Research and Descriptives: Dr. Bradley K. Loo, RN, MSN, DBA (U) A. Maceda Integrated School
Research and Descriptives: Dr. Bradley K. Loo, RN, MSN, DBA (U) A. Maceda Integrated School
2) authority
3) personal experience
4) deductive reasoning
Inductive
(QUANTITATIVE)
from specific to general
3 Types of Research Methodologies
Qualitative research is an approach for
exploring and understanding the meaning
individuals or groups ascribe to a social or
human problem.
Types of Qualitative Designs
Narrative research is a design of inquiry from
the humanities in which the researcher
studies the lives of individuals and asks one
or more individuals to provide stories about
their lives (Riessman, 2008).
Narrative Design
often retold or restoried by the researcher
into a narrative chronology
in the end, the narrative combines views from
the participant’s life with those of the
researcher’s life in a collaborative narrative
(Clandinin & Connelly, 2000).
Phenomenological research is a design of
inquiry coming from philosophy and
psychology in which the researcher describes
the lived experiences of individuals about a
phenomenon as described by participants.
has strong philosophical underpinnings and
typically involves conducting interviews
(Giorgi, 2009; Moustakas, 1994).
Grounded theory is a design of inquiry from
sociology in which the researcher derives a
general, abstract theory of a process, action,
or interaction grounded in the views of
participants.
involves using multiple stages of data
collection and the refinement and
interrelationship of categories of information
(Charmaz, 2006; Corbin & Strauss, 2007).
Ethnography is a design of inquiry coming
from anthropology and sociology in which the
researcher studies the shared patterns of
behaviors, language, and actions of an intact
cultural group in a natural setting over a
prolonged period of time.
Case studies are a design of inquiry found in
many fields, especially evaluation, in which
the researcher develops an in-depth analysis
of a case, often a program, event, activity,
process, or one or more individuals.
Cases are bounded by time and activity, and
researchers collect detailed information using
a variety of data collection procedures over a
sustained period of time (Stake, 1995; Yin,
2009, 2012).
Mixed Methodology
Mixed methods research is an approach to
inquiry involving collecting both quantitative
and qualitative data, integrating the two forms
of data, and using distinct designs that may
involve philosophical assumptions and
theoretical frameworks.
Types of Mixed designs
Convergent parallel mixed methods
Explanatory sequential mixed methods
Exploratory sequential mixed methods
Quantitative Method
Quantitative research is an approach for
testing objective theories by examining the
relationship among variables.
Quantitative Designs
Non Experimental
Descriptive (what)
Correlational (relationships)
Comparative (Difference)
Experimental (effects )
True
Quasi-Expe
WORKSHOP 1:
SPECIFIC TOPIC METHODOLOGY DESIGN SPECIFIC
QUESTION
1.
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3.
The next session will start in
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The five basic words of Statistics
Population – all the members of the group
which you want to draw a conclusion.
A collection, or set, of individuals or objects
or events whose properties are to be
analyzed
Sample - A subset of the population
The part of the population selected for
analysis.
Parameter – a numerical measure that
describes a characteristics of a population
Example 30% patients suffering from
dengue are treated at a particular hospital
last year using the newest medical
procedure and new technology
Statistic-A numerical value summarizing the
sample data.
15% of the selected patients suffering from
dengue are treated at a particular hospital
last year using the newest medical
procedure and new technology.
Other terminologies
Data (singular): The value of the variable
associated with one element of a population
or sample. This value may be a number, a
word, or a symbol.
Branches of statistics
Descriptive Statistics: Inferential Statistics:
collection, presentation, making decisions and
and description of drawing conclusions
sample data. about populations.
Variable
• P10,000
• P15,000 and
• P20,000
Ratio Variable
Gender: 1. Male
2. Female
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Mean, Median, Mode & Range
Mean, Median, Mode are all
types of average. An average
summarises groups of data.
Mean
Average often means the ‘mean’
Mean = total of the numbers divided by how
many numbers.
Class shoe sizes: 3, 5, 5, 6, 4, 3, 2, 1, 5, 6
Add up the numbers:
3 + 5 + 5 + 6 + 4 + 3 + 2 + 1 + 5 + 6 = 40
Divide by how many numbers:
40 ÷ 10 = 4
The class mean shoe size is 4
Median
Median is the middle value
Put the numbers in order
Choose the number in the middle of the
list.
If there are 2 numbers in the middle then it
is halfway between them.
Class shoe sizes: 3, 5, 5, 6, 4, 3, 2, 1, 5, 6
Put in order: 1, 2, 3, 3, 4, 5, 5, 5, 6, 6
The larger the variance, the further the individual cases are from the mean.
Mean
The smaller the variance, the closer the individual scores are to the mean.
Mean
Variance
Variance is a number that at first seems complex to
calculate.
But we know that the two data sets are not identical! The
variance shows how they are different.
( x X )
N
Although this might seem reasonable, this expression
always equals 0, because the negative deviations about the
mean always cancel out the positive deviations about the
mean.
We could just drop the negative signs, which is the same
mathematically as taking the absolute value, which is known
as the mean deviations.
The concept of absolute value does not lend itself to the kind
of advanced mathematical manipulation necessary for the
development of inferential statistical formulas.
The average of the squared deviations about the mean is
called the variance.
x X
2
x X
2
For sample variance
s
2
n 1
Score
X( X )
2
XX
X
1
3
2
5
3
7
4
10
5
10
Totals
35
1
3 3-7=-4
2
5 5-7=-2
3
7 7-7=0
4
10 10-7=3
5
10 10-7=3
Totals
35
Score (
X X)
2
XX
X
1
3 3-7=-4 16
2
5 5-7=-2 4
3
7 7-7=0 0
4
10 10-7=3 9
5
10 10-7=3 9
Totals
35 38
Score (
X X)
2
XX
X
1
3 3-7=-4 16
2
5 5-7=-2 4
3
7 7-7=0 0
4
10 10-7=3 9
5
10 10-7=3 9
Totals
35 38
x X
2
38
s 2
7.6
n 5
Example 2
mean 23 23
median 22 27
range 10 22
1 28 5 25
2 22 -1 1
3 21 -2 4
4 26 3 9
5 18 -5 25
Totals 115 0 64
x X
2
sample standard deviation: s
n 1
N
Another formula
Definitional formula for variance for data in a
frequency distribution
S 2
(X X ) 2
f
f
Definitional formula for standard deviation for
data in a frequency distribution
S
( X X ) 2
f
f
The mean is 23
28 1
27 3
6 1
115 5
Myrna’s Score X f ( X X)2 ( X X )2 x f
XX
28 1 5
27 3 4
6 1 -17
115 5
Myrna’s Score X f ( X X)2 ( X X )2 x f
XX
28 1 5 25
27 3 4 16
6 1 -17 289
115 5
round-off rule – carry
one more decimal
Myrna’s Score X f ( X X)2 ( X X )2 x f
place than was
XX
present in the
original data
28 1 5 25 25
27 3 4 16 48
115 5 362