C. STRATIFIED SAMPLING - - in depth study - - commonly used - - testing application of theory - - reduces sampling error - - contextual analysis - - stratum: subset of population w/ - - triangulation common characteristic - - add to knowledge - D. CONVENIENCE SAMPLING - - may be biased - - exploratory research - - not representative of larger - - sampled selected because of problem convenience - C. CAUSAL DESIGN - E. JUDGMENT SAMPLING - - if x then y - - common non-probability - - impact of change on norms method - - causal effect: nomothetic - - based on judgment perspective - - extension of convenience - - requires: sampling - (1) empirical association: - F. QUOTA SAMPLING independent and dependent - - non-probability equivalent of variable stratified sampling - (2) appropriate time order: varied - - stratum then proportion ind. variable before dep. - G. SNOWBALL SAMPLING - (3) nonspuriousness: relationship - - non-probability method bet two variables, w/o variation - - when desired sample - - not all relationships are causal characteristic is rare - - only inferred - - difficult/cost prohibitive - - hard to distinguish which is - IV. RESEARCH DESIGN cause - - overall strategy - D. CROSS-SECTIONAL DESIGN - - blueprint - - existing differences, no variation - - evidence addresses research - - inferences from existing problem differences - - steps: - - no time dimension - (1) identify research problem - - static results to time - (2) rrl - - no follow up - (3) hypothesis - E. DESCRIPTIVE DESIGN - (4) data - - who, what, when, where - (5) method of analysis - - current status of phenomena - TYPES OF RESEARCH DESIGN - - natural and unchanged - A. ACTION RESEARCH DESIGN environment - - interventionary strategy - - pre-cursor - - a cyclic process - - dependent on instrumentation - F. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN - K. MIXED-METHOD DESIGN - - predict what may occur - - examining research problem - - time priority - - narrative and non-textual - - experimental and control group information, numeric data: - - what causes something to supports each other occur - - triangulation, for broader and - - artificial, may not be complex research problems generalized - - stronger evidence - - costly - - more complete knowledge - G. EXPLORATORY DESIGN - L. OBSERVATIONAL DESIGN - - for researches with few or no - - comparison to control group earlier studies - - direct observation: people are - - gain insights aware of being watched - - new ideas and tentative - - unobtrusive measures: people hypotheses are not aware of being watched - - direction for future research - - low reliability - - insight but not definite - - may be biased, “see only what conclusions you want to see” - - flexible but unstructured - M. PHILOSOPHICAL DESIGN - H. HISTORICAL DESIGN - - broad approach to examining - - evidence from past research problem - - unobtrusive: research does not - - challenge deeply embedded affect results assumptions - - contextual background - - argumentation - - can be used repeatedly - - means of greater self- - I. LONGITUDINAL DESIGN understanding - - same sample over time, - - refine concepts repeated observations - N. SEQUENTIAL DESIGN - - patterns of change - - deliberate or staged approach - - analysis of duration of - - one stage followed by another phenomena until there is enough data - - prediction of future outcomes - - limitless number of subjects - - integrity maintenance is difficult - - sampling techniques: gather - - qualitative research data, statistical methods: analyze - - takes long data - - large sample size - - cohort: group of individuals - J. META-ANALYSIS DESIGN - - useful for exploratory studies - - clearly defined description of - - little effort needed objectives - O. SYSTEMATIC REVIEW - - precise definitions of variables - - research about well-defined and outcomes topic, usually from public policy - - well-reasoned justification or practice-based problem - - assessment of researcher bias - - evaluation of study’s - - for determining gaps in literature contributions - - distinct principles applied to the process of evaluating rrl - P. QUALITATIVE RESEARCH - - primarily exploratory research - - understanding for reasons - - insight - - trends in thought and opinions - - small sample size - - focus groups, in-depth interviews, review of documents - - inductive process - - more subjective - - in-depth information on few cases - - unstructured response options - - text based - - no statistical tests - - depends on skill of researcher - - less time on planning, more time on analysis - - less generalizable - Q. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH - - data quantification - - generalization of results - - quantify attitude and behavior - - surveys, structured interviews, observations, review of records - - deductive process - - more objective - - number based - - less in depth but broad - - fixed response options - - statistical tests - - depends on measurement device - - more time on planning, less time on analysis - - more generalizable