Introduction To Educational Research
Introduction To Educational Research
Overview
Four sections of this presentation
An overview of the scientific method and
educational research
The classification of types of research by
purpose
The classification of types of research by
method
Examples of types of research
Ways of Knowing
Five ways we can know something
Personal experience
Tradition
Experts and authorities
Logic
Inductive
Deductive
Educational Research
Educational Research
Steps for conducting educational research
Selection of a problem
Use of specific research procedures to design and
collect data
Analysis of data
Statement of conclusions based on the results of the
data analyses
Obj. 1.7
Educational Research
Difficulties conducting educational research
Involves human beings and the complexities associated
with them
Difficulties generalizing from specific studies
Problems when imposing sufficient controls to conduct
research in educational settings
Complications when observing in educational settings
Indirect measurement of the variables being studied
Obj. 1.8
Introduction to research
Research
Quantitative
Defined as
called
classified
Systematic inquiry
uses
Scientific method
Steps
Definition of a problem
Formulation of hypotheses
Collection of data
Statement of conclusions
Can be
Method
Descriptive/survey
Correlational research
Causal-comparative
Experimental
Single-subject
or
Purpose
Can be
Basic
Applied
Evaluation
R&D
Action research
Qualitative
called
Narrative
Ethnographic
Classifying Research
Two helpful ways to view research
Purpose
The degree of direct applicability of research to
educational practices and settings
Method
The overall strategies followed to collect and
analyze data
Obj. 3.3
Obj.
3.4
Obj. 3.4
Obj. 3.4
Obj. 3.4
Obj. 3.4
Obj.
3.4
Research Methods
Obj. 3.5
Quantitative Methods
General purpose
Collect and analyze data to explain, predict, or control
phenomena of interest
Describe current conditions
Investigate relationships
Study causes and effects
Quantitative Methods
Characteristics
Numerical data
Use of formally stated hypotheses and procedures
Use of controls to minimize the effects of factors that
could interfere with the outcome of the research
Large numbers of participating subjects
An objective, detached researcher
Use of pencil and paper tests, questionnaires, etc.
Quantitative Methods
Five basic designs
Descriptive
Correlational
Causal-comparative
Experimental
Single subject
Obj. 3.7
Quantitative Designs
Descriptive
Purpose to describe the current status of a variable of
interest to the researcher
Examples
How many students drop out of school in Louisiana?
What are the attitudes of parents, students, and teachers
concerning an extended school year?
What kinds of activities typically occur in sixth-grade art
classes, and how frequently does each occur?
To what extent are elementary teachers using math
manipulatives?
Quantitative Designs
Correlational
Purpose to ascertain the extent to which two or more
variables are statistically related
Examples
What is the relationship between ACT scores and freshman grades?
Is a teachers sense of efficacy related to his/her effectiveness?
Do significant relationships exist between the types of activities
used in math classrooms and student achievement?
Quantitative Designs
Causal-comparative
Purpose to explore relationships among variables that
cannot be actively manipulated or controlled by the
researcher
Examples
What is the effect of part-time employment on the achievement of
high school students?
What characteristics differentiate students who drop out from those
who do not?
What is the effect of attending a boarding school on student
motivation?
Quantitative Designs
Experimental
Purpose to establish cause and effect relationships
between variables
Examples
What is the effect of teaching with (1) a co-operative
groups strategy or (2) a traditional lecture approach on
students achievement?
What is the effect of teaching with manipulatives vs. a
traditional algorithm approach on students test scores?
Quantitative Designs
Single subject
Purpose to investigate cause and effect relationships
with samples of one (1)
Examples
What is the effect of a behavior modification program on
Johns conduct in class?
What is the effect of a behavioral training program on
Joans ability to complete her performance tasks?
Qualitative Methods
General purpose
To probe deeply into the research setting to obtain in-depth
understandings about the way things are, why they are like that,
and how participants perceive them
The need to create a sustained, in-depth, in context study that
allows the researcher to uncover subtle, less overt personal
understandings
Qualitative Methods
Characteristics
There are no hypotheses guiding the researcher, rather a
general issue known as the foreshadowed problem suggests the
general issues of concern
Problems and methods tend to evolve over the course of the
study as understanding of the research context and participants
deepens
Phenomena are examined as they exist in a natural context, and
they are viewed from the participants perspectives
There are few participants involved in the study
Data analysis is interpretative in nature
The researcher interacts extensively with the participants
Qualitative Methods
Obj. 3.9
Qualitative Designs
Narrative
Purpose focus on studying a single person and
gathering data through the collection of stories that are
used to construct a narrative about the individuals
experience and the meanings he/she attributes to them
Examples
What are the experiences of a veteran teacher who has
been moved into an administrative position in her school?
What does inclusion mean to a special needs child who
is placed in a regular education classroom?
Qualitative Designs
Ethnography
Purpose to obtain an understanding of the shared
beliefs and practices of a particular group or culture
Examples
What is the nature of the problems teachers encounter
when they begin using a constructivist approach to
instruction after having taught using a very traditional
approach for ten years?
Why does a sense of failure permeate everything about
this particular high school?
Research design
The research design is the master plan
specifying the methods and procedures
for collecting and analyzing the needed
information.
The function of a research design is to
ensure that the evidence obtained enables
us to answer the initial question as
unambiguously as possible.
(David de Vaus: Research Design in Social
Research, 2001)