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Reviewing the Literature and Developing Research Questions You will be able to: Identify research problems. Explain why it is necessary to conduct a literature.

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Presentation on theme: "Reviewing the Literature and Developing Research Questions You will be able to: Identify research problems. Explain why it is necessary to conduct a literature."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Reviewing the Literature and Developing Research Questions You will be able to: Identify research problems. Explain why it is necessary to conduct a literature search. Conduct a literature search. Explain the reason for stating the purpose of a research study and the research questions. Explain the difference between purpose statements and research questions in qualitative and quantitative studies. Explain the purpose and necessity of stating your research questions and hypotheses. Explain the difference between problem statements in qualitative and quantitative studies.

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4 Research topic Research problem Research Purpose Research Question Hypothesis

5 Ideas that Can’t Be Resolved Through Empirical Research

6 Review of the Literature Has it been researched already? Assist in forming research questions Ideas how to proceed and design your study Can point out methodological problems Identify appropriate data collection instruments

7 Literature Review for Qualitative Research Explain theoretical underpinnings of the study Assist in formulation of the research question and selection of the study population Stimulate new insights

8 Two Schools of Thought Conduct a thorough lit review before collecting data Ignorance is Bliss: review literature after research to avoid bias or only review enough to know if the study has been done

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10 How to Judge the Quality of Internet Resources Authority: a. lists author and credentials and address has a preferred domain such as edu.org, or.gov b. Identify the qualifications of the publisher of the web document. Read “about us” or “mission” of “Who We Are”

11 Accuracy Look for credentials of author Look for a link or e-mail address that allows you to contact the offer Is there an acknowledgement of the limitations of the information? Identify the purpose of the information: public service announcement, advertising, sales pitch, news release, published research? This may suggest a certain bias.

12 Objectivity Highest when : there is no little or no advertising Provides accurate and objective information Identify if there is any bias: Is the information traceable to factual information presented in some bibliographic or Internet reference? Info may be less biased Do authors express own opinions? Opinions suggest bias

13 currency Coverage Is good when you can view the information on the web page without paying fees or having additional software applications. Determine when the web page was produced Determine when the page was updated and ho up-to-date the links are Web page and links should be updated regularly

14 Feasibility After literature review synthesize the material to formulate specific research questions and a hypotheses to be investigated. Determine feasibility? Do you have the time, resources, participants needed?

15 Research Problem Quantitative Emphasis on the need to explain, predict or describe some outcome or event Attempt to explain why the problems exist as well as how to ameliorate them Qualitative Focus on exploring some process, event or phenomenon

16 Purpose of the Study Quantitative Declarative statement that identifies the type of relationship being investigated between a set of variables. The relationship could be causal or descriptive. Qualitative A statement that the intent of the study is to explore or understand some phenomenon experienced by certain individuals at a specific research site. should be to describe, understand, develop or discover something Should state the central idea to describe understand or discover State method of data collection State unit of analysis/and or research site

17 Research Question Quantitative Interrogative sentence that asks a question about the relationship that exists between two or more variables. Common forms are predictive, descriptive and causal research questions 1. descriptive: how often? How much? What is changing over time or over different situations? 2. predictive: can one or more variables be used to predict some future outcome? 3. causal: compare different variations of some phenomenon to identify the cause of something Be specific: ensures you have a good understanding of your research and aids in design and conduct of study Qualitative Interrogative question about some process, issue or phenomenon that is to be explored. General, open-ended and over- arching question you would like to answer Then you narrow down to specifics by writing subquestions

18 Formulating Hypotheses Formal statement of prediction of relationship that exists among the variables under investigation Logically follows the research question Typically emerges from the literaure review or theory Can also come from reasoning based on casual observation of events Must be able to be confirmed or not confirmed

19 Consumer Use of the Literature Must not consider any one study’s results to be conclusive Look across studies to see whether the findings are repeatedly confirmed or replicated For a study to be reliable, the results must be replicated by other researchers on other populations in other locations Meta-analysis will have more accurate results than a study that only integrated a few studies


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