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PRACTICAL RESEARCH 1ST SUMMATIVE

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PRACTICAL RESEARCH 1.1
I.
Inquiry vs. Research
Similarity
-
To gather and discover a new body
of knowledge
Starts by asking a question /
questions
Concept Discovery
Inquiry
- A broad process that involves
different paths or procedures
- Asking broad questions involving
different procedures
Theory
- A fact, but would be an accepted
idea once proven by experts,
scholars or philosophers
- Generally utilized by the people
Inquiry-based Learning Question Patterns
1. How can/might _____ improve /
change / affect ____?
2. What impact did / does _____
have on _____?
3. How does / do / ______ might
impact ______?
4. In what ways can we _____?
Scope and Depth
Research
- A formal process with the goal of
establishing facts ( FINDING
ANSWERS )
- Asks specific questions and
involves a formal and systematic
procedure
Inquiry-based Learning
- An approach to learning that
emphasizes the exploration of
questions and focuses on the
process of discovery
Inquiry
-
Research
-
Students focus on finding an
effective way to expedite the
answer-process
Inquiry…
-
Benefits:
- Improve interpretive thinking
- Widens vocabulary
- Social awareness and cultural
knowledge
- Encourages cooperative learning
- Enhance your HOTS
Students show curiosity by asking
high-quality inquiry questions
-
-
Elevates your thinking power by
enabling you to arrive at an idea or
understanding
Inquisitive thinking allows you to
shift from one level of thought to
another
It does not go in a linear fashion;
rather, it operates in an interactive
manner
Inquiry vis-a-vis Research
-
-
II.
Inquiry starts from what you are
ignorant about
Research makes you learn
something by means of a
problem-solving technique
Both encourage you to formulate
questions to direct you to the exact
information you want to discover
Nature of Inquiry &
Research
Research follows a step-by-step process
of investigation that uses standardized (
generally accepted / utilized → have
reference to the standardized instrument )
approach to answer questions or solving
problems ( Polit & Buck, 2004 )
Research Process
1. Question / SOP
2. Rationale
3. Theoretical Background ( Purpose
of Conducting the Study )
4. RRL / RRS
5. Methodology
6. Results / Data Analysis
7. Recommendation
8. Conclusion
Importance of Research
-
-
-
Provides a scientific basis for any
practice or methodology in any
field or discipline
Is undertaken for the continuous
development and further
productivity in any field
Helps develop tools for assessing
effectiveness of any practice and
operation ( for innovation )
-
-
Provides solutions to problems
concerning at most all issues
encountered in the different areas
of work
Impacts decision making
Purpose of Research
-
Gather necessary information
Make changes
Improve standard of living
Have a safer life
Know the truth
Explore our history
Understand the arts
III. Characteristics of Research
Research
●
A process of executing various
mental acts for discovering and
examining facts and information to
prove the accuracy or truthfulness
of your claims or conclusions about
the topic of your research
Inquiry vs. Research
Research does not center on mainly
raising questions, but carrying out a
particular order of research stages
The Research Process
not an individual task because the
knowledge obtained in each stage comes
not only from yourself but other people as
well ---> Cooperative Learning
“Research puts you in a context where
a problem exists”
- Central to research is your way of
discovering new knowledge,
applying knowledge in various
ways
as
well
as
seeing
relationships of ideas, events, and
situations.
Purposes of Research
Characteristics of Research
IV. Types of Research
Accuracy
-
Data
must
be
correct accurate,
and
references
should
be
acknowledged
-
Work independently
Work scientifically or systematically
In-depth knowledge of something
HOTS
Basic tools of research
Free yourself
Based on Application of Research Method
( Is the research theoretical or practical? )
Pure Research
Concepts, principles,
abstract things
Applied Research
Societal problems,
issues, finding ways to
make positive changes
in society
Objectiveness
-
Facts not opinions
arising
from
assumptions
or
generalizations
Based on Purpose of Research ( What is
the objective or goal in conducting the
research? )
Timeliness
-
Fresh topics that
are
new
and
interesting
to
society
Descriptive Research
Liable to repeated
research because its
topic relates itself only
to a certain period or a
limited number years
Relevance
-
Instrumental
to
improving society
Correlational Research
Relationships or
connectedness of two
factors
Explanatory Research
Explains not just the
reasons behind the
relationship of 2
factors, but also the
ways by which such
relationship exists
Exploratory Research
Investigate questions
that have not
previously been
studied in depth
Action Research
An ongoing practice
for the purpose of
Clarity
-
Simple, directing,
concise
and
correct
Systematic
-
Organized
orderly
Verbal portrayal or
picture
and
obtaining results that
will bring
improvements in the
system
Approaches to Research
Multiple triangulation approach
-
Encourages several methods to
collect
data
and
multiple
investigators with varied expertise
Methods of Research
Scientific/ Positive
Approach
Discover and measure
information
Naturalistic Approach
How people behave
toward their
surrounding
Triangulation
Approach
View every single
angle of the research
from different
perspectives, add
richness and clarity
Triangulation Approach
-
-
Used to increase the credibility and
validity of research findings
Combination of theories, methods
or observers in a research study →
ensure that fundamental biases
arising from the use of a single
method or observer overcome
Central is the notion that methods
leading to the same results give
more confidence in research
findings
Types of Triangulation
Data triangulation
Periods of time, space
and people
Investigator
triangulation
Several researchers in
a study
Theory triangulation
Encourages several
theoretical schemes to
enable interpretation of
a phenomenon
Methodological
triangulation
Promotes the use of
several data collection
methods such as
interviews and
observations
Inductive
●
No theory to
test
Observation → Pattern
→ Theory
Deductive
●
Used to test a
theory
Theory → Hypothesis
→ Collect Data →
Analyze Data →
Confirm Hypothesis
V. Processes of Research
Identification of
Research Problem
●
●
●
Formulation of
Hypothesis
●
●
Review of RRL
Research Design
●
●
●
Gathering of Data
●
●
Good problem
→ Good
research
Guides in
formulating
the
hypothesis
and
interpretation
of findings to
formulate the
right
conclusion
Basis of all
subsequent
research
activities you
are going to
undertake
Solving a
logical
relationship
between 2
variables
Make an
educated
guess
Get a vivid
picture of the
whole
research
through
reading
various
publications
The work plan
of the study
Blueprint of
the research
Implementatio
n of research
design
Prove the
validity of the
formulated
hypothesis
Results and
Discussion
●
Heart of the
research
process
where the
findings of the
research can
be found
Conclusions and
Recommendations
●
Present the
solution to the
proposed
●
●
problem
based on the
findings of the
investigation.
It should
answer your
hypothesis
and research
problem
Recommenda
tions are
based on
conclusions
Additional Notes:
●
Formulating the Statement of the Problem
( Problem Statement )
“Working Title” → can be edited →
conducted → changed once defended
Types of Questions to be formulated:
○
○
General Problem ( 1-2
sentences )
■ Purpose Statement
■ Time of the Conduct (
School Year 2022-2023 )
■ Output of the Study (
Development Plan,
Action Plan,
Enhancement Plan )
Specific Questions
Can be answered
through interview
questions
● Personal
● Survey forms
through “Likent
scale” ( Have
an even
amount of
positive and
negative items
on the survey
form for each
specific
question )
Related Literature
●
Discusses, defines, describes
○ Topic Sentences
■ Example Resources
■ Academic
Textbooks
■ E-books
■ Government
sites / websites
■ Research
Paper
Participants
→ Willingness ( need to be willing to be involved in
the gathering of data )
→ Informed consent and Transparency ( especially
to someone who do not know )
●
→ Name ( optional )
●
Related Studies
●
Provides findings or conclusion
○ Resource:
■ Abstract
■ Conclusion
○ Key words to find RRS: “study” /
“findings”
Resources that can be used:
●
●
●
●
Google Scholar
Academia.edu
Researchgate.net
Publish or Perish Application
Let participants know the questions and
outcomes of the data
●
To keep things confidential and
anonymous
Ensure participants that no other
information shall be spread
Informed consent → The heart of all ethical codes
and guidelines
“The voluntary consent of the human subject is
absolutely essential.
Ways of asking consent
1. Through a Transmittal letter
Free and Informed Consent
VI. Ethics of Research
●
The process of making free and
informed decisions
Not only the conduct of how we do the
research, but also how we deal with the
participants of the research
●
Individuals who provide informed
consent must be legally competent
and have enough
decision-making-capacity to
consent to research
Ethics
-
Moral behavior
A system of accepted beliefs that
control behavior
Ethics in Research
-
Framework applying broad ethical
principles to the responsible
conduct of research and to the use
of any outcomes resulting from
research
Possibilities of Backing out:
Reasons: ( The importance for the
participants to know the questions )
1. No benefit
2. Risks of security / safety
3. Violated their rights as a person (
can be a form of bias or
discrimination )
Importance of Ethics in Research
●
Autonomy
●
Rights, safety and well being of
research participants are the most
important considerations and
should prevail over the interests of
science and society
○ It is the right thing to do
○ Preserves credibility, trust
and accountability
○ Reduces liabilities, wasted
time and resources
→ Informing
participants through
Transmittal letter &
verbal agreement
●
●
Components of Ethical Research
Social Value
For the good of the
person
Scientific Soundness
Scientifically
conducted
standardized
approaches are
applied
Ethical Soundness
Level and experience
Community
Involvement
Share not shelf
●
●
●
●
PRINCIPLES OF ETHICAL
RESEARCH
Beneficence
Respected as
a person
Commitment
is not
demanded (
especially to
those who
have little to
no knowledge
they have the
right to
refuse,
DON’T
FORCE
THEM )
Non-Maleficence
Necessity of the
informed consent
Researcher
Competence
Anticipated
Risk
Protected
against harm
and wrong
DO NO
HARM (
conducting
the study to
get benefits
and positive
results )
Know if the
study is risky
or not
Will the
participants
be safe?
Justice
●
●
●
At end and
not a means
Not ONLY
respect the
decision of
the
participants,
but making
sure that the
results benefit
all
Publishing
works can
help give
beneficence
●
●
●
●
Equal to other
persons
Equality in
terms of the
rights, dignity,
benefit and
opinion (
equally heard
of )
No obvious
bias and
discrimination
Have equal
benefit
Research Misconduct
●
●
Refers to any behavior that
deviates from accepted ethical
standards in the conduct of
research
There are many forms of research
misconduct, but the most serious
are often referred to as the “three
cardinal
sins”
of
research
misconduct
Purpose
-
Provide insight into the
experiences, perspectives, and
motivations of participants
Data Collection Methods
-
Uses various data collection
method
In-depth Interview
( usually individual
)
Fabrication
The act of making up
data or results that
never actually
occurred
Falsification
The act of altering or
manipulating data or
results to make them
appear different from
what was actually
observed
Plagiarism
The act of using
someone else’s work
or ideas without giving
them proper credit
Can be personal or
digital
If personal ask if
they would allow a
recording ( video /
audio )
Digital ( using digital
platforms / call ) ask
if they allow video
recording
Focus Group
Discussion
VII. Qualitative vs Quantitative Research
Relies on verbal
narratives like spoken
or written data
Quantitative
Uses logical or
statistical observations
to draw conclusions
The once asking the
questions given by
the researcher:
Expert ( 1 )
External Moderator ( 1
)
Participants ( 6 )
Participant
Observation
Qualitative research
-
Uses non-numerical data
Gain an in-depth understanding of
a phenomenon
Understand human experiences,
behaviors
Composed of 8-12
members
Consists of:
What sets them apart?
Qualitative
Non-structures ( not
limited to the
questions provided )
Entails immersion
A period specified ( 2
weeks or more )
Interact and
communicate with the
participants,
observation,
photography
Subjectivity
Written texts (
journal entries or
case studies )
●
Deals with
literature,
anecdote
records
and printed
articles
●
●
Analysis
●
●
●
Iterative and inductive
Involves multiple stages, such as
coding, categorizing and
interpreting the data
Goal is to identify patterns,
themes, and relationships in the
data, and to develop a deep
understanding of the phenomenon
being studied
Generalizability
●
●
Deductive Coding
●
●
Predetermined codes
Before the final gathering of data
○ Areas of interest
Inductive Coding
●
Read / finalize the dataset before
creating the codes
Flexibility
●
●
●
●
Allows for adjustments to the
study design as needed, and the
ability to explore unexpected
findings
Does not rely on predefined
variables and measures and
allows for the exploration of new
or unanticipated phenomena
Explore more to have a substantial
and strong conclusion
EVERYTHING WILL BE BASED
ON RESPONDENTS’ ANSWERS
Relies on the interpretation of the
researcher
Take steps to minimize their own
biases through techniques such as
reflexivity and member checking
○ Can build a strong
connection between
researcher and participant
○ Create a different type of
objective conclusion
●
Lack of generalizability, as the
results cannot be generalized to a
larger population
Allows for an in-depth
understanding of a specific
phenomenon, rather than a
generalization about a population
Generalize in a certain locality or
group
Limitations
●
●
●
Time and resource requirements
Potential for researcher bias
Difficulty in making comparisons
between studies due to the lack of
standardized methods
Conclusions
●
Gain an in-depth understanding of
human experiences, behaviors and
perspectives
Quantitative Research
-
-
Uses numerical data
Collected through surveys,
experiments and statistical
analysis to understand and
describe phenomena
Measure and quantify variables,
establish cause-and-effect
relationships, and make
generalizations about a larger
population
Replicability
Purpose
• systematic, numerical approach of
quantitative research makes it easy to
replicate the study with the same or a
different sample, allowing for verification of
results
• provide numerical data that can be
analyzed and interpreted to gain insights
• important for building confidence in the
validity of the research findings.
Data Collection Methods
• Uses various data collection methods,
such as surveys, experiments, and
secondary data analysis.
• Used to collect numerical data that can
be analyzed using statistical methods.
Analysis
• Descriptive statistics, inferential
statistics, and regression analysis
• Identify patterns, relationships, and
trends in the data, and to make inferences
about a larger population.
Objectivity
• focus is on numerical data and statistical
analysis.
• minimize researcher bias and provides a
more objective understanding of the
phenomenon being studied
Generalizability
• allows for generalization of the results to
a larger population
• data is collected from a sample that is
representative of the population
• insights into the characteristics of the
larger population
Limitations
• focus on numerical data, which can limit
the researcher's understanding of the
experiences and perspectives of the
participants.
• inflexible, as the structured nature of the
research can make it difficult to adjust the
study design as needed, or to explore
unexpected findings.
Conclusions
• valuable method for measuring and
quantifying variables, establishing
cause-and-effect relationships, and
making generalizations about a larger
population.
• allows for a more objective
understanding of the phenomenon being
studied.
VIII. Qualitative Research in Focus
●
●
Reality is conditioned by society
and people’s intentions
A study of things in their natural
setting, an act of inquiry or
investigation of real-life events
○ Don’t transport participants
in a different environment
○ Considering all aspects and
no manipulation of data
observing people as
they live and work
Characteristics of Qualitative
Research
Human understanding
and interpretation
Active, powerful, and
forceful
Data analysis results
show an individual’s
mental, social and
spiritual understanding
of the world
Look at all minute
situations
Breathing and the way
they talk matters
Abounds with words
and visuals
A lot of changes occur
continuously in every
stage of qualitative
research.
Data gathering through
interviews or library
reading, as well as
presentation of data
analysis results, is
done verbally
You are not fixated to a
certain plan
Multiple research
approaches and
methods ( Mixed
method approach )
You are free to
combine this with
quantitative research
and usually gathered
data and analysis
More objective results
/ outcomes
Words come in big
quantity
Internal Analysis
Examine the data
yielded by the internal
traits of the subject
individuals
Types of Qualitative Research
Case Study
Specificity of
Generalization
Focuses on a
particular individual,
group or event
Specific ideas in a
qualitative research
are directed to a
general understanding
of something
To gain an in-depth
understanding of the
particular case, and to
identify patterns,
themes, and
relationships that can
be used to develop
general insights into
the phenomenon
being studied
It follows an inductive
or scientific method of
thinking
Contextualization
Involves all variables,
factors or conditions
affecting the study
Understanding
human behavior
It is crucial for you to
examine the context or
situation of an
individuals lives
Diversified data in
real-life situations
Prefers collecting data
in a natural setting like
Ethnography
Focuses on
understanding the
culture, practices, and
beliefs of a particular
group of people
Involves extended
immersion in the field,
and often involves
participant observation
and in-depth
interviews
process ( cycle ) of
data collection and
analysis, and is
grounded in the
experiences and
perspectives of the
Phenomenology
Focuses on
understanding the
essence of a
particular
experience, from the
perspective of the
individuals who have
experienced it.
Used to gain insight
into the subjective
experiences of
individuals
participants
Coding in Grounded Theory
Open Coding
Breaking down of data
into smaller units and
categorizing them
Identify core concepts
and relationships,
basis for the theory
Narrative Inquiry
The stories and
experiences of
individuals
Understand the
meaning and
significance of
individuals’
experiences, and to
gain insight into the
ways in which
individuals make
sense of their lives and
the world around them
Axial Coding
Examining the
relationship between
the codes generated
Linking codes to each
other, identifying
patterns
Selective Coding
Synthesizing and
integrating the
categories,
relationships and
patterns into a
coherent and
comprehensive theory
→ Central thesis of
research
Historical Analysis
The examination of
historical events,
documents and
artifacts to gain insight
into the past
Understand the
historical context of a
particular phenomenon
and to gain a deeper
understanding of how
it has evolved over
time
Grounded Theory
Developing a theory
that is grounded in
data collected from
participants.
Theory developed
through an iterative
Advantages of Qualitative Research
-
Naturalistic Approach
Full understanding of human behavior
Positive societal changes
Respect for People’s individuality
Understanding and interpreting social
interactions
Increases the researcher’s interest in the
study
Multiple ways of acquiring and examining
knowledge
Disadvantages of Qualitative Research
-
Involves a lot of researcher’s subjectivity in
data analysis
Hard to know validity or reliability of the
data
Open-ended questions yield “data
overload”
Time-consuming
Involves several processes
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