Assignment 01
Assignment 01
Assignment 01
17BQA00340
Assignment No.1
Unit No. 1 – 4
Educational Research (837)
Tutor: Respected Mrs. Salma Ayyub
Submitted By:
Name: Muhammad Ibrahim
F/Name: Rasheed
Reg. No: 17BQA00340
Roll Number: BO639202
Semester: Spring 2023
Programme: M.Ed. One Year Science Education
District: Quetta, Balochistan
In deductive reasoning you must know the premises before you can
reach a conclusion, but in inductive reasoning you reach a conclusion by
observing examples and generalizing from the examples to the whole
class or category. To be absolutely certain of an inductive conclusion, the
investigator must observe all examples. This is known as perfect
induction.
Imperfect induction is a system in which you observe a sample of a group
and infer from the sample what is characteristic of the entire group. An
example of a conclusion based on imperfect induction is the present
thinking concerning the physical characteristics of very intelligent
children.
While we can debate the idea of action research, there are people who
are action researchers, and they use the idea of action research to
develop principles and theories to guide their practice. Action research,
then, refers to an organization of principles that guide action researchers
as they act on shared beliefs, commitments, and expectations in their
inquiry.
Reflection and the Process of Action Research
When an individual engages in reflection on their actions or experiences,
it is typically for the purpose of better understanding those experiences,
or the consequences of those actions to improve related action and
experiences in the future. Reflection in this way develops knowledge
around these actions and experiences to help us better regulate those
actions in the future. The reflective process generates new knowledge
regularly for classroom teachers and informs their classroom actions.
Unfortunately, the knowledge generated by educators through the
reflective process is not always prioritized among the other sources of
knowledge educators are expected to utilize in the classroom. Educators
are expected to draw upon formal types of knowledge, such as textbooks,
content standards, teaching standards, district curriculum and behavioral
programs, etc., to gain new knowledge and make decisions in the
classroom. While these forms of knowledge are important, the reflective
knowledge that educators generate through their pedagogy is the
amalgamation of these types of knowledge enacted in the classroom.
Therefore, reflective knowledge is uniquely developed based on the
action and implementation of an educator’s pedagogy in the classroom.
Action research offers a way to formalize the knowledge generated by
educators so that it can be utilized and disseminated throughout the
teaching profession.
Each of the methods used to collect descriptive data have their own
strengths and limitations. The following are some of the strengths and
limitations of descriptive research studies in general.
Strengths:
Limitations: