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Explore different types of research, methodologies, and approaches in scientific research. Learn about basic and applied research, quantitative and qualitative approaches, data collection techniques, and analysis methods.
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WELCOME HEIDI VAN DER WESTHUIZEN Cell: 082 824 2056 Email: meertjie@gmail.com
CHAPTER 3 SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
Tutorials PLEASE: • Turn off your cell phone • Be on time for the class • Attend regularly • Come prepared
Overview • Ch 1: Strategies of discovery • Ch 2: The role of theory in research • Ch 3: Scientific research
Ways of classifying research • Categories • For what the research is used • Methodology • The approach on which research is based • Aims • What this type of research aims at (wants to achieve) • Time dimension • The length of time involved in doing that research
Decisions about • The researcher should first decide which type of research to use, basicor applied research • He should then decide which approach to use, quantitative,qualitative or using multiple methods (triangulation) • It is then important to decide on the aim or purpose of the research • Then he has to decide about the time dimension to use, namely cross-sectional, longitudinal or case-study research
Categories of research • Basic research • Applied research These types of research are not mutually exclusive
Basic research • Expands on fundamental knowledge • Researcher first states what is being researched, then describes or explains the phenomena • When the focus is on a contribution of knowledge • Is used to: • support or reject theories by explaining social relationships • To interpret changes in communities, in order to enhance new scientific knowledge about the social world • Makes use of • Exploratory research • Descriptive research • Explanatory research
Basic research • Criticism • The knowledge acquired through basic research sometimes does not offer short-term practical solutions • Advantage • Creates a basis for the application of knowledge to many social problems
Applied research • Tends to solve specific problems • Researcher investigates the problem, then it is treated in a specific manner by applying acquired researched knowledge • The focus is more practice orientated, on immediate problem solving • Is generally descriptive in nature • Advantage • It can be applied immediately after the results have been obtained • Disadvantage • Sometimes the results are not published
Approaches on which research is based • Quantitative approach • Qualitative approach
Quantitative research • Researchers investigate the cause and effect of events, by using a large number of respondents • Focuses on measureable aspects of human behavior • Is a formal, objective, systematic process in which numerical data are used to obtain information • Is used to: • Describe variables • Determine cause-effect relationships between variables • Examine relationships amongst these variables
Quantitative research • Is structured and controlled in nature • The scope of quantitative research is larger and more universal • For research to be valid and reliable, use is made of specific scientific methods and techniques • Methods and techniques used in quantitative research • Conceptualisation of concepts that can be operationalised through measurement instruments • Data collection techniques such as structured questionnaires • Data analysis techniques
Quantitative research Measuring instruments used in quantitative research: • Questionnaires • Interviews • Observers • Existing documentation • Any standard method of data collection Analysis: • It is the process in which certain procedures, for ex descriptive statistic techniques, are used to work through the data that have been collected
Qualitative approach • Acknowledge the uniqueness and the meaningfulness of human situations and behavior • Principles of qualitative approach • Believing in multiple realities • Being committed to participants’ viewpoints • Limits disruption • Acknowledgement of participants in the research process • Reporting data by means of participants’ commentaries
Qualitative approach • Use different methods than quantitative research • Observation is an important aspect • Methods and techniques used: • Concepts that capture the meaning of the experience, action or interaction of the element • Unstructured (open) questionnaires and interviews • Participant observation and case studies • Recording of life histories • Analysis of collected data by means of non-quantitative frameworks.
Qualitative approach • General characteristics • Involves holistic investigation • Man is the primary data-collection instrument • The emphasis is on the use of qualitative methods • Subjects are selected in a purposeful, rather than a random manner • Researcher makes use of inductive data analysis • A grounded theory (a theory that was actually developed from the data) can be developed • The design develops as the research develops • The subject plays a role in the interpretation of the results • Intuitive insights are used • The emphasis on social processes
Qualitative approach • Reasons for doing qualitative research: • Research that can’t be done by means of an experiment because of practical and ethical considerations • Research that makes in-depth enquiries into complexities and processes • Research where the relevant variables still need to be identified • Research that tries to find out and explore why the current practice do not work • Research about unknown phenomena
Multiple Methods or Triangulation • Sometimes there are an overlap between quantitative and qualitative research used. • This results in a multiple method study in which the researcher uses multiple methods of data collection and analysis • Triangulation is based on the assumption that any bias inherent in a certain data source, would be neutralised when used in conjunction with another source
Multiple methods or triangulation • Data triangulation • The use of more than one data source (questionnaires, diaries, interviews) • Researcher triangulation • The use of more than one researcher, to achieve inter-subjective agreement • Theory triangulation • The use of multiple theories to interpret a single set of data
Multiple methods or triangulation 4. Methodological triangulation • The use of multiple methods to study a single topic, for ex combining quantitative and qualitative data in a single study 5. Analysis triangulation • The use of two or more analytical techniques to analyse the same set of data
Validity and reliability • Validity: A methodologicalrequirement for • research methods such as observation, the use of measuring instruments • research results such as the analysis and interpretation of collected data and conclusions from analysis • Reliability: When identical investigations are repeated, similar research results will be obtained.
Types of research • Exploratory research • Descriptive research • Explanatory research • Correlational research
Types of research • Exploratory research • Does research on a topic which has not been researched before • The major purpose is: • the clarification of ideas • the formulation of questions and hypotheses, for more precise investigation later • Investigates the “what” of the matter
Types of research • Exploratory research • Methods • Secondary sources of information are studied • Selected cases are analysed • A survey of persons who are likely to have information on the phenomenon under investigation is conducted
Types of research • Descriptive research • Aimed at giving the specific details of a situation or relationship • Determines the “how” or “why” the phenomenon came into being, and also everybody that is (was) involved
Types or research • Explanatory research • Aimed at gaining insight into a situation or a phenomenon • Looks for causes and reasons why “something” happened or did not happen
Types or research • Correlational research • Refers to: • a systematic investigation of relationships between two or more variables • or to explain the nature of the relationship • Does not examine cause and effect, does not indicate causation • When a correlation exists, a change in one variable corresponds to a change in others
Time dimensions in research • Cross-sectional research • Longitudinal research • Panel studies • Follow-up studies • Tracer studies (Time-series research) • Cohort research • Trend designs • Case study research
Cross-sectional research • Is nonrecurrent in nature • Is done at a specific point in time • Concentrate on the here and now • Disadvantage: can not include changes in the process • It is difficult to demonstrate causality • Can be exploratory, descriptive or explanatory in nature with descriptive research yielding the best results
Longitudinal research 1. Are done over an extended period of time 2. Is used in: • Studying time-relating processes • Determining time sequences • Making comparisons over time • Enhancing research control
Designs in longitudinal research • Panel studies • The same people or group, is investigated again over various periods of time • The panel refers to the sample of subjects providing data • Expensive • Attrition (loss of participants over time)
Designs in longitudinal research 2. Follow-up studies • Similar to panel studies • To determine the subsequent development of individuals who have a specific condition or who have received a specific intervention
Designs in longitudinal research • Tracer studies (Time-series research) • Traces people or follow their lives over a period of time • In most cases data is only collected at one point • Ex 5 years after completion of a drug rehab programme
Designs in longitudinal research • Cohort research • Is done by using a category of people who had the same experiences in life over a specific period of time • The emphasis is on a category, not a specific individual • They are studied over different periods of time
Trend designs • Investigates changes in the general population in relation to a specific phenomenon. • Researchers select different samples of subjects from the same population • At preset intervals of time, data are collected from that particular sample.
Case-study research • Researcher do an in-depth investigation into various characteristics of a small number of cases over a specific period of time. • Data may be collected by means of various techniques such as • Observation by the researcher • Interview • Questionnaires • Written accounts by the subjects in the form of diaries and narratives • Data reported in documents and newspapers
Summary Table 3.3 p103 NB!!