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III' STEPS in CONDUCTING RESEARCH

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1. this is the critical step. a. what is it you are actually ... (methodology) in response to what it. is you do not know ... this is refers to thinking ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: III' STEPS in CONDUCTING RESEARCH


1
III. STEPS in CONDUCTING
RESEARCH
  • (Miller, 1977)

2
A. Define the Problem
  • 1. this is the critical step
  • a. what is it you are actually trying
    to do?
  • b. the research question
  • 2. your research is your experiment
  • a. your DEPENDENT variable
  • b. What are you are actually interested
    in?
  • c. this is the focus of your research
    intentions
  • 3. identify your perspective
  • a. what is your point of view?
  • 1) will you be attempting to
    solve a problem or explain it?

3
  • 2) are you examining your issue as a
    particular kind of
  • researcher?
  • gt psychologist,
    sociologist, economist, political scientist,
  • public administrator, law
    enforcement practitioner...?
  • b. this matters
  • 4. degree and definition
  • a. how broad is your problem?
  • gt individual, local, state, national,
    international?
  • b. how do you define your key
    variables?
  • 1) must itemize your operational
    definitions
  • 2) these
    definitions must be exact, as explicit as possible

4
Develop Theory (explanation / solution)
  • 1. what is the explanation / solution to
    your problem?
  • gt based on your perspective, what
    are you proposing?
  • 2. a statement of what you believe
  • 3. identifies what it is you will examine
    as well as what it is
  • you will not
  • 4. the library should be your first stop
  • 5. work with what you know (epistemology)
    along with
  • how you find out (methodology) in
    response to what it
  • is you do not know

5
C. Conceptualization / Measurement
  • 1. understanding specifically what you intend
    to examine
  • 2. what do you see when you see someone
    doing what
  • you intend to examine?
  • 3. what information are you actually seeking
  • gt what do you want / need to prove your
    point?
  • 4. a more thorough discussion of this area
    will be
  • conducted later (in the research design
    section), but
  • this is refers to thinking about your
    problem

6
D. Identify Methodology / Data Collection
Strategy
  • 1. how will you seek the answers to the
    questions you
  • must ask to prove your point?
  • gt what questions need to be
    asked?
  • 2. what are your options to generate
    the best
  • information?
  • 3. typical social science strategies
  • a. secondary analysis
  • b. face-to-face interviews
  • c. self-report questionnaires
  • d. unobtrusive measures

7
E. Data Analysis/Presentation
  • 1. what strategy best shows
    your efforts?
  • a. various levels of
    statistical analysis are the most popular in
    social
  • science research
  • 1) univariate, bivariate,
    multivariate statistical analyses
  • 2) tables

8
3) graphs
  • 3) graphs (pictograms)

9
  • b. narratives (growing in popularity post
    modernism)
  • gt written, verbal
    descriptions
  • c. multi-media presentations
  • 2. purpose is to illustrate what it is you did

10
F. Summary
  • 1. based solely on the problem you
    address, the sources
  • of your information, and the data
    generated from
  • those sources...what did you find out?
  • gt this is the only reasonable
    conclusion possible
  • 2. speculation about what if, or perhaps
    if, can only be
  • an addendum to your basic conclusion
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