Definition and Scope of Educational Research A. Definition of Educational Research
Definition and Scope of Educational Research A. Definition of Educational Research
C. Kinds of Research
The types of research can be grouped according to the type of research in terms
of objectives, approach, level of explanation and type of data.
1. Research in terms of its objectives
This type of research is divided into twoparts, namely pure research (basic)
and applied research. Pure research is research that. The aim is to discover
new knowledge that was previously unknown. While applied research is
research that aims to use known scientific knowledge to solve practical life
problems.
2. Research according to its approach
Can be divided into survey research, ex post facto, experiments, policy
research, action research
3. Research According to the Level of Explanation
Based on research, it can be grouped into descriptive, comparative and
associative research.
4. Research by Data Type
The types of data in research can be grouped into two main things, namely
qualitative data and quantitative data
AN OVERVIEW OF QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
1. Ethnography
• Ethnography is a branch of anthropology to analyze the culture of a nation or
society in its natural environment over a long period of time in collecting
main data, observational data and interviews.
• The purpose of the analysis is to understand a view of life from the
perspective of the indigenous people.
• This research was conducted with observation, long enough observations of
a group, tribe / community, to find the meaning of each behavior, the language
of interaction / something related to the community itself.
2.Cases tudies
• Researchers carefully investigate a program, event, activity, process, or
group of individuals.
• Cases are limited by time and activity, and researchers collect complete
information using time-based procedures.
3. Phenomenology
• Researchers identify the nature of human experience about a particular
phenomenon.
• Understanding the experience of human life makes phenomenological
philosophy a research method whose procedures require the researcher to
study a number of subjects with a relatively long and direct involvement in it
to develop patterns and meaning relations.
4.Grounded Theory
• Researchers produce a general and abstract theory of a particular action,
process, or interaction that comes from the views of participants.
• Researchers must go through a number of stages of data collection and
filtering categories for the information that has been obtained.
• It has main characteristics, namely: (1) constant comparison between data
and emerging categories and (2) theoretical sampling of different groups to
maximize information similarity and difference.
5. Narrative
• Researchers investigate the lives of individuals and ask a person or group of
individuals to tell their life.
• This information is retold by the researcher in a narrative chronology.
• In the final stage of the research, the researcher must combine with a
narrative style his views on the participant’s life with the views held by the
researcher himself.