Basic Research Method 1 & 2
Basic Research Method 1 & 2
For classification of research we shall look from four dimension
s
1. The purpose of doing research;
2. The intended uses of research;
3. How it treats time i.e. the time dimension in research; and
4. The research (data collection) techniques used in it.
1) Research Classification by The purpose of doing research;
A) Exploratory or Formulative
You may be exploring new topic or issue in order to learn about it. If
the issue was new or the researcher has written little on it, you began at
the beginning. This is called exploratory research.
Exploratory research may be the first stage in a sequence of studies.
A researcher may need to know enough to design
and execute a second, more systematic as well as extensive study.
When a researcher has a limited amount of experience with or
knowledge about a research issue, exploratory research is useful
preliminary step that helps ensure that a more rigorous, more
conclusive future study will not begin with an inadequate
understanding of the nature of the management problem.
The findings discovered through exploratory research would the
researchers to emphasize learning more about the particulars of the
findings in subsequent conclusive studies.
Goals of Exploratory Research
1) Become familiar with the basic facts, setting, and concerns;
2) Develop well grounded picture of the situation;
3) Develop tentative theories, generate new ideas, conjectures,
or hypotheses;
4) Determine the feasibility of conducting the study;
5) Formulate questions &
refine issues for more systematic inquiry
6) Develop techniques and a sense of direction for future researc
h.
B) Descriptive Research
Descriptive research presents a picture of the specific
details of a situation, social setting, or relationship. The
major purpose of descriptive research, as the term implies,
is to describe characteristics of a population or
phenomenon. Descriptive research seeks to determine the
answers to who, what, when, where, and how questions.
Labor Force Surveys, Population Census, and Educational
Census are examples of such research.
Descriptive study offers to the researcher a profile or
description of relevant aspects of the phenomena of
interest. Look at the class in research methods and try to
give its profile ¬ the characteristics of the students. When
we start to look at the relationship of the variables, then it
may help in diagnosis analysis.
Goals of Descriptive Research
1) Describe the situation in terms of its characteristics
2) Give a verbal or numerical picture (%) of the situation;
3) Present background information;
4) Create a set of categories or classify the information;
5) Clarify sequence, set of stages; and
6) Focus on `who,' `what,' `when,' `where,' and `how' but n
ot why?
C) Explanatory Research
When we encounter an issue that is already known and
have a description of it, we might begin to wonder why
things are the way they are.
The desire to know "why," to explain, is the purpose of
explanatory research. It builds on exploratory and
descriptive research and goes on to identify the reasons
for something that occurs. Explanatory research looks
for causes and reasons.
For example, a descriptive research may discover that
10 percent of the parents abuse their children, whereas
the explanatory researcher is more interested in learning
why parents abuse their children
Goals of Explanatory Research
1) Explain things not just reporting. Why? Elaborate and enrich a theo
ry's explanation.
2) Determine which of several explanations is best.
3) Determine the accuracy of the theory;
4) Test a theory's predictions or principle.
5) Advance knowledge about underlying process.
6) Build and elaborate a theory;
7) Elaborate and enrich a theory's predictions or principle.
8) Extend a theory or principle to new areas and new topics:
9) Provide evidence to support or refute
10)Test a theory's predictions or principles
2) Research classification by USE
A) Basic Research
Basic research advances fundamental knowledge about t
he human world.
It focuses on refuting or
supporting theories that explain how world operates
what makes things happen, why social
relations are a certain way, and why society changes.
Basic research is the source of most new scientific
ideas and ways of thinking about the world.
It can be exploratory, descriptive, or explanatory;
however, explanatory research is the most common.
Basic research generates new ideas, principles and
theories, which may not be immediately utilized; though
are the foundations of modern progress and development
in different fields.
A new idea or fundamental knowledge is not generated
only by basic research. Applied research, too, can build
new knowledge. Nonetheless, basic research is essential
for nourishing the expansion of knowledge. Researchers at
the center of the scientific community conduct most of the
basic research
B) Applied Research
Applied researchers try to solve specific policy problems or help
practitioners accomplish tasks. Theory is less central to them than
seeking a solution on a specific problem for a limited setting.
Applied research is frequently a descriptive research, and its main
strength is its immediate practical use. Applied research is conducted
when decision must be made about a specific real-life problem.
Applied research encompasses those studies undertaken to answer
questions about specific problems or to make decisions about a
particular course of action or policy.
For example, an organization contemplating a paperless office and a
networking system for the company's personal computers may
conduct research to learn the amount of time its employees spend at
personal computers in an average week
Types of Applied Research
i) Action research
ii) Impact Assessment Research
iii) Evaluation Research
C. Basic and Applied Research Compared
The procedures and techniques utilized by basic and
applied researchers do not differ substantially.
Both employ the scientific method to answer the
questions at hand.
The consumers of applied research findings are
practitioners. Often, someone other than the researcher
who conducted the study uses the results of applied
research. This means that applied researchers have an
obligation to translate findings from scientific technical
language into the language of decision makers or
practitioners.
The results of applied research are less likely to enter the
public domain in publications. Results may be available
only to a small number of decision makers or
practitioners, who decide whether or how to put the
research results into practice and who may or may not use
the results.
Applied and basic researchers adopt different orientations
toward research methodology.
Basic researchers emphasize high standards and try to
conduct near-perfect research.
Applied researcher make more trade-offs. They may
compromise scientific rigor to get quick, usable results.
Compromise is no excuse for sloppy research, however.
Applied researchers squeeze research into the constraints
of an applied setting and balance rigor against practical
needs.
Such balancing requires an in-depth knowledge of
research and an awareness of the consequences of
compromising standards
4) Research by Time Dimension:
1. Cross-Sectional Research
2. Longitudinal Research
3. The panel study
4. A cohort analysis
5)Research (data collection) Techniques Used
Quantitative: - Experiments, Surveys,
and Content Analysis and Using Existing Statistics
Qualitative :- Field Research, Case Study and
Focus Group Discussion
1.5.Types of Research
The basic types of research are as follows:
(i) Descriptive vs. Analytical:
Descriptive research includes surveys and fact-finding
enquiries of different kinds.
The major purpose of descriptive research is description
of the state of affairs as it exists at present.
In social science and business research we quite often
use descriptive research.
In analytical research, the researcher analyzes
information to make a critical evaluation of the material.
Types of Research
(ii) Applied vs. Fundamental: Research can either
be applied (or action) research or fundamental
(basic or pure) research.
Applied research aims at finding a solution for an
immediate problem facing a society or an
industry/organization,
Fundamental research is mainly concerned with
generalizations and with the formulation of a
theory.
Types of Research
(iii) Quantitative vs. Qualitative:
Quantitative research is based on the
measurement of quantity or amount.
It is applicable to phenomena that can be
expressed in terms of quantity.
Qualitative research is concerned with qualitative
phenomenon whose aim is to discover the
underlying motives of human behaviour.
If you: Then Use:
• want to conduct statistical
analysis
C. Funding bodies-researchers
Fund allocations directing research
i.e. ‘money buying research results’?
Therefore, some important shared values for the
responsible conduct of research include:
2.1.Research Problem
2.1.1. Source of Research Problem
2.1.2. Criteria of a good Research Problem
2.1.3. Formulating and testing of the problem
2.2. Research Hypothesis
2.2.1. Characteristics of a usable hypothesis
2.2.2. Difficulties in formulating Hypothesis
2.2.3. Hypothesis Testing
2.2.4. Criteria for Good Hypothesis
The Research Process
Collect Data
Analyze Data
Interpret and
Report
2.1.Souces of Research Problem
A Research problem is a discrepancy between
what one knows and ought to know to solve a
problem. Sources are:
1.Experiences
2.Literatures
3.Theories
4.Reports
5. Technology
6. Inconsistence in past studies
2.2. Criteria of good research problem
1.Interests
2. Researchable
3. Feasible/practical
4. Significance
5. Economics
2.3. Formulating a Research Process
1.Defining a problem
2.Showing the severity of the problem with data
3.Showing the extent of the problem with data
4.Showing the gap in the previous studies and your
value-added
Defining the Research Problem
Knowing what to research and its purpose is key to the
first step in the research design.
A good research topic is broad enough to allow you to find
plenty of material, but narrow enough to fit within the size
and time constraints of your paper.
• To do a research a topic or a felt practical or theoretical
difficulty must be identified.
The problem identification affects the quality, usefulness,
effectiveness and efficiency of the research activity.
Defining the problem, showing the severity of the
problem, showing the extent of the problem, and showing
the gaps
What does one mean when he/she wants to
define a research problem?
The answer may be that one wants to state the
problem along with the bounds within which
it is to be studied.
It involves the task of laying down
boundaries within which a researcher shall
study the problem.
How to define a research problem is
undoubtedly a herculean/exceptional task.
However, it is a task that must be tackled
intelligently to avoid the perplexity
encountered in a research operation.
Defining a research problem properly and
clearly is a crucial part of a research study and
must in no case be accomplished hurriedly.
However, in practice this is frequently
overlooked, which causes a lot of problems
later on.
Hence, the research problem should be defined
in a systematic manner, giving due emphasis
to all relating points.
The research problem and objectives
The researcher must know exactly what his/her problem is
before he/she begins working on it.
A problem clearly defined is a problem half solved.
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The research problem and
objectives
In defining the statement of the problem, the following
questions could be helpful:
Who is affected and how?
What is missing and where?
What went wrong and to what extent?
What are the notable effects, where, extent for whom?
Is the problem self-expressive or does it generate other
problems?
What have others to say about it? Establishing the gap!
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The research problem and objectives
The problem is very important in the sense that it should
receive considerable and persuasive attention
Its importance is inevitably subjective and will vary from
researcher to researcher.
Objectivity can be injected by answering questions such
as:
Is the problem of current interest? Is it topical (up-to-
date)?
Is the problem likely to continue into the future?
Would the information about the problem have
practical application?
The research problem and objectives
Will the information about the problem have
theoretical importance?
How large is the population affected by the problem?
Would this study substantially revise or extend existing
knowledge?
Would this study create or improve an instrument of some
utility?
Would research findings lead to some useful change in
best practice?
Is there evidence or authoritative opinion from others to
support the need for this research?
The research problem and objectives
The problem statement could close with a question.
Typically, the question could contain two variables, a
measurable relationship, and some indication of
population.
A good example of research question:
"What is the relationship between farm productivity and
farmer use of fertilizer"?
The information needed is:
◦ Productivity levels
◦ Some measure of fertilizer use.
The research problem and objectives
Hazardous noise is an important occupational health
problem because it leads to hearing loss and may lead to
increased stress and other deleterious physiological effects.
More than 30 million workers are exposed to hazardous
noise on the job…Use of hearing protection devices,
specifically ear plugs is known to reduce noise exposure
and prevent noise – induced hearing loss… there are,
however, relatively few investigators who have examined
factors related to the low use of hearing protection by
workers.
1. Verification
2. Justification
3. Refutability
4. Validity
5. Rectification
6. Repeatability
7. Falsification
2.2.3. Hypothesis Testing
There are four procedures:
1. Stating the hypothesis
2. Setting the criteria for a decision
3. Collecting data
4. Evaluate the H0
Problem: Type I (When Ho is wrongly rejected) and Type II
accept Ho wrongly when it is false in fact)
Decision
Reject Ho Accept Ho
Truth Ho Type I Right Decision
H1 Right Decision Type II
2.2.4. Criteria for Good Hypothesis