Title: Research Methods Lecture2 given12March2003 Research Topic Selection: Issues, Approaches
1 Research Methods Lecture-2
given_at_12-March-2003Research Topic Selection
Issues, Approaches Examples
- Dr Frantz Clermont (Daryl Essam)
2This Lectures Outline
- The Research Process
- A generic prescription
- A nonlinear an interactive search
- Example of Initial Steps
- Research Topic/Question Search
- An iterative process
- Originality-related issues examples
- Creative Critical Thinking Skills
- Statistics
- Basic Role
- Methodological Duality (Descriptive and
Inferential)
3The Research Process A generic prescription
- Generic Steps
- 1) Choose a Topic ?? Idea-Generating Phase
- 2) Research Question ?? Narrowing-Down Phase
- 3) Design the Study
- 4) Collect Data
- 5) Analyse Data
- 6) Interpret Data
- 7) Inform Others
4Research Topic Research Question (Pass-1)
example
- Consider
- Hastings P. K. Hodge, D. R. (1986), Religious
moral attitude trends among college students,
1948-1984, Social Forces, vol 65 370-377. - __________________________________________________
___________ - Topic Moral attitudes of college students
periods of conservatism or liberalism - Research Question (Pass-1)
- Idea students ?? cultural change?
- Evidence How have student attitudes changed from
1948 to 1984? - Fact Student attitudes have been found to change
from 1948 to 1984? - Question Students are pacesetters of cultural
change!
5Research Question(Pass-2) example
- Narrowing Down
- Literature Perspectives (Media Reports Past
Studies) - 1980s student attitudes return to 1950s
conservatism - FURTHER QUESTION THUS RAISED BY LITERATURE
- Were religious moral beliefs also
shifted? - Studies on College Students from the 1920s
through the 1970s - Shifts observed in strength of student religious
beliefs - Parallelled periods of conservatism liberalism
on socio-political issues - HYPOTHESIS Religious moral beliefs would
become more conservative in the 1980s than in the
1970s! - DESIGN APPROACH
- 1948 Hastings questionnaire submitted to 205
students at Williams College - 1967,1974,1979,1984 Same Questionnaire from 1948
distributed at same college -
6Research Process Communication Style
- Research Topic Problem ? Introduction
- Literature Review ? Research
Context - Design, Instrumentation ? Materials
Methods - Data Analyses ? Results
Discussion - ?
Abstract
? Title
7What Next? That is all very well, but how do I
go about selecting my own research topic which is
to yield original work?
- Questions
- What should I do?
- What skills do I need to develop?
8Topic/Question Search An Iterative Process
- Activity
- Make a list of topics of interest/relevance/import
ance - Consider one or two topics about which you know
something - Carry out exploratory/skeletal review of
literature relevant to broad area - Consult with supervisor others gt perspectives
on worthiness feasibility
9Topic/Question Search Literature Review-1
(exploratory)
- Aims
- to assess importance/worthiness of topic(s) of
interest - to clarify and justify a specific topic
- Involves
- Reading seminal papers, recent review/tutorial
papers - Learning about state-of-the-art from papers
introductions - Learning of ways forward from papers
conclusions - Paying attention to titles, keywords and
recurrent citations - Annotating a preliminary bibliography
10Literature databases
- Procite
- EndNote
- Reference Manager
- WriteNote
- BibDesk (free - Mac OS X)
- http//www.researchsoftware.net/index.php?pagemai
nnew_id6 - http//www.port.ac.uk/departments/studentsupport/l
ibrary/generalinformation/staffresearchers/bibliog
raphicandreferencemanagementsoftware/ - http//bibdesk.sourceforge.net/
11Research Topic/Question Search In a nutshell!
- Initial seed(s)
- Supervisor and/or Others
- Personal Background, Experiences, Intuition
- Literature Review-1 exploratory/skeletal
- Consultation with Supervisor and Others
- An Iterative Process
- An Incessant Search for Originality!
12What Next? That is still all very well, but what
is meant by Originality and how will I recognise
it?
- Consider the following analogy
- Research Course ?? An Expedition
- Research Student (U) ?? The Explorer (E)
- E starts with a general idea of an area (e.g., of
land) to explore - U starts with a general area of interest
13Originality Tools, Techniques Procedures
- E gathers information to firm up why a particular
area is to be explored - U studies the literature, talks to experts and
sits on relevant seminars. - E uses collected information to organise
procedures, tools, equipment personnel - U must include decisions about procedures, tools
techniques, and possibly also people to be
involved. - --------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------- - Selection, development and testing of
- procedures, tools techniques could be the basis
of originality! - --------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------
14Originality Exploring the unknown
- E embarks on a preplanned previously unexplored
route! - U embarks on a major investigation of
something, which has not before been
investigated! - --------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------- - A research problem defined in an unknown or
unexplored area - almost readily bears the stamp of originality!
- --------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------
15Originality Use of Data
- E brings back potentially useful or
ground-breaking data, which were not processed on
the expedition - U may be in the same situation and could proceed
to use fresh (or even) old data in order to gain
new insights into new or existing theories or
practices. - --------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------ - Use of Data for the purpose of gaining new or
further insights - (theoretical/practical) could also be the basis
of originality! - --------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------
16Originality Outcomes
- E may bring back range of data from the expected
to the unexpected - U may develop outcomes which may or may not
relate closely to the research problem as it was
first formulated. - --------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------ - Research outcomes do not need to be new in
absolute terms, but only need to be new to a
situation! - Unexpected outcomes can cause a reformulation of
the initial research problem. - However, this is likely to add considerable
strength to the argumentation leading to the
amended problem, thereby injecting originality to
such outcomes! - --------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------
17Statistics Basic Role
- What is Research? ? Systematic, Objective
Scholarly - Research question ? Hypothesis
- Information needed to answer question
- Means of collection information
- Analysing information
- Presenting Results
- What is Statistics? ? End-Product not Process
- Start with hypothesis (e.g., children who learn a
language using method X will perform differently
from those using method Y) - Collect data ( a sample)
- 1 group using method X 1 group using method Y)
- Control age, sex, socio-economic status ? the 2
groups differ only by the factor being tested) - Analyse data using Statistical Methods
- To test the differences between the results from
the instructional method - To score each of the students in the 2 groups
using the same tests - ?differences between the 2 groups are due to
CHANCE or NOT ?SIGNIFICANCE
18Statistics Basic Role (contd)
- Advantages
- Replicable same test can be repeated with a
similar group w/ similar results - Generalisable if sample is appropriate, then
the factor should have same impact in other
groups - Objective results are statistically
quantifiable and tested before conclusions are
drawn - Disadvantages
- Too focussed one factor of interest but other
useful factors could be missed - Artificial controlled environment ? idealised
perspective
19Statistics Methodological Duality
- Descriptive ? Summary Measures
- Inferential ? Parameter Estimation
- ? Hypothesis Testing
20Summary
- The Research Process
- A search for novelty
- A nonlinear an interactive search
- Read literature
- Research Topic/Question Search
- An iterative process
- Originality-related issues examples
- Creative Critical Thinking Skills
- Statistics
- Descriptive
- Inferential