Friday, January 8, 2010

RESEARCH DESIGN STRATEGIES

What is Research Design?

  • A plan for selecting the sources and types of information used to answer research questions
  • A framework for specifying the relationships among the study variables
  • A blueprint that outlines each procedure from the hypothesis to the analysis

Classifications of Designs

  • Exploratory study is usually to develop hypotheses or questions for further research
  • Formal study is to test the hypotheses or answer the research questions

Methods of Data Collection

  • Monitoring, which includes observational
    studies
  • Interrogation/communication studies

Power to Produce Effects

  • In an experiment, the researcher attempts to control and/or manipulate the variables in the study
  • In an ex post facto design, the researcher has no control over the variables; they can only report what has happened.

Purpose of the Study

  • Descriptive study tries to explain relationships among variables.
  • Causal study is how one variable produces changes in another.

The Time Dimension

  • Cross-sectional studies are carried out once and represent a snapshot of one point in time
  • Longitudinal studies are repeated over an extended period

The Topical Scope

  • Statistical studies attempt to capture a population's characteristics by making inferences from a sample's characteristics
  • Case studies place more emphasis on a full contextual analysis of fewer events or conditions and their interrelations

The Research Environment

  • Field conditions
  • Laboratory conditions
  • Simulations

A Participant's Perceptions

  • Usefulness of a design may be reduced when people in the study perceive that research is being conducted
  • Participants' perceptions influence the outcomes of the research

Why do Exploratory Studies?

  • Exploration is particularly useful when researchers lack a clear idea of the problems

Data Collection Techniques

  • Qualitative techniques
  • Secondary data
  • Focus groups
  • Two-stage design

Causation

  • The essential element of causation is
    • A "produces" B

                Or

  • A "forces" B to occur

Causal Study Relationships

  • Symmetrical
  • Reciprocal
  • Asymmetrical

Asymmetrical Relationships

  • Stimulus-Response
  • Property-Disposition
  • Disposition-Behavior
  • Property-Behavior

Achieving the Ideal Experimental Design

  • Control
    • Random Assignment
    • Matching
  • Randomization    
    • Manipulation and control of variables


 


 


 


 


 


 

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