Module
Module
Research as a Process
• a process we undertake with the goal of generating knowledge about what we believe
the world is
• a process of organized and systematic enquiry and investigation that increases
knowledge
• a thorough and rigorous at all stages of the research process
• it addresses a specific problem or issue (the research problem)
2. APPLIED RESEARCH
• researches that focus to finding solutions to existing problems in the society
o new knowledge acquired has specific commercial objectives:
productions, procedures, or services
o answer the specific questions aimed at solving practical problems
Basic research in engineering is by definition concerned with the discovery and systematic
conceptual structuring of knowledge. Engineers develop, design, produce or construct, and
operate devices, structures, machines, and systems of economic and societal value.
The qualities to be a good researcher can be broken down into more specific core competencies:
• Communication skills • Organizational skills
• Intellectual skills • Information technology skills
• Independence & critical thinking • PERSEVERANCE & HARD WORK
• Motivation
1.5 | UNIVERSITY RESEARCH AGENDA
1. Disaster Risk Reduction Management: The reduction of the damage caused by natural
hazards like earthquakes, floods, droughts, and cyclones, through an ethic of prevention.
2. Sustainable Development: Meeting the needs of the present without compromising the
ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
3. Poverty Alleviation: The lifting of people out of poverty through both economic and
humanitarian means.
4. Local Knowledge: The collections of facts and relates to the entire system of concepts,
beliefs, and perceptions that people hold about the world around them. This includes the
way people observe and measure their surroundings, how they solve problems and
validate new information. It includes the processes whereby knowledge is generated,
stored, applied, and transmitted to others.
5. Disciplinal and Multi-Disciplinal Studies: The generation of knowledge based on the
different school disciplines or programs and integration of the same among disciplines or
programs.
6. Institutional Studies: The knowledge generation along broad category of work done in the
university to inform campus decision-making and planning in areas such as but not limited
to admissions, financial aid, curriculum assessment, enrollment management, staffing,
student life, finance, facilities, athletics, and alumni relations.
Here are a few criteria that could help you in your evaluation:
• Authority
• What are the author’s credentials and affiliation?
• Who publishes the information?
• Accuracy
• Based on what you already know about the topics or from reading other sources, does the
information seem credible?
• Does the author cite other sources in a reference list or bibliography, to support the
information presented?
• Scope
• Is the source at an appropriate comprehension or research level?
2. SCHOLARY SOURCES
• are written by experts in a particular field, with the expectation the audience has
a certain level of pre-understanding
• journal articles, conference proceedings, theses/dissertations, and others
• in general, these sources:
o are written by subject experts
o are written for experts (researchers, post-secondary students, and so on)
o have extensive citations and references to their source information
o include figures, tables, charts, or graphs that generally focus on results
2. SECONDARY SOURCES
• review the existing literature, and often summarize, interpret, or evaluate the results
found in primary resources
• not as current as primary resources but are often useful for finding introductory
material
o books
o review articles in journals
o standards
o news reports
o handbooks
o manuals
PEER REVIEW
• an article is reviewed by other experts in the field before publication
• helps ensure that a published work is a high quality, accurate, informative, and with
reduced bias
• also called refereed publications
• how to tell if a publication is peer-reviewed:
o use peer review filters
o use the publisher’s website
2. UTILITY MODELS
• a registrable utility model is any technical solution to a problem in any field of
human activity which is new and industrially applicable
• may or may not have an inventive step
• a Utility Model (UM) allows the right holder to prevent others from commercially
using the registered UM without his authorization, provided that the UM is new
based on the Registrability Report
• compared with invention patents, it is relatively inexpensive, faster to obtain, and
with less stringent patentability requirements.
• the provisions regarding "Non- Patentable Inventions" as provided for in Part 2, Rule
202 of the Regulations for Patents shall apply, mutatis mutandis, to non-registrable
utility models:
o Discoveries, scientific theories and mathematical methods;
o Schemes, rules and methods of performing mental acts, playing games or
doing business, and programs for computers;
o Methods for treatment of the human or animal body by surgery or therapy
and diagnostic methods practiced on the human or animal body. This
provision shall not apply to products and composition for use in any of these
methods;
o Plant varieties or animal breeds or essentially biological process for the
production of plants or animals. This provision shall not apply to micro-
organisms and non-biological and microbiological processes.
o Provisions under this subsection shall not preclude Congress to consider the
enactment of a law providing sui generis protection of plant varieties and
animal breeds and a system of community intellectual rights protection:
o Aesthetic creations; and
o Anything which is contrary to public order or morality.
• a utility model is entitled to seven (7) years of protection from the date of filing,
with no possibility of renewal.
3 | RESEARCH CONCEPTUALIZATION
PLAGIARISM
• occurs when a writer duplicates another writer’s language or ideas and then calls the work
his or her own
• copyright laws protect writer’s words as their legal property
6 | RESEARCH PROPOSAL WRITING: THE TITLE
6.2 | TITLE
• a good proposal has a good title
• first thing that help the reader begin to understand the nature of work
• good titles identify the field/s of research and indicate the kind of results to be obtained
• avoid too long, too general, or vague titles
7 | RESEARCH PROPOSAL WRITING: THE INTRODUCTION
2. Introduce the specific topic of your research and explain why it is important.
• move towards presenting the specific topic of your research
• bring in some statistics to show the importance of the topic or the seriousness of the
problem
• highlight the possible benefits from solving the problem, emphasize the positive
3. Mention past attempts to solve the research problem or to answer the research question.
• indicate any earlier relevant research and clarify how your research differs from
those attempts
Your objectives should be stated using action verbs that are specific enough to be measured, for
example: to compare, to calculate, to assess, to determine, to verify, to calculate, to describe, to
explain, etc.
2. BY PUBLICATION
• order your sources by publication chronology, then, only if the order demonstrates
a more important trend
4. METHODOLOGICAL
• focuses on the methods utilized by the researcher
• a methodological scope will influence ether the types of documents in the review
or the way in which these documents are discussed