Research Methodologies and Designs
Research Methodologies and Designs
Research Methodologies and Designs
What is a Paradigm?
The term paradigm refers to the progress of scientific
practice based on people’s philosophies and assumptions
about the world and the nature of the knowledge – in this
context, about how research should be conducted
Paradigms are universally recognised scientific
achievements that for a time provide model problems and
solutions to a community of practitioners (Kuhn, 1962).
They offer a framework comprising an accepted set of
theories, methods and ways of defining data.
There are two main research paradigms or
philosophies.
The two paradigms (approaches)can be labelled
POSITIVIST and PHENOMENOLOGICAL.
The most common terms used are quantitative and
qualitative
Alternative terms of the main research
paradigms
POSITIVISTIC PARADIGM Phenomenological Paradigm
Quantitative Qualitative
Objectivist Subjectivist
Scientific Humanistic
Experimentalist Interpretivist
traditionalist
RESEARCH DESIGN
A detailed outline of how an investigation will take
place.
A research design will typically include how data is
to be collected, what instruments will be employed,
how the instruments will be used and the intended
means for analyzing data collected.
Research design is about how to select the people
(or things) that will give us valid (legitimate,
appropriate) and reliable (consistent and
dependable despite different times & researchers)
information or data.
Research Design
A research design provides a framework for the collection
and analysis of data.
A research method is simply a tool or technique for
collecting data. This includes observations, interviews,
questionnaires, FGD, community meetings.
Research design is also about how to ask in such a manner that
the data will be representative
In short, the three criteria for evaluating business
research are:
Reliability; Validity and Replicability
Criteria for evaluating research
Validity of research has several dimensions (is concerned
with the integrity of conclusions generated from research.
Measurement validity/ construct validity- that is whether or
not a measure that is devised of a concept reflects a concept
being measured,
Internal validity-whether a conclusion that incorporates a
causal relationship between two or more variables is logical,
External validity-whether or not the results of a study can be
generalised beyond the specific context.
Ecological validity-whether or not the social scientific
findings are applicable to people’s daily lives, natural social
settings.
What are the Questions that
Research Design Answers?
How to conduct a study such that the
information gathered is as true a
representation of reality as possible?
How to conduct a study such that similar
results can be obtained if someone else
comes and conducts the same study at a
different time?
How to conduct a research project to
specifications, in time and within budget?
Types of Research Methods
Cross-sectional Action research
Experimental Case studies
Longitudinal Grounded theory
Surveys Participative enquiry
(Positivism/ Quantitative) Ethnography
Archival
(Phenomenological/
Qualitative)
Cross- Sectional
Is also called a social survey design designed to obtain
information on variables in different context (more
than one case) but at the same time (data on variables
of interest are collected more or less simultaneously).
Normally, different organizations or groups of people
are selected and a study is conducted to ascertain how
factors differ.
e.g if you want to investigate associations between
labor turnover and productivity you need to select
groups where labor and productivity is different
Cross sectional research
More than one case is selected to identify variations and
make distinctions between cases.
In order to establish variation between cases it is necessary
to quantify the data.