RM and IPR Unit I
RM and IPR Unit I
AND IPR
Subject Code:P20CCT101
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
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Meaning
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Objectives of Research
The purpose of research is to discover answers through the application of
scientific procedures.
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Characteristics of Research
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SCIENTIFIC METHOD
‘Science’ refers to the body of systematic and organised
knowledge which makes use of scientific method to acquire
knowledge in a particular field of enquiry.
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BASIC POSTULATES
IN SCIENTIFIC METHOD
It relies on empirical evidence.
It utilizes relevant concepts.
It is committed to only objective
considerations.
It presupposes ethical neutrality.
It results into probabilistic predictions.
The methodology is made known.
Aims at formulating scientific theories.
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CRITERIA OF A GOOD RESEARCH
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QUALITIES OF A GOOD RESEARCH
• Systematic
• Logical
• Empirical
• Replicable
• Creative
• Use of multiple methods
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NEED FOR RESEARCH
♪ EXPLORATION
♪ DESCRIBE
♪ DIAGNOSE
♪ HYPOTHESIS
♪ INDUCTIONS AND DEDUCTIONS
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SCOPE / SIGNIFICANCE OF RESEARCH
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Provides the basis for all government policies in
our economic system.
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PROBLEMS IN RESEARCH
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Insufficient interaction between university
research departments and business
establishments
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Poor library management and functioning
Ignorance
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ROLE OF RESEARCH
IN
DECISION-MAKING
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TYPES OF RESEARCH
Descriptive vs Analytical Research
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Applied vs Fundamental Research
Applied Research or Action Research is carried
out to find solution to a real life problem requiring an
action or policy decision.
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Quantitative vs Qualitative Research
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Conceptual vs Empirical Research
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Some other types of research..
One-time Research – Research confined to a single
time period.
Longitudinal Research – Research carried on over
several time periods.
Diagnostic Research – It is also called clinical research
which aims at identifying the causes of a problem,
frequency with which it occurs and the possible
solutions for it.
Exploratory Research – It is the preliminary study of
an unfamiliar problem, about which the researcher has
little or no knowledge. It is aimed to gain familiarity
with the problem, to generate new ideas or to make a
precise formulation of the problem. Hence it is also
known as formulative research.
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Experimental Research – It is designed to assess the
effect of one particular variable on a phenomenon by
keeping the other variables constant or controlled.
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RESEARCH PROCESS
FF
Review the literature
FF
Review
Concepts Analyse
Design
And Collect Data
Research Interpret
Define theories Formulate Data (Test
(Including and
Research hypothesis (Execution) Hypothesis
Sample report
Problem if any)
Review Design)
F F
Previous
I Research III IV V
findings VI VII
II
F
F Feed Back
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FF Feed Forward 27
STEP-1
DEFINITION
OF THE
RESEARCH PROBLEM
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RESEARCH PROBLEM
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HOW DO WE KNOW WE HAVE A
RESEARCH PROBLEM?
Customer complaints
Conversation with company employees
Observation of inappropriate behaviour or
conditions in the firm
Deviation from the business plan
Success of the firm’s competitor’s
Relevant reading of published material (trends,
regulations)
Company records and reports.
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The first step in the research process – definition
of the problem involves two activities:
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IDENTIFICATION / SELECTION OF THE
RESEARCH PROBLEM
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SOURCES OF PROBLEMS
Reading
Academic Experience
Daily Experience
Exposure to Field Situations
Consultations
Brainstorming
Research
Intuition
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CRITERIA OF SELECTION
The selection of one appropriate researchable
problem out of the identified problems requires
evaluation of those alternatives against certain
criteria. They are:
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Problem definition or Problem statement is a clear,
precise and succinct statement of the question or issue
that is to be investigated with the goal of finding an
answer or solution.
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PROCESS INVOLVED IN DEFINING THE
PROBLEM
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UNDERSTANDING THE NATURE Of
PROBLEM
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DEVELOPING IDEAS THROUGH
DISCUSSIONS
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CRITERIA OF A GOOD RESEARCH PROBLEM
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Defining Problem, Results in
Clear Cut Research Objectives..
Symptom Detection
Analysis of
the Situation
Problem Definition
Statement of
Research Objectives
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ESTABLISHMENT OF RESEARCH
OBJECTIVES
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ESTABLISHMENT OF RESEARCH
OBJECTIVES
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STEP-2
REVIEW
OF
LITERATURE
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REVIEW OF LITERATURE
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REVIEW OF LITERATURE
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PURPOSE OF REVIEW
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How to conduct the Literature
Survey?
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SOURCES OF LITERATURE
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RECORDING THE LITERATURE
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SOURCE CARDS
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SOURCE CARDS
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How to write the review?
There are several ways of presenting the ideas of
others within the body of the paper.
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Points to be kept in mind while
reviewing literature..
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STEP-3
FORMULATION
OF
HYPOTHESIS
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HYPOTHESIS
For example;
The variable SEX/GENDER has 2 attributes - Male
and Female.
The variable AGREEMENT has 5 attributes –
Strongly Agree, Agree, Neutral, Disagree, Strongly
Disagree.
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Types of Variables
Explanatory vs Extraneous Variable
The variables selected for analysis are called explanatory
variables and all other variables that are not related to the purpose
of the study but may affect the dependant variable are extraneous.
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HYPOTHESIS
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HYPOTHESIS
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PROBLEM (VS) HYPOTHESIS
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CHARACTERISTICS OF HYPOTHESIS
Continuity of research.
Descriptive Hypothesis
These are assumptions that describe the characteristics
(such as size, form or distribution) of a variable. The
variable may be an object, person, organisation, situation
or event.
Examples:
“Public enterprises are more amenable for centralized
planning”.
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Relational Hypothesis [Explanatory Hypothesis]
These are assumptions that describe the relationship
between two variables. The relationship suggested may be
positive, negative or causal relationship.
Examples:
“Families with higher incomes spend more for recreation”.
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Null Hypothesis
Example:
H0: There is no relationship between a family’s income and
expenditure on recreation.
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Alternate Hypothesis
It is the hypothesis that describes the researcher’s
prediction that, there exist a relationship between two
variables or it is the opposite of null hypothesis. It is
represented as HA or H1.
Example:
HA: There is a definite relationship between family’s
income and expenditure on recreation.
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FORMS OF RELATIONSHIPS
NON-DIRECTIONAL Vs DIRECTIONAL
• If X changes
• (increases
• decreases)
• then
• Y will ______
• (increase or
• decrease)
• a causal link
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DIRECTION OF RELATIONSHIP
• If X increases, Y increases
• A POSITIVE relationship
• If X increase, Y decreases
• A NEGATIVE or INVERSE
relationship
• As X changes, Y does NOT change...>
• No Change...>NO RELATIONSHIP
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NON-DIRECTIONAL HYPOTHESES
- the weakest form
• There Is
• a relationship
• between X & Y
– non-causal
– correlational
statement
– X…..Y
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CORRELATIONAL RELATIONSHIP
Positive correlation
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• When the values of 60
• TWO variables 50 Hr
w o rk
• “go together” 40
E a rn in
• or 30 gs
• values on X & Y 20
• change in SAME 10
• DIRECTION 0
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Negative Correlation
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FUNCTIONS OR ROLE OF HYPOTHESIS
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