Research Design Definition
Research Design Definition
Research Design Definition
A research design involves a series of rational decision-making choices depending
upon the various options available to the researchers. Broadly it
is composed of different elements like: the purpose of
the study, the unit of
analysis, time dimension, mode of observation, sampling design, observation tool
s,
data processing, and data analysis. Let us look at each one of these elements
1. Purpose of the Study
From the perspective of purpose of
the study, a research can be exploratory, descriptive, and
explanatory (the distinctions we have already discussed). As we
have already covered a number of steps in the research process.
at this stage it is assumed that we are pretty sure about what we are
looking for whereby we have gone much beyond the stage of
an exploratory study (all studies have
elements of exploration in them).
Beyond the exploratory stage now we are entering into the formal stage of deline
ating the plan for data
collection, data processing, and data analysis. Here our focus is
on whether our study is going to be a
descriptive or explanatory. The essential difference between descriptive and expl
anatory studies lies in their objectives.
If
the research is concerned with finding out who, what, where, when, or how
much,
then the study is descriptive.
If it is concerned with learning why that is how one variable produces
changes in another it is causal.
Research on crime as such is descriptive when it measures the types of
crimes committed, how often, when, where, and by whom.
In a explanatory study, we try to explain
relationships among variables for instance, why the crime rate
is higher in locality A than in locality
B. Every explanatory study in the beginning is likely to be descriptive as well as
Methodological rigor increases as
one moves from exploratory study to explanatory study, which may
encompass hypothesis testing involving multiple methods of data collection, sophi
stications in sampling designs, formulation of instruments
of data collection, data processing, and data analysis. Since the
purpose of the study is likely to determine how rigorous the research design
is likely to be, therefore, the
researcher would decide very early on about the purpose of his/her study.
Within the explanatory study, researcher may further decide about the type of
investigation i.e. causal
versus correlational. The researcher must decide whether a causal or correlational
study is needed to find an answer to the issue at hand. The former is done when it
is necessary to establish a definitive cause-and-effect relationship. If
the researcher just wants a mere identification of important factors
"associated with" the problem, then a correlational study is called for. Whether th
e study is basically a
correlational or causal will help in deciding about the mode of observation survey
study or an experimental study.