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Quantitative Research

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views2 pages

Quantitative Research

Uploaded by

chirikokurumi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
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QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH

Chapter I
Background of the study
- The first section of the paper and establishes the context underlying the research. The
background explains to the reader where your research journey started, why you got
interested in the topic, and how you developed the research question that you will later
specify.
Statement of the Problem
- A statement of the problem is used in research work as a claim that outlines the
problem addressed by a study. The statement of the problem briefly addresses the
question: What is the problem that the research will address? What are the goals of a
statement of the problem?
Scope and Delimitation
- The scope of a study describes how deeply the research area will be investigated in the
work and establishes the limitations that the investigation will operate. Delimitations are
the parameters set by the researcher to determine what to include and what to leave
out of the research study. For example, let's say a researcher wants to study the impact
of mobile phones on behavior patterns of elementary school children. However, it is not
possible for the researcher to cover every aspect of the topic. So the scope will have to
be narrowed down to a certain section of the target population.
Significance of the Study
- The significance of a study is its importance. It refers to the contribution(s) to and impact
of the study on a research field. The significance also signals who benefits from the
research findings and how. Start by explaining the problem that your study aimed to
solve then discuss why it is important to find ways to address this issue.

Chapter II
Review of Related Literature
- A literature review is a survey of scholarly sources on a specific topic. It provides an
overview of current knowledge, allowing you to identify relevant theories, methods, and
gaps in the existing research that you can later apply to your paper, thesis, or
dissertation topic. In an RRL, you talk about knowledge and findings from existing
literature relevant to your topic.
Review of Related Studies
- An RRS is a review of all the studies around a particular research problem. An RRS helps
justify the need for studying the problem in the first place. Studies involve actual
experiments and/or data collection and analysis. Therefore, an RRS only includes
empirical studies, experiments, and research findings.

Chapter III
METHODOLOGY
Research Design
- The research design refers to the overall strategy and analytical approach that you have
chosen in order to integrate, in a coherent and logical way, the different components of
the study, thus ensuring that the research problem will be thoroughly investigated.
Research Instrument
- A research instrument is a tool used to collect, measure, and analyze data related to
your subject. Research instruments can be tests, surveys, scales, questionnaires, or even
checklists.
Data Analysis Procedure
- Data Analysis is the process of systematically applying statistical and/or logical
techniques to describe and illustrate, condense and recap, and evaluate data.
Data Collection
- Data collection is the process of gathering and measuring information on variables of
interest, in an established systematic fashion that enables one to answer stated research
questions, test hypotheses, and evaluate outcomes.

Chapter IV
Results
- The results section of the research paper is where you report the findings of your study
based upon the information gathered as a result of the methodology [or methodologies]
you applied. The results section should simply state the findings, without bias or
interpretation, and arranged in a logical sequence.
Discussion
- The discussion section is one of the final parts of a research paper, in which an author
describes, analyzes, and interprets their findings. They explain the significance of those
results and tie everything back to the research question(s).

Chapter V
Summary
- A well-written summary should cover three main points: why the research was done,
what happened in the experiment, and what conclusions the author drew. Why was the
research done? The first section of your summary should include all the important
background information and context.
Conclusion
- The conclusion of a research paper is where you wrap up your ideas and leave the
reader with a strong final impression. It has several key goals: Restate the problem
statement addressed in the paper. Summarize your overall arguments or findings.
Recommendation
- Recommendations in research are suggestions/solutions that address certain problems
based on your study results. Discuss the importance of your research study and the
difference it makes. Lists specific actions to be taken with regard to policy, practice,
theory, or subsequent research.

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