QRM 2
QRM 2
16 October, 2021
One point from each member – share with the partner sitting next to
you.
5 minutes
Check In Activity
Group 1: LHS
Group 2: RHS
Anderson, G. (1998).
Berliner, D.C. (2002). Educational Fundamentals of Educational
research: The hardest science of all. Research. London: Falmer Press.
Educational Researcher, 31(8), 18- Chapter 1- The nature of
20.
educational research.
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/
download?doi=10.1.1.467.8532&r
ep=rep1&type=pdf
Small Group Discussion (10
minutes)
https://onlinenotebank.wordpress.com/2020/03/18/educational-research-meaning-characteri
stics-importance-and-scope-of-educational-research
/
Defining features of Educational Research
1. Purposeful
Educational research attempts to solve a problem, examine an issue,
understand perspectives and practices etc.
2. Systematic/Scientific
• Research involves gathering data from primary or first-hand
sources or using existing data for a new purpose – methodological
decisions.
• Research is based upon experiences or evidence – scientific in
nature.
• Research demands systematic/planned tools for data collection.
• Research generally employs carefully designed procedures and
rigorous analysis
Defining Features: Educational
Research
3. Logical Process
Research is deliberate and unhurried activity which is directional but often
refines the problem or questions as the research progresses
6. Dissemination
• Research is carefully recorded and reported to other persons interested
in the problem.
According to the
• Objectives of the research/strategies
Basic research / Action Research /Ethnographical
Research/experimental research
• Time Horizons
Longitudinal /cross sectional
• Philosophy/methodology
Qualitative/quantitative /positivist /pragmatic/Interpretive/critical
Place where conducted
Library research/laboratory research/ field research
How to do research?
Core Actions
Analysis &Write-up
Finding/generati ng DATA
From Literature
“..a way of seeing the world that frames a research topic and influences the way
that researchers think about the topic (Hughes, 2010 : 35)”.
“a set of beliefs about the way in which particular problems exist and a set of
agreements on how such problems can be investigated” (Fraser and Robinson ,
2004) .
‘Social phenomena exist not ‘out there’ but in the minds of people and
their interpretations’.
This relatively new and challenging paradigm opens many new and exciting doors
for educational researchers as it brings to our attention the very important concept of
‘representation’ (Denzin & Lincoln, 2005) which holds that what goes on in our
minds and hearts is not directly accessible to the world outside us.
There is no window in our heads that allows another person to look directly into our
minds and see ‘exactly what we mean’; the best we can do is ‘represent’ our
thoughts and feelings through various means of communication (e.g., language, art,
dance, gesture).
We cannot afford to simply look to the past for ‘know how’. Educators can
learn from new developments in interdisciplinary collaboration (Linger,
2011) that bring together the Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences, Natural
Sciences and Engineering in creative endeavours amongst discipline experts,
policy makers and the public to engage in new forms of interdisciplinary
knowledge production aimed at resolving real-world practical problems.
The ………. fisherman enables the fish to perceive the pollution in the
water in which they live, to find its source, and to identify its harmful
effect on their being in the water.
A. Critical
B. Interpretive
C. post-positivist
D. Positivist
Review Point
A. Critical
B. Interpretive
C. post-positivist
D. Positivist
Review Point
A. Critical
B. Interpretive
C. post-positivist
D. Positivist
Review Point
A. Critical
B. Interpretive
C. post-positivist
D. Positivist
Review Point
A. Critical
B. Interpretive
C. post-positivist
D. Positivist
Review Point
A. Critical
B. Interpretive
C. post-positivist
D. Positivist
Review Point
The component of a research paradigm that investigates the origin, nature, methods and
limits of human knowledge is
A. Epistemology
B. Axiology
C. Ontology
D. Methodology
E. Epistemology
F. Axiology
G. Ontology
H. Methodology
Review Point
A. Epistemology
B. Axiology
C. Ontology
D. Methodology
Epistemology
• What is knowledge?
• How is knowledge acquired?
• How do we know what we know?
Epistemology
Study of Behaviour
How would your
Generalizing from the specifics research look like, if
Invisible entities are rejected you take this
position?
‘one size fits all’
/ Think-Pair- Share
Methodological Decisions