Research is a systematic inquiry to
describe, explain, predict and control the observed phenomenon. Research
involves inductive and deductive methods (Babbie, 1998). Inductive methods
analyze the observed phenomenon and identify the general principles,
structures, or processes underlying the phenomenon observed; deductive methods
verify the hypothesized principles through observations. The purposes are
different: one is to develop explanations, and the other is to test the
validity of the explanations.
One thing that we have to pay
attention to research is that the heart of the research is not on statistics,
but the thinking behind the research. How we really want to find out, how we
build arguments about ideas and concepts, and what evidence that we can support
to persuade people to accept our arguments.
Gall, Borg and Gall (1996) proposed
four types of knowledge that research contributed to education as follows:
- Description: Results of research can describe natural or social phenomenon, such as its form, structure, activity, change over time, relationship to other phenomena. The descriptive function of research relies on instrumentation for measurement and observations. The descriptive research results in our understanding of what happened. It sometimes produces statistical information about aspects of education.
- Prediction: Prediction research is intended to predict a phenomenon that will occur at time Y from information at an earlier time X. In educational research, researchers have been engaged in:
- Acquiring knowledge about factors that predict students' success in school and in the world of work
- Identifying students who are likely to be unsuccessful so that prevention programs can be instituted.
- Improvement: This type of research is mainly concerned with the effectiveness of intervention. The research approach include experimental design and evaluation research.
- Explanation: This type research subsumes the other three: if the researchers are able to explain an educational phenomenon, it means that they can describe, can predict its consequences, and know how to intervene to change those consequences.
What are the purposes of research?
Patton (1990) pointed out the importance of identifying the purpose in a research process. He classified four types of research based on different purposes:
Patton (1990) pointed out the importance of identifying the purpose in a research process. He classified four types of research based on different purposes:
- Basic Research: The purpose of this research is to understand and explain, i.e. the research is interested in formulating and testing theoretical construct and propositions that ideally generalize across time and space. This type of research takes the form of a theory that explains the phenomenon under investigation to give its contribution to knowledge. This research is more descriptive in nature exploring what, why and how questions.
- Applied Research: The purpose of this research is to help people understand the nature of human problems so that human beings can more effectively control their environment. In other words, this type of research pursues potential solutions to human and societal problems. This research is more prescriptive in nature, focusing on how questions.
- Evaluation Research (summative and formative): Evaluation research studies the processes and outcomes aimed at attempted solution. The purpose of formative research is to improve human intervention within specific conditions, such as activities, time, and groups of people; the purpose of summative evaluation is to judge the effectiveness of a program, policy, or product.
- Action Research: Action research aims at solving specific problems within a program, organization, or community. Patton (1990) described that design and data collection in action research tend to be more informal, and the people in the situation are directly involved in gathering information and studying themselves.
What is the research process?
Gall, Borg, and Gall (1996) described the following stages of conducting a research study:
Gall, Borg, and Gall (1996) described the following stages of conducting a research study:
- Identify a significant research problem: in this stage, find out the research questions that are significant and feasible to study.
- Prepare a research proposal: a research proposal usually consists of the sections including introductory, literature review, research design, research method, data analysis and protection of human subject section, and timeline.
- Conduct a pilot study: the purpose is to develop and try out data-collection methods and other procedures.
- Conduct a main study
- Prepare a report
Gall, Borg, and Gall (1996) also
explained that these five stages may overlap or occur in a different order
depending the nature of the study. Qualitative studies which involve emergent
research design may gather and analyze some data before developing the
proposal, or a pilot study can be done before writing a research proposal or
not at all.
Anglin, Ross, and Morrison (1995)
took a closer look at the stages of identifying a research problem and
preparing the research proposal. They advised a sequence of planning steps:
Select a Topic
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Research requires commitment. As a
researcher, you want to make sure you are doing something that you have a
great interest in doing.
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Identify
the Research Problem
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Based on your own understanding
and interest of the topic, think about what issues can be explored?
Sometimes, a research problem cannot be immediately identified. But, through
reviewing the existing literature and having continuous discourse with peers
and scholars, the research problem will start take its shape.
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Conduct
a Literature Search
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Reviewing literature has two major
purposes: one is to build up the researcher's knowledge base of the topic
under exploration for a deeper understanding, and the other is to ensure the
significance of the research. The researcher needs to make sure how the
research will be able to contribute to the knowledge in the related field
compared with the existing research literature.
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State
the Research Question
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The research problem will evolve
during your pursuing knowledge base through reviewing literature and
discourse with peers and scholars. To specify what questions your research
study want to answer helps to provide the basis of planning other parts of
your study, e.g. the research design, the methods for data collection and
analysis.
Ideas
abstracted from Anglin, Ross, and Morrison (1995)
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Determine
the Research Design
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In the intention of the research
study is to verify a causal relationship between certain variables, use an
experimental design; if the intention of the research study is to find out
how variables relate to one another, use a correlational design; if the intention
of the research study is to describe and understand a particular social
condition/pattern and meaning of a social experience, conduct a qualitative
study.
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Determine
Methods
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Three major elements in the
research study need to be considered: participants, materials, and
instruments.
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For
qualitative research, the issues are the sources of data, where the
researcher can find the information and what methods the researcher can use
to get the information. Qualitative research usually focuses on the verbal
information gathered from the interviews, observations, documents or cultural
artifacts. The very distinctive feature about the qualitative research is
that the researcher is part of the instrument. The recognition of this
researcher's subjective interpretation of the information yields the process
of triangulation, which emphasizes use of multiple sources, methods,
investigators, and theories to ensure the credibility of the research.
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Identify
Analysis Procedures
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Different research questions and
different research designs entail different analysis method to take.
Experimental design employs statistical analysis to give statistical
descriptions of the groups in terms of different independent variables and
dependent variables, and to determine the significance of the differences
whether the dependent variables are caused by the independent variables. On
the other hand, qualitative design employs semantic analysis to identify
themes, categories, processes, and patterns of an observed phenomenon, and
provides rich descriptions of the phenomenon in order to develop a deeper
understanding of human systems.
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