Research 1 (G-11)
Research 1 (G-11)
Research 1 (G-11)
PRACTICAL RESEARCH 1
2ND SEM
GRADE 11
S. Y. 2021-2022
NAME: ___________________________________________________
COMPILED BY:
JUDILYN M. JUMAMOY
DISCLAIMER: The lesson content has been compiled from various sources in public domain including
but not limited to the internet for the convenience of the users. The school has no propriety right on the
same.
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WEEK 1 & 2
WHAT IS RESEARCH?
RESEARCH (Walker)
is the systematic investigation and study of materials and sources to establish facts
and reach new conclusions.
it may take place in different settings and may use different methods; scientific
research is universally a systematic and objective search reliable knowledge.
is an act of studying something carefully and extensively in order to attain deep
knowledge.
OTHER DEFINITION
it is an inquiry process.
it is a formal process of problem solving.
it is a set of procedures and stages.
it originates with aquestion or a problem, often it is an iterative (repitition) process.
IMPORTANCE OF RESEARCH
BENEFITS OF RESEARCH
1. Economics research refers to matters concerning the environment and which may
lead to improved techniques to ensure sustainable food production.
2. Social research leads to an increased knowledge of people and their interactions
with one another, which could be relevant to policy makers.
3. Environmental research focuses on improved techniques to ensure sustainable food
production.
4. Cultural research leads to increased understanding of cultural values or social
approaches.
5. Health research contributes to a better understanding of the causes of medical
conditions.
1. EMPIRICAL
Research is based on observation and experimentation of theories.
2. SYSTEMATIC
Research follows orderly and sequential procedures, based on valid
procedures and principles.
3. CONTROLLED
Research all variables, except those that are tested /experimented on, are
keep constant.
4. EMPLOYS HYPOTHESIS
Guides the investigation process.
5. ANALYTICAL
Critical analysis of all data.
6. OBJECTIVE
Research as unbiased and logical (reasonable).
7. ORIGINAL WORK
Requires effort, researcher’s own investigation and produce the data
needed to complete the study.
4. DESCRIPTIVE DATA
Forms of words, pictures or visual.
5. EMERGENT DESIGN
Cannot be finalized at the beginning continues to adjust
methods and ways as the study progresses.
FUNCTIONS OF ETHICS
1. Norms promote the aims of research such as knowledge, truth and evidence of
error.
2. Ethical standards promotes values that are essential to collaborative work (trust,
accountability, mutual respect and fairness.
3. Ethical norms ensure that researchers can be held accountable to the public.
4. Ethical norms, helps build public support quality and integrity of research.
Honesty
Objectivity
Integrity Social responsibility
Carefulness Non- discrimination
Openness
Competence
legality
Confidentially
Responsible publication
Respect for colleagues
CATEGORIES OF RESEARCH
1. QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
Based on an approach which sees the individual and the world around
him/her as interconnected.
Exploratory research
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2. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH
Used to quantify the problem by the way of generating mathematical data
or data that can be transformed into usable statistics.
Associated with research in the natural science.
BACHMAN (2009)
1. Empirical research is aimed at creating new knowledge.
2. Research creates knowledge by observing phenomena.
3. All the entities of interest like attitudes, motives and learning.
4. All researchers are concerned about the universality of ideas or expressing an
idea in a general statement.
TYPES OF RESEARCH
1. APPLIED RESEARCH
Designed to solve practical problems of the modern world, its goal is to
improve human condition.
It is used to find solutions to everyday problems, current illness and
develop technologies.
EXAMPLE:
Improve agricultural crop production
Treat or cure a specific disease
To improve the energy efficiency of homes, offices or modes of
transportation
2. BASIC RESEARCH
Referred to as fundamental or pure research, is driven by a scientist’s
curiosity or interest in a scientific question.
The main motivation is to extend man’s knowledge, not to create or
invent things.
EXAMPLE:
Possible cure for HIV
Genetic code of the fruit fly
How do mushrooms reproduce?
3. CORRELATIONAL RESEARCH
Refers to the systematic investigation or statistical study of relationships
among two or more variables, w/o necessary determining cause and effect.
4. DESCRIPTIVE RESEARCH
Refers to researchers that provides an accurate portrayal of a class or a
particular individual situation or group.
Known as statistical research.
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5. ETHNOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Refers to the investigation of a culture.
6. EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
An objective, systematic, controlled investigation for the purpose of
predicting and controlling phenomena and examining probability.
7. EXPLORATORY RESEARCH
Conducted for a problem that has not been clearly defined.
8. HISTORICAL RESEARCH
Involving analysis of events that occurred in the remote or recent past.
9. PHENOMENOLOGICAL RESEARCH
An inductive descriptive research developed from phenomenological
philosophy.
Aim to describe an experience as it is actually lived by the person.
1. What is research?
2. Give the significance of research.
3. What are the role of research in our society?
4. Write the characteristics of a qualitative research.
5. What are the benefits that you can get out of a research?
II. Copy and write your answer before the number in the blank.
THANK YOU
AND
GOOD LUCK!!!
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WEEK 3 - 5
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
ACCORDING TO:
CRESSWELL (1994)
An inquiry process of understanding a social or human problem.
NEUMAN (2007)
Follows a linear research path, speaks a language of variables and hypothesis
and emphasize measuring variables and testing hypothesis.
1. PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
Demands immersion in the natural setting of the research participants.
2. OBSERVATION
The systematic noting or recording of events, behaviors and artifacts (objects) in
the social setting chosen for study.
3. IN – DEPTH INTERVIEWING
Resembles conversation, but with pre-determined response categories.
5. CONTENT ANALYSIS
Systematic examination of forms of communication to document patterns
objectively (letters, emails, minutes of meetings, policy statements).
6. NARRATOLOGY
Applied to any spoken or written story. (Great deal of sensitivity between
participant and researcher)
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STRENGTHS:
1. Offer the best answers to certain phenomena (social, economic, political or
psychological)
2. Research results are exhaustive (complete, true)
3. Offers several avenues to standard phenomena, behavior, human conditions
4. Can be build or develop theories through consistent themes, categories,
relationships, interrelationships.
WEAKNESSES:
1. Total immersion can be time-consuming and tedious and resource draining.
2. Comes a point when the personal self and the researcher self are inseparable, so,
subjectively, on the part of the researcher, can happen.
THEORY
Refers to an organizing scheme for the data that place them in orderly patterns and
give meaning and insight into the lives of others.
Not placed before data collection; it comes out of data and is thus referred to as
grounded theory. (Glaser and Strauss)
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RESEARCH TITLE
A product of real world observations, dilemmas, wide reading, selective viewing
(television programs, films, documentaries, videos)
Original, clear, concise or specific
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1. CREDIBILITY
Truth value, consistency, neutrality
2. VALIDITY
Complexity of variables and embedding of interactions
3. TRANSFERABILITY
One set findings to another context
Bringing more than one source of data to bear on a single point
4. DEPENDABILITY
Change in the design created by increasing refined understanding of the
setting
5. CONFORMABILITY
Do the data help confirm the general findings and lead to the
implications?
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I. IDENTIFICATION
Identify the given statement and write your answer on a sheet of paper.
III. ENUMERATION
Answer the following questions and write your answer in a sheet of paper.
WEEK 6 – 8
Research questions should be congruent with the data collection and data analysis:
1. Understanding and Perception
2. Practices/ accounts of practice
3. Influencing factors
4. Construction
5. Language Practice
Sets boundaries and parameters of the problem inquiry and narrows down the
scope of the inquiry.
ASPECTS OF SIGNIFICANCE
LITERATURE REVIEW
Provides an overview of what has been written about a specific topic
Includes all the information and data which are relevant to the topic
1. The types consisting of an initial collection to help you consider the kinds,
methods and sources of evidence for a new study.
2. The type of a selective review that targets other studies and appear to cover the
same topic and helps you define new study in your own
3. A comprehensive review conducted out of a desire to summarize what is known
on a given topic.
To indicate the research that has been conducted to ensure that you’re not
“reinventing the wheel”.
To demonstrate that you’re aware of important and recent studies in your study
area.
To ensure that you haven’t missed literature detailing a way for you to conduct your
study.
To demonstrate your ability to critically analyze the literature in your study area.
1. TRADITIONAL
Referred to as narrative literature review
It provides a quick overview of current studies
It helps explain why your study is important in the context of the
literature
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2. INTEGRATIVE
Review synthesizes findings from different approaches (Whittemore and
Knafl, 2005)
3. SYNTACTIC
Synthesizes high quality empirical information to answer a given research
question
4. SOPING
Involves a broad research question that explores the current evidence
base (Armstrong, Hall, Doyle and Waters 2011)
It can help inform areas that are appropriate for a systematic review
TYPES OF SOURCES
1. PRIMARY SOURCES
Researchers report the results of their studies (journals)
2. SECONDARY SOURCES
Authors describe the work of others (textbook)
SYNTHESIS
A discussion that draws on one or more sources
Refers to the bringing together of materials from different sources and the
creation of an integrated whole.
TYPES OF SYNTHESIS
1. EXPLANATORY
Helps the readers to understand a topic
Aim to present the facts in a reasonably objective manner
2. ARGUMENT SYNTHESIS
To present your own point of view with the support of relevant facts
drawn from services and presented in a logical manner.
CATEGORIES OF SOURCES
1. SUMMARY
Simplest way of writing a synthesis
You write one after the other most relevant information and
sources you gathered
2. EXAMPLE OR ILLUSTRATION
A reference to a particularly illuminating example or illustration that you
have included in your review.
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1. INTRODUCTION
A single paragraph that introduces the general topic and provide
scholarly or societal (policy, practice) context for the review.
It also identifies the overall statement of knowledge about the topic
(evidence, methodology, problem or opportunity)
2. BODY
You need to address previous research on the topic, grouped according to
theme, theoretical, perspective, method used or chronological
development.
Connect the literature to the proposed research objectives within this
parts and describe previous work you have accomplished related to your
proposed study.
3. CONCLUSION
A single paragraph that provides a summary statement of the overall
statement of knowledge about the topic.
Reconnect ideas to your introduction. It should establish the potential
significance or importance of your proposed study relative to the current
state of knowledge.
ETHICS
1. ETHICAL RELATIVISM
o Refers to the view that values are relative in the sense that a person feels
his/her value is better than any other person’s value.
2. ETHICAL PRINCIPLES
o Refers to values that are translated into rules or standard of conduct.
o Guides for minimizing risks to participants - risks as making participants
uncomfortable or the researcher’s probing into personal areas of
participants.
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3. ETHICAL DELIMMA
o Entails a situation where there is a felt conflict between values or
principles and a choice of action needs to be decided.
RESEARCH INTEGRITY
A researcher uses words that can be trusted as representative’s truthful positions
and statements.
1. FOCUSED
o Presents only ideas and reports on studies that are closely related to the
topic.
2. CONCISE
o The ideas should be presented economically.
3. LOGICAL
o The flow within and among paragraphs should be smooth, logical
progression from one idea to the next.
4. DEVELOPED
o The ideas are fully and completely written.
5. INTEGRATIVE
o It shows how ideas are related and how all reviewed materials contribute
to your topic.
6. CURRENT
o It exhibits up-to-date information related to your study
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I. MULTIPLE CHOICE
Direction: Select the letter of your choice. Write the answer on a sheet of
paper, do not write anything on the modules.
1. It sets boundaries and parameters of the problem inquiry and narrows down the
scope of the inquiry.
a. Scope c. Delimitation
b. Scope and Limitation d. Limitation
2. It is associated with qualitative study related to validity and reliability.
a. Scope c. Delimitation
b. Scope and Limitation d. Limitation
3. The boundaries of the research study.
a. Scope c. Delimitation
b. Scope and Limitation d. Limitation
4. It looks for the purpose of evaluation.
a. Scope c. Delimitation
b. Scope and Limitation d. Limitation
5. Provides an overview of what has been written about a specific topic.
a. Literature c. Literature Review
b. Review of Literature d. Literature Background
II. IDENTIFICATION
Direction: Identify the following statement and write your answer on a sheet
of paper.
III. ENUMERATION
Direction: Give the answers of what is ask. Write your answer on a sheet of paper.
THANK YOU
AND
GOB BLESS!!!
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1. CASE STUDY
Studies a person, program or event in a define time frame.
2. ETHNOGRAPHY
CRESSWELL (2003):
Studies an intact cultural group in a prolonged period of time by collecting,
primarily, observational data.
3. CONTENT ANALYSIS
1. The researcher analyzes the materials and put them in a frequency table as
each characteristic or quality is mentioned.
2. The researcher conducts a statistical analysis so that the result are reported
in a quantitative format.
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4. PHENOMENOLOGICAL STUDY
1. Writing the research questions that explore the meaning of the experience.
2. Conducting the interviews.
3. Analyzing the data to find the clusters of meanings.
4. Writing a report that makes the readers understand more clearly the
essential structure of the experience.
5. GROUNDED THOERY
An attempt to extract a general abstract theory of a process, or
interaction grounded in views of research participants.
SAMPLING PROCEDURES
SAMPLE
A smaller set off cases a researcher selects from a large group and generalizes to
the population.
QUALITATIVE SAMPLING
NEUMAN (2007)
The primary goal of sampling is to get a representative sample, or a small
collection of units and cases from much larger collection or population.
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1. CONVENCE SAMPLING
Involves choosing respondents at the convenience of the researcher.
2. QUOTA SAMPLING
Samples a populations that has been subdivided who classes or categories.
3. JUDGEMENTAL SAMPLING
The researcher uses his/her own expert judgement.
3. CLUSTER SAMPLING
The groups are defined in order to maintain the heterogeneity of the population.
Clusters are representative samples of the population as a whole.
4. SYSTEMATIC SAMPLING
The researcher selects every nth member after randomly selecting the first,
through nth element as starting point.
1. CRITERION SAMPLING
Selection is based on specific characteristics (students who have dyslexia)
2. HOMOGENOUS SAMPLING
Selections of participants who have similar experiences, attitudes or outlook.
(Working students, commercial models, students leaders, scholars and others)
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4. INTENSITY SAMPLING
The objective of the selection is to sample the same characteristics respectively.
6. PURPOSIVE SAMPLING
The process of collecting data or doing the interpretation or data analysis.
1. INTERVIEW
Take the form of informal conversations, open-ended, interviews or in-depth
discussions.
KINDS OF INTERVIEW:
a. STRUCTURED INTERVIEWS
Use a set of questions prepared by the researcher.
b. UNSTRUCTURED INTERVIEWS
Use open-ended questions which the interviewer of research participants answer
freely.
c. SEMI-STRUCTURED INTERVIEW
Use both close and open-ended questions.
2. PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
The researcher immerses himself/herself in the natural setting of the research
participants.
4. OBSERVATIONAL EVALUATION
The researcher may or may not participate in activities of the group being
observed.
Observes and records’ both the verbal and non-verbal behavior of a person or
group of persons.
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5. BIOGRAPHY/AUTOBIOGRAPHY
Personal biographies offer a rich source of data or evidence that can shed light
or provide tentative answers to research questions.
1. OBSERVATION
The researcher take field notes of the behavior and activities of research
participants at the research site or in their natural setting.
2. INTERVIEW
The research may:
a. Conduct face-to-face interviews with participants
b. Do telephone interviews of participants or
c. Engage in focus group interviews with 6 or 8 interviews
3. DOCUMENTS
These take the form of public documents which are all collected during the
research process.
Public documents (Newspaper, minutes of meetings, official reports)
Private documents (Personal journals, diaries, letters, and emails)
1. CODING
The research analyst reads the data and marks segments within the data,
this may be done at different times throughout the process.
Each segment labeled with a “code” usually a code or short phrase that
suggest how the associated data segments inform the research objectives.
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2. RECURSIVE ABSTRACTION
Data set are summarized
The end result is more compact summary that would have been difficult
to accurately discern without the preceding steps of distillation.
1. GROUNDED THEORY
Has systematic steps to follow according to Strauss and Corbin (1990,
1998):
a) OPEN CODING = generating categories of information.
b) AXIAL CODING = selecting one of the categories and positioning
it within a theoretical model.
c) SELECTIVE CODING = explicating a story from the
interconnection of these categories.
3. PHENOMINOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Uses the analysis of:(Moustakas, 1994)
a) Significant statements
b) The generalization of meaning units
c) Development of an “essence” description
4. NARRATIVE RESEARCH
Employs re-storying the participants’ stories using structural elements
such as plot, setting, activities, climax, and denouement. (Clandinin and
Connelly, 2000)
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I. MULTIPLE CHOICE
Direction: Choose the answer (word) of your choice, be sure to write it on a
sheet of paper.
11. The groups are defined in order to maintain the heterogeneity of the population.
a. Simple random sampling c. stratified random sampling
b. Cluster sampling d. systematic sampling
12. The researcher selects every Nth member after randomly selecting the first,
through Nth element as starting point.
a. Simple random sampling c. stratified random sampling
b. Cluster sampling d. systematic sampling
13. Selection is biased on specific characteristics.
a. Criterion sampling c. homogeneous sampling
b. Maximum variation sampling d. intensity sampling
14. Selection of participants who have similar experiences, attitudes or outlook.
a. Criterion sampling c. homogeneous sampling
b. Maximum variation sampling d. intensity sampling
15. The objective of the selection is to attain more in depth views from a big number
of participants.
a. Criterion sampling c. homogeneous sampling
b. Maximum variation sampling d. intensity sampling
16. The objective of the selection is to sample the same characteristics repetitively.
a. Criterion sampling c. homogeneous sampling
b. Maximum variation sampling d. intensity sampling
17. The researcher seeks cases that differ from the dominant pattern or from the
predominant characteristics of other cases.
a. Criterion sampling c. homogeneous sampling
b. Deviant case sampling d. purposive sampling
18. The process of collecting data or doing the interpretation or data analysis.
a. Criterion sampling c. homogeneous sampling
b. Deviant case sampling d. purposive sampling
19. The researcher immerses himself/herself in the natural setting of the research
participant.
a. Biography c. participant observation
b. Focus group interview d. observational evaluation
20. The researcher may or may not participate in activities of the group being
observed.
a. Biography c. participant observation
b. Focus group interview d. observational evaluation
II. ENUMERATION
Direction: Answer what is ask in the given statement, write your answer on a
sheet of paper.
THANK YOU
AND
GOD BLESS !!!