1 COMM 301: Empirical Research in Communication Kwan M Lee Lect1_1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Conceptualization Making clear what we are talking about.
Advertisements

1 COMM 301: Empirical Research in Communication Lecture 15 – Hypothesis Testing Kwan M Lee.
1 COMM 301: Empirical Research in Communication Kwan M Lee Lect4_1.
Research Problems Chapter 2
The Purpose Statement and Research Questions
TOOLS FOR LEARNING ABOUT BEHAVIOR IN ORGANIZATIONS
Designing Research Concepts, Hypotheses, and Measurement
Identifying research questions
The Purpose of Statement
1 NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program Seminar 2 ©Valorie Troesch 2006.
Research Methods in Social Sciences
1 ETR 520 Introduction to Educational Research Dr. M C. Smith.
Specifying a Purpose, Research Questions or Hypothesis
Developing operational definitions PY257: Research I February 10, 2010 Dr. Leonard.
SOWK 6003 Social Work Research Week 4 Research process, variables, hypothesis, and research designs By Dr. Paul Wong.
Specifying a Purpose, Research Questions or Hypothesis
Behavior in organization. Sociology and social psychology Field of organizational behavior psychology communication Political science Management science.
ICER 2005 Factors Affecting the Success of Non-Majors in Learning to Program Susan Wiedenbeck Drexel University.
Orientation to Online Learning An Instructors Guide.
Evaluating your ideas and Reading the Literature Psych 231: Research Methods in Psychology.
Research problem, Purpose, question
Data Analysis and Presentation
Reliability and Validity. Criteria of Measurement Quality How do we judge the relative success (or failure) in measuring various concepts? How do we judge.
The Proposal. The Final Product Introduction –Including your Management Question Literature Review Your Model –Research Questions –Hypotheses you plan.
Specifying a Purpose and Research Questions or Hypotheses
Specifying a Purpose, Research Questions or Hypothesis
Research in Psychology
May 12 th Class Introductions Syllabus and Expectations Discussing the who, what, when where And “why?” of Comparative Politics Discussion of Assignments.
Chapter 3 An Overview of Quantitative Research
COURSE ADDITION CATALOG DESCRIPTION To include credit hours, type of course, term(s) offered, prerequisites and/or restrictions. (75 words maximum.) 4/1/091Course.
Welcome to CS 3260 Dennis A. Fairclough. Overview Course Canvas Web Site Course Materials Lab Assignments Homework Grading Exams Withdrawing from Class.
Qualitative Methods vs. Quantitative Methods. Qualitative Methods? Quantitative Methods?
Research Methodology Lecture No : 3. Recap lecture 2 Broad problem: the entire situation where one sees a need for problem solving and research. Literature.
Copyright © 2008 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey All rights reserved. John W. Creswell Educational Research: Planning,
Research Methods & Writing a Hypothesis. Scientific Method Hypothesis  What you expect to happen Subjects  The who (or what) of the study Variables.
ITINERARY:  Syllabus  Plagiarism  Sources for Citation  Library Tour  Homework.
COMM 250 Agenda - Week 10 Housekeeping C2 – Returned to You Today RP1 – Due Today (IM Surveys) TP3a – Due Tomorrow Lecture RAT4 Review RP1 Experiments.
Experimental Research Methods in Language Learning Chapter 16 Experimental Research Proposals.
Creswell, Educational Research: Planning, Conducting, and Evaluating Quantitative and Qualitative Research, 4e © 2012, 2008, 2005, 2002 Pearson Education,
Educational Research: Competencies for Analysis and Application, 9 th edition. Gay, Mills, & Airasian © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK and Hypothesis Development
RESEARCH PROPOSAL Statement of problem Objectives of the study Scope of the study Review of Literature Methodology and theoretical back- ground Benefits.
Presentation 7 H 0 The Null Hypothesis (Click on the left mouse button to continue. Click on the right mouse button and select “Previous” to go back.)
FOR 500 PRINCIPLES OF RESEARCH: PROPOSAL WRITING PROCESS
Log onto: Click on Political Science 2.
The Internet and Politics Agenda for Today  Lab scheduling  Comparative Politics methodology  Web guide assignment  Web site and bulletin board overview.
I know of no more encouraging fact than the unquestionable ability of man to elevate his life by conscious endeavor. Henry David Thoreau.
Psychology 3051 Psychology 305A: Theories of Personality Lecture 1 1.
Reviewing the Literature and Developing Research Questions You will be able to: Identify research problems. Explain why it is necessary to conduct a literature.
Semester 2: Lecture 0 Course Overview Prepared by: Dr. Lloyd Waller ©
A look at psychological research. General principles The specious attraction of anecdotes The concern for precise measurement Operational definitions.
1 Quantitative Reasoning Fall 2012 Lecture Notes.
Physics-160 SECTION 001 Physics and Astronomy for Elementary School Teachers 3 credit hours MWF 9am - 10:50am Dr. Robert Fersch (instructor) Prof. Joseph.
COMM 250 Agenda - Week 4 Housekeeping Team Pictures Team Issues Team Rosters (?) TP1, TP2 Lecture RAT 1 The Craft of Research Variables Research Questions.
11 Chapter 4 The Research Process – Theoretical Framework – (Stage 3 in Research Process) © 2009 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
BIT 143: Programming – Data Structures It is assumed that you will also be present for the slideshow for the first day of class. Between that slideshow.
Midterm Review Renan Levine POL 242 June 14, 2006.
What is Research?. Intro.  Research- “Any honest attempt to study a problem systematically or to add to man’s knowledge of a problem may be regarded.
McGraw-Hill © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Slide 1 Sociological Research SOCIOLOGY Richard T. Schaefer 2.
Psychology 101: General  Chapter 1Part 2 Scientific Method Instructor: Mark Vachon.
Selection Of THE Research Problem
Research Problem, Questions and Hypotheses
Purpose of the Study and Theoretical Rationale a mini tutorial
Educational Research: Fundamentals for the Consumer
Week 2 Research Proposals
Experimental Research Vocabulary
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Research Questions Major Points
Reasoning in Psychology Using Statistics
Presentation transcript:

1 COMM 301: Empirical Research in Communication Kwan M Lee Lect1_1

2 Course Goal Ultimate –Become a better problem solver in life! Practical –Know how to conduct empirical research in theory and in practice –Become a better consumer of research findings –Say intelligent things about stats

3 Requirement Examination 125% Examination 224% Examination 328% Assignment and Research Project17% Attendance and Participation 04% Instructors’ Judgment 02% Extra Credits for Re. Participation: extra 2% Focus is on making all students successful

4 Key Dates Check Syllabus –Exams –Final project due –Lab assignment dues Course Web: – Fill out Student Info Survey and hand in the next class –Lect1-3.doc

5

6 Project Guideline Check “Project Guideline (lect2_2.doc)”lect2_2.doc Also check “Typical phases in the research process” section in the “Project Guideline”

7 Generating research questions Refer to the exercise guide, “Coming up with research topics and questions (lect1_2.doc),” and the discussion which follows.lect1_2.doc

8 Research Question Research question –Strict definition: a statement exploring the relationship between two or more (communication related) concepts. –Loose Definition: a question calling for empirical investigation –RQs are not necessarily based on previous literature/theories. –Types Open-ended: Will A affect B?; Will there be a relationship? Close-ended: Will A increase B? Will A be positively related to B

9 Hypothesis – a statement declaring a predicted relationship between two or more (communication related) concepts. –Hs are based on theory/previous literature/logic. –Types One-tailed Two-tailed

10 RQ & H Forms RQ and H are statements about relationships between/among concepts/variables Relationships suggest causes and effects Hence, research questions and hypotheses take a certain form: e.g. Does information oriented Internet use increase political efficacy of users? e.g. Information oriented Internet use increase the political efficacy of users.

11 Elements of RQ and H “Does political information oriented Internet use increase political efficacy of users?” What are the parts of the above question? –Constructs: terms representing concepts/things in which the researcher has an interest –Relationships By breaking research questions into parts, we are starting to define them.

12 Defining research questions Conceptual Definition –Defining constructs by relating them to other constructs and terms –specifying aspects and dimensions –aim is to reduce abstraction and ambiguity, so others can agree on the meaning of the terms –First part of Explication process! (e.g., Lee’s explication paper (lect1_5.pdf)

13 Defining research questions Example constructs: –Political information oriented Internet use –Political self efficacy How can you define these conceptually? Internet use activity focused on retrieving political information “the feeling that individual political action does and can have impact upon the political process, i.e., that it is worthwhile to perform one’s own civic duties” (Campbell, Gurin, & Miller, 1954, p. 187).

14 Defining research questions Operational Definition –describing what the constructs’ observable indicators are, and how the indicators can be observed –key aspect of learning about research methods –defining by action, specifically measurement (e.g., p&p questions; physiological data; behavioral data), rather than by words

15 Defining research questions Example constructs: –Political information oriented Internet use –Political self efficacy –How can you define these operationally? If you used the Internet or any online service providers during the last seven days, how many hours were devoted to visiting news sites such as CNN, New York Times, MSNBC, etc.? 1) I consider myself well-qualified to participate in politics. 2) I feel that I have a pretty good understanding of the important political issues facing our country. 3) I feel that I could do as good a job in public office as most other people. 4) I often don’t feel sure of myself when talking with other people about politics and government. (Reverse scoring)

16 More on CD (conceptual D) and OD (operational D) Check lect1-4.doc

17 Variables At the level of operational definition, constructs become variables. Variables are constructs capable of taking 2 or more values Must vary Continuous or Dichotomous –Continuous “On a scale of 1-10” “How many times did they smile?” “How much did they bid?” “What was the score of the game?” –Dichotomous “Vote for one of A or B” “Did you win or lose?” Yes/No questions

18 Defining research questions Remember: relationships suggest causes and effects This parallels the 2 key classes of variables: –Independent variable representing the generative forces, expected to influence another variable –Dependent variable representing the effects, expected to be influenced by the independent variables

19 Defining research questions Apply to the example research question (and H) above Does information oriented Internet use increase political efficacy of users? Information oriented Internet use increase the political efficacy of users. –Which is the independent variable and which is the dependent variable?

20 After defining research questions Next step: search for prior research done on these topics. Refer to the exercise guide: “Searching for prior research” (lect1_2.doc) – page 2.