RESEARCH
RESEARCH
LECTURE
YOU GOTTA FOCUS!
SYSTEMATIC
NATURE OF RESEARCH AND INQUIRY • The study follows a logical sequence
How can we get the answers to your questions? VALID
Inquiry
• An act of asking questions to acquire information • Whatever one can conclude on the basis of the findings
• Both aims to expand a body of knowledge is correct and can be verified by others too.
Research EMPIRICAL
• A systematized process of finding concrete solutions to • The data in the research is based upon hard evidences
a problem from real life experiences.
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PRAGMATIC
• Philosophy: “We need to look to many possibilities for
collecting and analysing data”
• Main Concept: Use of quantitative and qualitative data QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
in expressing research findings
• exploring and understanding the meaning individuals
THE RESEARCH PROCESS or groups ascribed to a social or human problem
CONCEPTUALIZATION PHASE
QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH
topic is identified
• testing objective theories by examining the relationship
• not-too-broad but not-to-specific concept to allow
among variables
flexibility and further exploration
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UNIT 2
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH AND ITS IMPORTANCE IN
DAILY LIFE
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
• curiosity leads a person to conduct qualitative research
to discover the mysteries of human behavior
• reflection of the desire to have the inquiry based on
realities and viewpoints of individuals
• designed to understand the behavior and perception of
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH the target audience
• results are primarily descriptive
ETHNOGRAPHIC RESEARCH
• systematic process that involves observing, exploring,
QUANTI VERSUS QUALI RESEARCH documenting and analyzing the ways and cultural
beliefs of a group of people most especially the
indigenous or minority group
PHENOMENOLOGICAL
• systematic study of the lived experiences of individuals
• main objective: understand a person’s experience and
what makes it meaningful
• a study on how an individual or a group of people
experience a phenomenon
CASE STUDY
• in-depth analysis of a single entity or a small group
• often used in sociology, nursing and psychology
CORNERSTONES OF QUALITATIVE RESEARCH • researcher seeks to understand and answer the
NARRATIVE question why such situation occurred
• researcher studies the lives of individuals and asks one
or more individuals to provide stories about their lives NARRATIVE ANALYSIS
• focuses on a specific story as the subject matter of
PHENOMENOLOGICAL inquiry
• researcher describes the lived experiences of • determines how individuals make sense of a particular
individuals about a phenomenon event in their lives
• how individuals make sense of their world by
ETHNOGRAPHY constructing, reconstructing and narrating stories
• researcher studies the shared patterns of behavior,
language and actions of an intact cultural group in a GROUNDED THEORY
natural setting over a prolonged period of time
• systematic collection of data through observation and
interview to generate a comprehensive explanation of
CASE STUDIES
a phenomenon grounded in reality
• researcher develops and in-depth analysis of a case,
• seeks to understand actions by discovering the
often a program, event, activity, process of one or more
problem and the person’s behavior on resolving a
individuals
problem
GROUNDED THEORY CHARACTERISTICS OF A QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
• researcher derives a general, abstract theory of a HUMAN UNDERSTANDING AND INTERPRETATION
process, action or interaction grounded in the views of • we are able to get a view of a person’s perspective
the participants
FLEXIBILITY
• it has the capacity to adjust on what is being learned
CONTEXTUALIZATION
• researcher should have a grasp of the situation
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DISADVANTAGES RESEARCH
• research quality depends on the skills of the researcher • From journals
and can be influenced by personal judgment and • 1st priority
biases
• validity and reliability of the data GRAY
• time-consuming and data may be difficult to interpret • From other sources
• its open-ended questions obtain a lot of data which • Not priority (mostly secondary)
makes it hard for the researcher to sort and transcribe
LITERATURE IDENTIFIERS
RESEARCH PROCESS ISBN
CONCEPTUAL PHASE • International Standard Book Number
• The preparation and conceptualizing of topics and • Internationally regulated system of identifying the book
problems take place in this phase by number.
• Publishers purchase a bunch of ISBN at one time and
EMPIRICAL PHASE then assign them to publications.
• The gathering of data and testing of the hypothesis
take place in this phase
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RESEARCH CAPSULE
• BLUEPRINT of a research.
• Summarizes research details and attributes for planning
research.
DOI
• Direct Object Identifier
• Help identify specific journalarticles.
• Frequently used for scientificarticles.
PMID
• PubMED IDs
• Strings of numbers that identify the records in the
STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
PubMED Database.
• It is a concise description of the issues that need to be
addressed by the researcher.
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TYPES OF LITERATURE
RESEARCH LITERATURE
• is based on research findings.
• Its data is supported by evidences.
WHY WE DO BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY EXAMPLE:
• To gain knowledge about your topic ▪ journal articles, literature reviews, research
• For the readers to become familiar with your study. abstracts
• To provide support for your ongoing research.
• To learn more about the previous works of the NON-RESEARCH REFERENCES
researchers. • these are not based on research findings.
• They provide insights and may broaden understanding
1ST PARAGRAPH regarding a topic.
• It must contain a partial review of your research topic. • They have limited use and do not serve the purpose of
The review must consist of your own personal review literature review since they are not based on research
and a review taken from a reference but it must be findings.
PARAPHRASED. EXAMPLE:
▪ literary or artistic works, opinion articles,
brochures, magazines, anecdotes
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• The researcher explains what the results mean or what are usually subjected to sanctions like suspension and
are the plausible reason why the results are the way even expulsion from the institution.
they are. • There are available online tools which help identify
• How are findings can be used practically may also be plagiarism.
added.
• The researcher is also in the best position to UNIT V
enumerate the weaknesses or limitations that the study UNDERSTANDING DATA AND WAYS TO
may have and how he considers them in interpreting SYSTEMATICALLY COLLECT DATA
the findings. SAMPLING
POPULATION
REFERENCES SECTION
• The list of journal articles, books and other documents • entire aggregation of the case where a researcher is
that were referenced in the written research interested
manuscript. • often, it is not feasible to include all members of the
• It follows a certain standard format, like the following: population in a research
▪ APA (American Psychological Association) Style
▪ The Chicago Manual of Style SAMPLING
▪ MLA (Modern Language Association) Style • process of selecting the sample or a portion of the
population
TIPS ON READING RESEARCH REPORTS
• Make research reading a habit. SAMPLE
• Highlight significant information and do not hesitate to • subset of the population elements
write notes on photocopies of research reports.
• Initially scan the report then read them more slowly REPRESENTATIVENESS
next time.
• Ensure that you understand what you read. • how well the sample represents the population
• Do not be discouraged by technical terms or statistical
data. REPRESENTATIVE SAMPLE
• Translate research jargons into more familiar terms. • one whose key characteristics closely approximate
• Do not underestimate the value of your sense while those of the
reading. • population
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SNOWBALL SAMPLING
• “Referral System” GROUNDED THEORY
• initial sample members are asked to refer other people • developed in 1967 by Glaser and Strauss
who meet the criteria required by the researcher
• people who share the same traits or experiences know ETHNOGRAPHY
each • aims to describe and interpret behaviour of a certain
• other useful for participants who are hard to find culture
▪ N= Population
▪ n= desired sample
▪ k= sampling interval
CLUSTER SAMPLING
• Multi-stage Sampling
• useful when the population is large and widely
dispersed
• sampling is done in several stages
SAMPLING ERROR
• Particularly for quantitative research, this results to
overrepresentation or underrepresentation of some
segment of the population
• smaller sample size = bigger chance of sampling errors
PHENOMENOLOGY
• focuses on lived experiences
HISTORICAL RESEARCH
• focuses on past events
• main challenge: determination of the authenticity of the
historical evidences