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Getting Started: Research and Literature Reviews. An Introduction. Objectives. To explain the concept of research To outline the main differences between primary and secondary sources of data To identify some of the secondary sources that you may find useful
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Getting Started: Research and Literature Reviews An Introduction
Objectives • To explain the concept of research • To outline the main differences between primary and secondary sources of data • To identify some of the secondary sources that you may find useful • To describe how to carry out a literature review • To warn against the moral dangers of plagiarism
Research Defined Systematic investigation into a problem or situation, where the intention is to identify facts and/or opinions that will assist in solving the problem or dealing with the situation
Research and Project • ALL projects require students to carry out research • Development projects – desk research on development methods, tools, hardware, software, trends in the business environment that may affect the development • Research projects – desk research (literature review) but also field work to gather data first hand
The Hallmarks of Good Research • Serves a purpose and is relevant • Clearly focussed and scoped • Scientific (depends on context) • Uses appropriate techniques & methods of data collection • Findings are presented as objectively as possible • Conclusions are based on the findings • Sources of information and ideas are clearly attributed
Research and Data Collection • Research and data collection are not synonymous. Data collection is: • Part of the research PROCESS • Provides answers to some of the questions addressed by the research TOPIC • Helps us to draw conclusions about the research QUESTION(S) we have investigated
Primary Questionnaires Interviews Observation Participant observation Informal conversations Structured group discussions Secondary Textbooks Specialist books Journal papers Conference papers Magazine articles Government & industry reports Web pages Acts of Parliament Company reports Primary and Secondary Data Sources
Literature Reviews • Find out what is known about the subject • Find out whether the research has been done before • Build a case for carrying out research • Show your expertise in the subject
Literature Reviews: Field Work Projects • Read a chapter of a well known textbook • Note references • Formulate some questions • Use questions to direct further reading • Jot down answers to questions • Use answers to build an argument
Literature Reviews: Development Projects • Read general textbook to identify key concepts, authorities • Carry out an author/subject search • Read a number of books, papers and synthesise key points • Write up what you have found out and explain how it relates to YOUR project
Research Methods: Field Work Projects • Surveys • Case Studies • Action Research • Scientific Experiments
Surveys • A means of data collection, usually in the form of a questionnaire or interview schedule, that enables a large amount of data to be gathered about a particular subject
When to Use Surveys • To explore a topic about which relatively little is known • To replicate/test/extend findings of a piece of research • To collect large amounts of data so that statistical analysis can be carried out • To make generalisations based on quantifiable findings
Case Studies (1) “A strategy for doing research which involves an empirical investigation of a particular contemporary phenomenon within its real life context using multiple sources of evidence” (Robson, 1993, p.52)
Case Study (2) • A case study can be conducted at any level of analysis • An individual • Pairs, groups • Sections, departments, divisions within a company • An entire company or several companies in the same or different sectors • Different industrial sectors • Entire nations
Case Studies (3) • Use multiple methods of data collection • Observation • Questionnaires • Interviews • Document Analysis • Diary Method
Action Research A research method that involves researcher(s) and practitioner(s) collaborating to engender a change/improve a particular situation
Plagiarism – Just Don’t Do IT! • Plagiarism involves: • Intentionally copying someone else’s ideas or words and not attributing them • Colluding with other students on work when prohibited from doing so • Cutting and pasting text from the Internet and passing it off as your own • Purchasing someone else’s work and describing it as your own