Topic 6, Methods of Data Collection
Topic 6, Methods of Data Collection
What is data?
research results.
or problem.
What is data collection?
• is a process of gathering
information from all the relevant
sources to find a solution to the
research problem.
What are data collection methods?
• Data collection methods are techniques
and procedures used to gather information
for research.
• In this case, close-ended questions are used to get quantitative data while open-
ended questions are used to collect qualitative data.
moderated setting.
towards consensus
Disadvantages
documents.
6. Experiments
• Experimental studies involve the manipulation of variables
to observe their impact on the outcome.
• Researchers control the conditions and collect data to draw
conclusions about cause-and-effect relationships.
• An experiment is a data collection method where you as a
researcher change some variables and observe their effect
on other variables.
• The variables that you manipulate are referred to as
independent while the variables that change as a result of
manipulation are dependent variables.
Advantages
• It is particularly effective at
registering the occurrence of
incidents, events, tasks, or
problems..
Advantages
Reading assignment
• Diaries.
• Field notes.
• Schedules.
• Audio.
• Photograph/video.
Two types of data according to source
• Primary data collection involves the collection of original data directly from the
source or through direct interaction with the respondents.
• There are various techniques for primary data collection, including: Surveys and
Questionnaires, Interviews, Observations, Experiments, and Focus Groups.
2. Secondary Data Collection:
• Secondary data collection involves using existing data collected by someone else
• These data are recorded in non-numerical form. Hence, they are known as
qualitative data.
1. Nominal Data
• Nominal data is a type of qualitative data that is used to represent data into labels
based on different categories.
• They do not have any specific order or numerical significance.
• Let us understand it better with a few real-world examples.
✓ Colours ( red, blue, green, orange, etc)
✓ Fruits ( Apples, Bananas, Grapes, strawberries)
✓ Gender (Male, Female, other)
✓ Marital Status ( Single, married, divorced, widowed)
✓ Blood type (A, AB, O, B)
• Days of the week (Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,
Saturday)
2. Ordinal Data
• This is also a type of qualitative data where only non-numerical data is
considered.
• It is almost similar to nominal data.
• However, there is just one major difference, ordinal data are arranged in a
meaningful order, unlike nominal data, which does not follow any specific order.
These data types are not used in comparison. These data types are also used in comparison.