BR Lecture (Update)
BR Lecture (Update)
BR Lecture (Update)
Chapter 1
Business Research: a systematic + objective process of finding
(gathering) and analyzing data in order to help people or “managers”
make better decision.
Evaluation research
: a formal appraisal or evaluation (e.g. once a year)
1
(Review Chapter 1)
Skip Chapter 2
2
Chapter 3
Six stages / steps in Research Process (* exhibit 3.6 p.60)
3
5. Data Processing and Data Analysis (Chapter 19, 20-24)
5.1 data processing editing and coding data data entry
5.2 data analysis statistical analysis for questionnaire survey
qualitative analysis for interview
(or content analysis)
4
(Review Chapter 3)
Research Questions
Research Objectives
Research Hypotheses
- Speed of service is the important factor that influences service
quality of MK restaurant.
- Level of satisfaction of MK restaurant is “high”.
- There is a positive relationship between the modern atmosphere of
MK restaurant and the satisfaction level of teenagers.
- There is a difference in “satisfaction of MK restaurant” between
teenagers and working people.
- There is a difference in “satisfaction of MK restaurant” between
customers in different income groups.
5
Exploratory vs Descriptive vs Causal Research
The following objective belongs to which research above?
Skip Chapter 4
6
Chapter 5
Theory Building (theory explanation of facts or phenomena)
1. Observe reality = objects, people, events
(or Do literature review)
2. Create concepts = given names of objects, events
3. Create propositions = relationship bet. Concepts
4. Create a theory = relationship bet. Propositions / combination
of many propositions (or networks of
propositions)
(from min. abstract to max. abstract)
<tangible> <intangible>
Proposition Hypothesis
(relationship bet. Concepts) (relationship bet. Variables)
(deriving tested hypothesis
from the conceptual model)
Concepts Variables
(abstract words, things) (designing the
measurement of concepts
in the model)
7
Scientific method
: technique used to “analyze” empirical reality or evidence
: to confirm prior theories or disprove them and get the new theories
(knowledge)
literature review look for “concepts” “propositions”
develop “hypotheses” research design (method) data collection
data analysis conclusion (a new knowledge or theory)
Concepts = words
: abstract names of things (at abstract level) e.g. learning aids,
furniture, happiness etc.
Variables = words
: = Concepts/things that can be observed / experimented and have
different numerical values.
: = Concepts at empirical level e.g. power point, chair, smiling face
etc.
- Types of variable (based on function) dependent variable,
independent variable, intervening variable, moderating variable
8
5 types of Hypothesis: ***
• If-then If X increases, then Y also increases too.
• Directional The higher X, the higher Y.
(X is positively related to Y)
(There is a positive relationship between X and Y)
• Non-directional X is related to Y. (There is a relationship
between X and Y)
• Null There is “no relationship” between X and Y.
• Alternative There is a “positive relationship” between X and Y.
1. Deductive reasoning
: from general (abstract level) to specific conclusion
2. Inductive reasoning
: from specific (empirical) to general conclusion
9
(Review Chapter 5)
Ladder of Abstraction
- Terminator - Three; Movie; Entertainment
- Pantene; Shampoo; Consumer Product
- Activity; Tennis; Sport
10
(Extra Handout/Sheet)
Conceptual Model / Framework
= a model that theorizes a logical set of relationships among several
factors that explains the main concept under study. It is based on
“literature review” of previous and existing studies of others. It is the
basis on which the entire research project is based.
Independent Variables Dependent Variable
(-)
Class Size
Student Learning
(+)
Class
Atmosphere
??
??
11
Types of Variables
Independent Variable Dependent Variable
(Predictor Var.) (Criterion Var.)
Class size:
A. How many students in one class? Fill the number in the blank
_____ students (continuous variable can find “mean value”)
Interestin
g topic
discussed
12
Chapter 6
13
4. Pilot study = use small “sampling survey”, not rigorous
14
Qualitative Versus Quantitative Research
Qualitative Quantitative
15
(Review Chapter 6)
16
Chapter 7
(Overview)
*only p.159-169*
Secondary data
: data gathered – before the current research
– not for the purpose of the current needs of researcher.
Primary data
: data gathered at the current research and for the purpose of the
current need of researcher.
Data conversion
: changing “original” form of data to format suitable for current
research.
17
Secondary Data Vs Primary Data
- data vs information
18
Chapter 8
Survey (an “obtrusive” research method)
: method of primary data collection based on communication between
researcher and respondents (based on “asking questions” method)
Written questionnaire
- popular method, quick, accurate, inexpensive
- mostly for “descriptive research” measuring awareness, attitudes,
behaviors, opinions.
19
2.1 Respondent error
- non-response error not-at-home error, refusal
- response bias deliberate or unconscious
20
(Review Chapter 8)
Statement of attitude SA A N DA SD
1. Internet service at ABAC is of x x x x x
good quality.
2. Computer lab at ABAC Bangna is x x x x x
convenient.
3. Staff at computer lab is very x x x x x
helpful.
4. Operating hours of the lab is x x x x x
reasonable.
5. Fees at the lab is reasonable. x x x x x
Or
1. Internet service at ABAC: good quality 5 4 3 2 1 bad quality
2. Computer lab at ABAC BangNa: convenient 5 4 3 2 1 inconvenient
3. Staff at computer lab: helpful 5 4 3 2 1 unhelpful
4. Operating hours of the lab: reasonable 5 4 3 2 1 unreasonable
5. Fees at the lab: reasonable 5 4 3 2 1 unreasonable
21
Survey Bias or Error
1.If a researcher noticed that some security guards with higher authority tended to
refuse to answers the interviewer’s questions about ghost rumor on campus.
3. When a job applicant is asked by HR manager (during job interview) about how
long he or she intends to work for this company, the possible bias may come from
______ .
5. The question, “Do you come from a good family?, might suffer ____ .
8. Housewife respondents tend to agree with all proposed qualities of the new
product survey.
9. The researcher filled in the income level for some respondents who did not
write the answers on the questionnaire.
10. Bias from a hotel guest who was so upset with the room service and after that
he wrote a complaint on the questionnaire placed near the check-out counter and
rated the service quality of the hotel very negatively.
22
(Chapter 9)
Personal
Face-to-face (door-to-door)
Verbal interview
(Interview)
Mall intercept
Survey interview
Telephone Central
Location
telephone
interview
Written
(Questionnaire) Computer
Assisted Tele.
Sent by hand Interview
Sent by mail, email, fax
Not sent Computerized
(self-administered questionnaire) Voice
Activated
Tele.
Interview
Survey
Cross-sectional
Cohort Study
23
Chapter 9
Survey: is divided into 3 types (based on “method”)
1. Personal interview – door-to-door
(face-to-face) – mall intercept interview
(or high traffic area interviews)
3. Mail questionnaire
Advantages
1. Immediate feedback
2. Probing complex questions “Can you tell me more about…”
3. Longer period
4. Can collect more complete info.
5. Can show product, visual aids
6. High participation
Disadvantages
1. no anonymity between researcher and respondents
2. influence of the demographics of interviewer (interviewer bias)
3. interviewer cheating
4. cost
5. callback problem
24
Telephone interview (about 10 minutes up to 30 minutes)
: very good, popular now in case that researcher has a short time
Advantages
1. speed “CATI” = can collect, record, analyze data at the same time
2. cost
3. more impersonal (no face-to-face meeting)
4. cooperation
5. easier to get callback
Disadvantages
1. can’t use visual aids
2. not get good representatives samples
Advantages
1. lowest cost
2. respondents’ convenience
3. most impersonal respondents feel more relaxed/ using
standardized question
4. length no more than 6 pages / should “Pretest” (trial run) first
Disadvantage
1. low “response rate”
25
How to increase response rate
1. use a cover letter ***
2. monetary incentives ***
3. interesting questions
4. use follow-ups reminder postcard (** most common)
5. preliminary notification advance postcard
6. survey sponsorship e.g. Study conducted by University ??
7. other techniques: free postage, colorful questionnaire
26
(Review Chapter 9)
Response Rate =
100 x (No. of questionnaires returned and completed without bias)
(No. of questionnaires sent to eligible persons without problems)
Example
You mailed 1,000 questionnaires, 200 were returned to you as “wrong address”.
After 4 weeks, 600 were returned and completed, but 50% of those returned
contained acquiescence bias and extremity. What is the response rate of this
study?
Answer = 37.5%
2. Department of Public Health used its own budget to study about the usage of the
30-Baht healthcare policy from Thai citizens all over the country.
5. The survey that conducts the telephone interview without human interviewers.
6. The survey that allows data collection and data processing (keyboarding the
answers and coding) to occur simultaneously.
7. Right after the new campaign of drug problems was on air, the researchers used
the very short and simple survey questions to measure the awareness of target
respondents toward this campaign.
27
Chapter 10
(Overview)
(only p.236-244)*
* observer bias
* observer error
28
3. Participation Observation / Participant Observation
- observer “participates” in the situation, becomes a member (temporary)
- have interaction with subjects gain the first-hand knowledge.
- combination between direct observation + interviewing
5. Content Analysis
- study the message itself– main content
– characteristics of message
- used when analyzing message in media and advertisement
1. eye-tracking monitor
2. pupilometer are placed onto subjects’ body parts.
3. psychogalvanometer
4. voice pitch analyzer
29
(Review Chapter 10)
1. BTS would like to estimate the number of student passengers using its service
during the rush hours.
3. We can know that the current government aims to solve the poverty problems as
its top priority by investigating the government policies announced in the
Parliament Meeting.
4. A car company wants to determine the most popular radio stations listened by
its customers by checking at the “setting programs” from one to six radio-
programmed buttons of all cars parked at the “check-up service”.
30
Chapter 11
(Overview)
(only p.255-265)
Experiment
: the study of causal relationship between variables in the condition
controlled by research (experimenter and test units)
units of analysis = test units in the experiment
Constancy of condition
: a way to control errors by keeping conditions / situations the same in
experimental groups (only treatments that are not the same)
: if there is no constancy of condition, there will be “constant error”
31
Some types of “errors” in experiment
1. Constant error = varying conditions in experiment
2. Demand characteristics = situation hints/demands test units to
behave in particular way
(Guinea pigs = tested animals in the lab experiment e.g. rabbit, mouse, etc.)
32
(Review Chapter 11)
Experiment
1. To study the impact of lotion on the skin of women.
2. To investigate how music affects work performance of security
guards at a parking lot.
Example
Sending employees to training at Phuket Island seemed to result in
higher work morale. The least we can conclude about “out-of-the-
house training” and “morale” is that these two variables have
____.
33
Basic Issues in Experiment
The researcher would like to know if customers will order more food
when the restaurant is painted in bright colors. He records
monthly food sales before this experiment. Then he paints the
wall of restaurant in red and yellow colors. At the end of that
month, he records the monthly food sales plus drinks. In the
following months, he observes the amount of food sales and it
confirms his hypothesis.
34
Questionnaire Design (Ch.13-15)
Ch. 13 Level of Scale
Ch. 15 Two types of question - nominal
1. Open–ended question - ordinal
2. Fixed–alternative question - interval
2.1 Simple–dichotomy question - ratio
2.2 Determinant–choice question Criteria of measurement
- Reliability
2.3 Frequency–determinant question
- Validity
2.4 Checklist question - Sensitivity
2.5 Attitude rating scales question
- simple attitude scale
- category scale
- Likert scale (exhibit 14.2 p.313) measure
Ch. 14 - semantic differential scale “Attitude”
(exhibit 14.3 p.314)
- numerical scale (p.315)
- stapel scale (exhibit 14.5 p.317)
- graphic rating scale Happy Face Scale
(exhibit 14.6 p.318) Ladder Scale
2.6 Filter question
2.7 Ranking question
Four techniques to measure “attitude”
– Attitude Components > affective feeling
> cognitive belief, thought
> behavioral intention to do
35
Chapter 13
Measurement: a process of assigning “numbers” to objects or concepts
(≠ single measure)
36
Three Criteria for good Measurement
37
Important Notes
“When a scale is ‘reliable’, it does not need to be ‘valid’. But when the
scale is ‘valid’, it should be also ‘reliable’. Reliability is a necessary
condition of Validity.
38
Level of Scale can predict “what” statistical techniques can be used
39
(Additional for Chapter 13)
“Efficient Company”
A. An excellent student.
B. A student who graduates with G.P.A. more than 2.7.
C. A student who has a high concern on good health.
“Satisfaction”
“Brand Loyalty”
A. When a person likes one brand so much.
B. When a person would like to buy the same brand again.
40
Review Chapter 13
a) __ Yes __ No
e) How often have you visited any Pizza Restaurant in the past two
months?
f) Rank 1 to 3 for the following pizza brands that you like. 1 means
“like the most” and 3 means “ like the least”
__ Pizza Hut
__ Narai Pizzeria
41
Four Levels of Scale with Pre-coding
a) __ 1. Yes __ 2. No
d) is also interval scale (we can fill in from 0 up to 100, but 0 is not
absolute zero)
e) is ratio scale (we can fill in any number and 0 is absolute zero)
42
Validity and Sensitivity
To measure “gender”
43
Chapter 14
Attitude: enduring disposition toward something
1. affective component feeling / emotion
2. cognitive component thinking / thought / belief / awareness
3. behavioral component buying intention / behavior intention
expectation
44
Review Chapter 14 “Attitude”
- shopping time
- duration of shopping
- amount of money paid / shopping
- attitudes toward store
- response latency in buying perfume
- reasons for choosing a perfume
- marital status of shoppers
45
- Ranking technique
- Rating technique
- Sorting technique
- Choice technique
__ Toyota __ Mitsubishi
__ Honda __ Nissan
2. Rank 1 to 4 to the car that you like “1” means like the least and “4”
means like the most.
__ Toyota __ Mitsubishi
__ Honda __ Nissan
46
(Additional Review for Chapter 14-15)
- Filter q. - Checklist q.
- Simple dichotomy - Simple attitude scale
- Determinant choice - Category scale
- Frequency determinant - Likert scale
- Semantic differential - Numerical scale
- Graphic rating scale - Stapel scale
B. Agree 5 4 3 2 1 Disagree
C. -2 -1 Agree +1 +2
F. SA A N D SD
- I support this plan __ __ __ __ __
- I like this plan __ __ __ __ __
47
J. ____ coffee ___ tea ____ soft drink ___ fruit juice
(you can choose more than one beverage)
R. ____ never
____ rarely
____ sometimes
____ often
____ always
48
Chapter 15
Questionnaire: - instrument to collect data in survey research
- should have grammar and good common sense
1. Open-ended question
2. Fixed-alternative question
49
Order bias: answer of earlier question influences answer of later question
50
Review Chapter 15
Questionnaire
51
H. What is your opinion about McDonald’s?
(Please check at one space)
SA A N D SD
- Food is delicious: __ __ __ __ __
- Service is friendly: __ __ __ __ __
I.
- Food: delicious ___: ___: ___: ___: ___: ___: ___: not delicious
- Service: friendly___: ___: ___: ___: ___: ___: ___: unfriendly
- Area: dirty ___: ___: ___: ___: ___: ___: ___: clean
J.
(Please circle one number)
- Food: delicious 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 not delicious
- Service: unfriendly 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 friendly
K.
- Food: -3 -2 -1 delicious +1 +2 +3
L.
+3
+2
+1
- Service: friendly
-1
-2
-3
M.
(Please mark on the line)
- Food: delicious -------------------------------- not delicious
- Service: friendly -------------------------------- unfriendly
52
O. How is the food at McDonald’s? (Point at any step of ladder)
Delicious
Not delicious
1. More safety
2. More reasonable price
3. Better after-sales service
4. Save energy
53
“Order Bias” Vs “Against Funnel Technique”
Do you smoke?
___ Yes ___ No
54
Research Problem
Questionnaire
OR
55
(Review Chapter 13-15)
Note: This is just an example for Review on Final (on Chapter 13-15). Some
questions are wrong or biased.
8. How much do you pay for the monthly mobile phone bill?
_____________
9. What is/are problems you find from the current mobile phone you are
using?
____ not have many functions ____ not look modern
____ not enough service center ____ not appropriate size
____ too big size ____ no advanced technology
____ other, ________________
56
10. What is your attitude toward the following characteristics of the mobile
phone you are using now?
10.1 Price: very reasonable 5 4 3 2 1 very unreasonable
10.2 Design: modern 5 4 3 2 1 out-of-date
10.3 Technology: high advanced 5 4 3 2 1 low advanced
10.4 Promotion: satisfied 5 4 3 2 1 dissatisfied
13. How often do you go to the service center of your current mobile phone?
____ less than 2 times a month ___ 3-4 times a month
____ 5-6 times a month ___ more than 6 times a month
14. What is the most appropriate price of the “good mobile phone” in your
opinion? (in Baht)
____ less than 4,000 ____ 4,000 – 8,000
____ 8,001 – 10,000 ____ more than 10,001
16. In case you have a chance to buy a new mobile phone, you will buy
____________ brand.
17. What is the first word came to your mind when you think about the most
wanted mobile phone?
_____________________________
19. What is the chance of you switching to the other brand of mobile phone?
Switch sure
57
Chapter 16
Sampling: method of choosing some respondents from a total group of
respondents to survey and draw a conclusion to that total population.
- sample: some items that researcher chooses to study sampling
units (each unit to be sampled)
- population: a total + complete group of items sharing common
characteristics. (population vs universe) population elements
- census: a national survey or a study of everybody in a population
- we can do sampling by using “sampling frame” or “working
population” to draw a sampling unit from
58
5. determine appropriate sample size – from calculation “n”
from past, similar studies
from pilot studies or exploratory
research
6. do the actual sampling
7. start conducting the field work = data collection (in the filed)
59
Formula to calculate a sample size (n)
2
ZS
1. n=
E
Z 2 pq
2. n= 2
E
( N − n)
3. Adjusted “n” = x n (N = population size)
( N − 1)
60
(Review Chapter 16)
1. Sample ≠ ________.
2. Sampling ≠ _________ .
3. Researchers usually collect data from the _______ to get results, then
they will generalize or infer those results to explain the __________ .
61
Sampling Method
A. Quota sampling E. Convenience sampling
B. Stratified sampling F. Simple random sampling
C. Judgment sampling G. Cluster sampling
D. Snowball sampling H. Systematic sampling
1. There are only six “pediatric” medical doctors in Thailand. They are
specialized in the heart surgery. The best way to sample these experts is
by ________.
4. Researcher decides to interview 100 customers who are below the age
of 30 and 50 customers who are above 30 years old.
5. BBC news reporter interviewed the first person they met on the street
in front of his TV station.
62
Quota Sampling versus Stratified Sampling
63
Chapter 17
Sample Size
Ex.
In the first study, the E was 4, the sample size used was 2,000. What
should be the sample size of the second study if the E becomes 8?
= E from 4 to be 8 double, so use the above principle to get n
= n of the second study is 1/4 (2,000) or equals to 500.
64
Example of Sample Size Calculation
=
10
= 553 .19
Z 2 pq
n=
E2
(1.96 ) 2 ( 0.6 )( 0.4 )
=
( 0.035 ) 2
= 753
3. Based on the above problem, if the entire working people are 10,000
people, what should be the more appropriate sample size?
Adjusted
n=
( N − n) x 10,000 − 753
n = x 753
( N − 1) 10,000 − 1
= 724
65
(Review Chapter 17)
A. From a study of 800 students, it was found that 60% of them liked
with the atmosphere of the new campus.
B. From a study of 800 students, it can predict that more than 50% of
students liked the atmosphere of the new campus.
1. ____ is used to determine the most favorite coffee from a list of four
brands of coffee.
4. ____ is the square root of variance and commonly used for measure
of dispersion.
66
Overview of the Stages in Data Analysis (Chapter 19-25)
After Data Collection
Editing
and verification
Error checking
Data entry
(keyboarding)
Data analysis
Conclusions
Recommendation
Report
67
Chapter 19
Data Processing:
68
Test tabulation: post-coding answer of the open-ended question by
selecting some questionnaire (e.g. 20% of total) to do preliminary
coding and come up with some code categories. Then using such code
categories to do coding for the rest of questionnaires (e.g. the rest 80%)
no missing answer/code
Two basic rules of coding
1. All codes must be “exhaustive” = all answers must have codes.
2. All codes must be “mutually exclusive” or non-overlapping no
overlap. - the same answer must have one code
- no overlapping case.
Re-coding: change some codes to better fit the final results adding or
collapsing (Data Transformation)
Error checking: data cleaning stage = the last step of coding before
researchers go to do data entry (or after data entry)
69
Review Chapter 19
Editing
Ex. 1
Q1. Do you have a PC at your house?
___ Yes
___ No
Ex. 2
Q1. Do you have a PC at your house?
Ex. 3
Q1. What is your monthly income?
I don’t know
--- or
I have no idea
Don’t know!
70
Test Tabulation
Sample size = 30
.
.
15. Why don’t you like Rungsit Campus?
71
Or: Collapsing from many groups into “two groups”
__ 3. 21 – 24 __ 4. 25 – 30
__ 5. more than 30
72
Recoding Case for “Reverse Items**”
(more scores like cooking)
(5) (4) (3) (2) (1)
(Likert Scale) SA A N D SD
Their answers are: 26, 20, 38, 55, 19, 277, 42, 35, 22, 50
334 = 33.4
10
73
Chapter 20
Hypothesis Testing:
Data Analysis Univariate
Bivariate
Multivariate
Level of Data Descriptive Inferential Hypothesis Testing
Statistics Statistics Difference Correlation
Ratio Central tendency Standard error - T-test -Pearson’s “r”
Interval - Mean ** of mean - Z-test or Correlation
- Mode - ANOVA coefficient ®
- Median
Dispersion - Regression
- Range
- Variance, S.D
Ordinal - Median Standard error -Chi-square -
Nominal - Mode ** of proportion test
- Percentage
- Counting
Frequency
Note: For descriptive statistics of “Nominal Data”, all can be used
(mode, percentage, counting) except “Median” and “Dispersion”. X
74
Moderator variable: another variable when added could change the
original relationship between two variables under investigation
Third variable: another variable when added will not change the
original relationship
75
(Additional for Chapter 20)
76
A. Do you like shopping? by gender
Male Female Total
Yes 10 45 55 n = 100
No 40 5 45
Total 50 50 100 M F
(50) (50)
= quota sampling
Conclusion: Female like shopping more than Male. correct??
Conclusion: Male like shopping more than Female. (67% > 57%)
77
Elaboration Analysis
78
Ranking to get final rank results
Mean = Σ x = 32 = 3.2
n 10
79
Chapter 21
Statistical Analysis
1. Descriptive Analysis: counting, percentage, central tendency
(mean, mode, median), and dispersion (range, variance, S.D)
Ch.17, 20
2. Inferential Analysis:
(2.1) Estimating population parameters (standard error of mean
and standard error of proportion) Ch.17
Parametric Statistics: statistics used for interval and ratio scale and it
assumes that population has a normal distribution
80
Non-parametric Statistics: statistics-used for nominal and ordinal scale
and there is no assumption about normal distribution of the population
81
Hypothesis Testing
Z-test: used when n is large (n > 30), S.D. may or may not be given
3. Z-test of a proportion
To compare “proportion” with hypothetical value in the null
hypothesis
82
Steps to test hypothesis
one-tailed other cases
1. Set Ho and Ha two-tailed Ho = (equal), Ha ≠ (always this one case)
2. Calculate “test statistics” value look in Hand-out about “SPSS output”
3. Find “critical value” (from the table)
4. Compare test statistics and critical values
5. If computed value is more than table value we reject Ho
(test statistics) (critical value)
X −µ X −µ
T value = or
S/ n S
X
X −µ
Z value =
S/ n
∑( O − E )
2
O2
χ value
2
=
E
or ∑
−n
E
p -π
Z value =
pq
n
83
Example of Statistical Analysis and Hypothesis (EGV)
1. Univariate AnalysisHypothesis about “one” variable (one question)
- Chi-square test for goodness of fit choice data
q.1 Attitude on seeing movies at theatre __ like __ dislike
84
85
Example of Hypothesis : Univariate Analysis (One variable)
Choice
Attitude on seeing movies at theatre __ like __ dislike
data
Method of buying ticket __ over counter
__ by phone
__ via internet
Speed of ticket service fast __: __: __: __: __: slow
Scale 5 4 3 2 1
data
Efficiency of security very reliable 5 4 3 2 1 very unreliable
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
86
Example of Hypothesis : Bivariate Analysis (Two variables)
- The faster the speed of ticket service, the higher efficiency of security.
(q.8.1 q.9.1)
87
Test of Difference Between “more than two groups”: e.g. age groups
88
Chapter 25
Written Report Format
1. Title page
2. Letter of Transmitted - researcher client
3. Letter of Authorization - client researcher
4. Table of Contents
5. Executive Summary:- Objectives
(should be written last) Results (in numbers, percentage)
Conclusions
Recommendations
focus group
in-depth interview
6. Body or Main Part of Report *** secondary data
observation
- Introduction: - Background data from literature review and
exploratory study
- Research Problem (or Problem Statement): -
Research Objectives + hypotheses + research
questions and Conceptual Framework/Model
- Methodology: - Research Design exploratory? descriptive? or
causal study?
- Data Collection Method / Technique
- Sampling Design
(-Scale and Measurement) level & type of scale
- Field Work (skip)
- Data Analysis (skip)
89
- Limitations of Study (skip)
- Results or Findings – Summary of results (from questionnaire)
Results in tables – frequency tables
contingency tables
Oral Report
90
The End
91