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Empowering Educational Research: Identifying and Defining Research Problems

Understanding how to identify and define research problems in the field of education is crucial for academic success. This guide outlines the process of recognizing educational issues, formulating research questions, and justifying the significance of the study. By exploring the purpose of the research and accessing relevant resources, researchers can contribute to knowledge and practice, filling gaps in existing research or shedding light on understudied topics. Key terms and literature reviews help situate the research within the scholarly community, emphasizing the importance of empirical studies and accessing global research databases for comprehensive insights.

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Empowering Educational Research: Identifying and Defining Research Problems

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  1. IDENTIFYING THE RESEARCH PROBLEM

  2. DEFINITION • Research problems are educational issues or concerns studied by researchers • In education, a problem is a concern to educators that exists in educational settings

  3. Ask yourself • To help locate your research problem for your thesis, ask yourself such questions as: • What was the issue/problem you want to study? • What is the concern being addressed “behind” this study? • Why do you want to undertake this study? • Why is this study important to the scholarly community?

  4. DEFINING TERMS • Research Problem: Educational issue/problem in a study • Research Topic: Broad subject matter being addressed in a study • Purpose: Major intent or object of study • Research Questions: Questions to answer or address in a study

  5. OVERVIEW General Topic Research Problem Research Statement Research Questions Specific

  6. PROBLEM RESEARCHABILITY 1. Will your research contribute to knowledge and practice? • It fills a void or extends existing research • It replicates a study with new participants or a new site • Problem has not be studied or understudied • It gives “voice” to people not heard, silenced, or rejected in society • It informs practice 2. Accessed to people & sites 3. Time, Resources and skills • Therapy 5. To prove what your already know

  7. DESIGNING & WRITING THE STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM • The research problem within this study • Justification for the problem (based on past research and practice) • Shortcoming of past research or practice • The importance / significance of the problem

  8. GETTING STARTED • Write down the purpose statement of your study • Embedded in this purpose statement are key terms that will help you to start your literature review • This part of the literature review searches for core literature and it should focus almost exclusively on empirical studies • Look for studies similar to your problem statement in Australia. • Look for studies similar to your problem statement in other countries.

  9. LITERATURE PRIORITY PARENT RELATIONAL CORE

  10. WHERE TO START • Encyclopedia of educational research (Alkin, 1992) The appendix ‘Doing library research in education’ is brilliant • Handbooks International Handbooks of Educational Administration, Educational Leadership, Lifelong Learning etc quickly introduce you to the major players and research issues in your study • Theses Overseas – Dissertation abstracts, US computer disks British Dissertation abstracts Australia – Cunningham library, ACER, www.acer.edu.au

  11. Databases ERIC (Educational Resources Information Centre) www.accesseric.org. (world’s largest source of information – one million abstracts) Australian Education Index (AUSINET) • Current index to journals in education and resources in education: locate through ERIC • Social Science Citation Index: CDROM • Online Journals (anbar) 8. Google (search engine)

  12. INITIAL ORGANISING THE LITERATURE • Print out your research problem and research purpose statement in font size 20pt & bold & adhere to a place near your computer where your regularly see. Do not be a dilettante . You need to get a reasonably solid grasp of your proposed topic relatively quickly in order to focus or flick. • Read, categorise, file • Construct a literature map (different from but a pre-requisite to a conceptual framework)

  13. From Creswell (2002).

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