Cainta Catholic College: Senior High School Department
Cainta Catholic College: Senior High School Department
Cainta, Rizal
CHAPTER 1
Theoretical Framework
Present and discuss a theory that serves as the foreground of your research
Anchor your study to the theory
Conceptual Framework
Figurative/Illustrative representation of the process of research
Label with the variables
Statement of Problem
Enlist the specific questions to be answered by the research
Hypothesis
wise guess
A tentative solution or answer to the problem
May be stated in a null or alternative hypothesis
Definition of Terms
Define all the variables
May be defined conceptually or operationally
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
Research Design
Research methodology or the type of research
Source of Data
Research Instrument:
Questionnaire
Test
Interview or FGD
Documentary Analysis
Observation
Actual Measurements
Statistical Treatment
Present statistical tool one-to-one with the specific questions
Range of Interpretation for Descriptive Statistics
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
Summary of Findings
Should be based on the result of the problem stated in Statement of the Problem
Should be concise and comprehensive
Conclusions
Your wise judgement or conclusions based on the summarized data
Should be concise and comprehensive
Related literature and studies can be used to strengthen justifications
Recommendations
Enlist recommendations based on the findings
Recommendations should address all the conclusions
Direct to the point
Future solution to the observed problems
Bibliography
In APA Format
Appendices
Letters (Permit and other Communications)
Certificate of Content Validation
Instrument
Other important documents involved in the study
Curriculum Vitae
Comprehensive resume or data about the researchers
Theoretical Framework
This part will present the Educational Theory in relation to the topic to support the
conduct of the study. Theories can be sourced from books and other materials: e.g.
Association Theory by Thorndike
Social Learning Theory by Bandura
Instrumental Conceptualism by Bruner
Hierarchy of Needs by Maslow
Remember that theory should give the researcher a guide as to how the study should
be conducted. Brief description of the theory is highly required as well as the
proponent and its relation to the study. Answer the question how is the theory
significant or applicable to the study.
Conceptual Framework
This sub-title of the paper will present the Research Model or Research Paradigm to
picture out how the study will proceed.
The model is presented on a separate page. Discussion of the model is important
including all the elements/features of the paradigm
Variable should be applied in the conceptual framework. Conceptual Framework
should present the procedure that the study will undergo.
Example:
This study will focus on the performance of the Senior High School Learners in
Practical Research at Cainta Catholic College during the School Year 2017-2018.
1. What is the profile of the Senior High School learners in terms of:
1.1 sex;
1.2 socio-economic status;
1.3 parents’ educational attainment; and
1.4 place of residence?
2. What is the level of performance in Practical Research of the Senior high School
learners with respect to:
2.1 Reading Habits;
2.2 Writing Skills; and
2.3 information and communications technology
3. Is there a significant relationship between the profile of the Senior High School
learners and their performance in Practical Research?
4. What component of Practical Research will be enhanced based from the result of the
study?
5. How will the identified component be enhanced?
Hypothesis
Use the null hypothesis
Normally, the researcher’s wise guess
Should address the question stated in the statement of the problem
Example:
This study will determine the performance in Practical Research of the Senior High
School Learners of Cainta Catholic College during the School Year 2017-2018.
This will involve the Senior High School Learners who have undertaken the Practical
Research subject who will be chosen purposively. They will be described according to their
sex, socio-economic status, parents’ educational attainment and place of residence. This will
also consider their performance in English along the areas of Writing and Reading,
Furthermore, this will use descriptive method of research with evaluation as its design.
The profile will be established with the questionnaire checklist and the performance in
Practical Research will be taken from the records filed at the school registrar.
The study will be limited to Senior High School learners of Cainta Catholic College
and will not involve other secondary schools. Only Practical Research subject will be
Research Design
This part will present the research method and its design. It includes the definition of
the method given by the authorities. Give the explanation why such research method
and design will be employed.
Source of Data
This part introduces the instruments/ documents to be used in the study. Description
of the instruments/documents must also be taken into consideration. If a questionnaire
checklist will be used, describe fully the checklist, how many parts, how many
components, how the questionnaire will be accomplished. Validation of the instrument
is also necessary and discussion is required, how will the checklist undergo validation,
who will validate the checklist. If documents will be referred to, describe the
documents, where will the documents be secured, what type of documents will be
referred to. Such documents will not need validation. Discussion on the scoring
method of the data to be generated is also needed.
Example:
Respondents
Population
Sample/Respondents
Instrument is the general term that researchers use for a measurement device (survey, test,
questionnaire, etc.). To help distinguish between instrument and instrumentation, consider
that the instrument is the device and instrumentation is the course of action (the process of
developing, testing, and using the device).
Instruments fall into two broad categories, researcher-completed and subject-completed,
distinguished by those instruments that researchers administer versus those that are
completed by participants. Researchers chose which type of instrument, or instruments, to
use based on the research question. Examples are listed below:
Researcher-completed Instruments Subject-completed Instruments
Rating scales Questionnaires
Interview schedules/guides Self-checklists
Tally sheets Attitude scales
Flowcharts Personality inventories
Performance checklists Achievement/aptitude tests
Time-and-motion logs Projective devices
Observation forms Socio-metric devices
Usability
Usability refers to the ease with which an instrument can be administered, interpreted by the
participant, and scored/interpreted by the researcher. Example usability problems include:
1. Students are asked to rate a lesson immediately after class, but there are only a few
minutes before the next class begins (problem with administration).
2. Students are asked to keep self-checklists of their after school activities, but the
directions are complicated and the item descriptions confusing (problem with
interpretation).
3. Teachers are asked about their attitudes regarding school policy, but some questions
are worded poorly which results in low completion rates (problem with
scoring/interpretation).
Validity and reliability concerns (discussed below) will help alleviate usability issues. For
now, we can identify five usability considerations:
1. How long will it take to administer?
2. Are the directions clear?
3. How easy is it to score?
4. Do equivalent forms exist?
5. Have any problems been reported by others who used it?
Validity is the extent to which an instrument measures what it is supposed to measure and
performs as it is designed to perform. It is rare, if nearly impossible, that an instrument be
100% valid, so validity is generally measured in degrees. As a process, validation involves
collecting and analyzing data to assess the accuracy of an instrument. There are numerous
statistical tests and measures to assess the validity of quantitative instruments, which
generally involves pilot testing. The remainder of this discussion focuses on external validity
and content validity.
External validity is the extent to which the results of a study can be generalized from a
sample to a population. Establishing eternal validity for an instrument, then, follows directly
from sampling. Recall that a sample should be an accurate representation of a population,
because the total population may not be available. An instrument that is externally valid helps
obtain population generalizability, or the degree to which a sample represents the population.
Content validity refers to the appropriateness of the content of an instrument. In other
words, do the measures (questions, observation logs, etc.) accurately assess what you want
to know? This is particularly important with achievement tests. Consider that a test developer
wants to maximize the validity of a unit test for 7th grade mathematics. This would involve
taking representative questions from each of the sections of the unit and evaluating them
against the desired outcomes.
Reliability can be thought of as consistency. Does the instrument consistently measure what
it is intended to measure? It is not possible to calculate reliability; however, there are four
general estimators that you may encounter in reading research:
1. Inter-Rater/Observer Reliability: The degree to which different raters/observers give
consistent answers or estimates.
2. Test-Retest Reliability: The consistency of a measure evaluated over time.
3. Parallel-Forms Reliability: The reliability of two tests constructed the same way, from the
same content.
4. Internal Consistency Reliability: The consistency of results across items, often measured
with Cronbach’s Alpha.
Source of Instrument
Related Literature or Studies
Theoretical Framework
Interview from the Experts
Validation of the Instrument
Validation should be done with 5 experts
Certificate of Content Validation must be secure as a proof
All comments and suggestions of the experts should be taken comprehensively
Thesis adviser will be the last person to approve the final instrument to be used in the study
Summary of Findings This part will summarize the salient findings of the study.
The reference is the chapter 4.
Conclusions this will answer the questions raised at the beginning of the investigation.
The use of probably, perhaps, maybe should be avoided.
Recommendations are based from the conclusions of the study. Description of the
suggestions for future action based on the significance of the findings. Appeal to
people or agencies concerned to help solve the problem should be stated
categorically.
It is important (morally & legally) to acknowledge someone else’s ideas or words you
have used. Academic writing encourages paraphrasing information you have
researched and read. Paraphrasing means re-wording something you have read in to
your own words. If you use someone else’s words or work and fail to acknowledge
them – you may be accused of plagiarism and infringing copyright.
Referencing also allows for you to retrace your steps and locate information
you have used for assignments and discover further views or ideas discussed
by the author.
In text citations
Even though you have put someone else’s ideas or information in your own words (i.e.
paraphrased), you still need to show where the original idea or information came from.
This is all part of the academic writing process.
When citing in text within an assignment, use the author/s (or editor/s) last name
followed by the year of publication.
Reference list entry:
Whitney, E., & Rolfes, S. (2011). Understanding nutrition (12th ed.). Australia:
Wadsworth Cengage Learning.
Note: This book did not have a city for place of publication, just a country.
Extra note: This book has an edition. This information is included straight after the title.
Deciding on a research method demands the researcher consider carefully the problem or
area of investigation being researched (Watson et al., 2008).
Basic rules
The reference list is arranged in alphabetical order of the authors’ last names.
If there is more than one work by the same author, order them by publication date –
oldest to newest (therefore a 2004 publication would appear before a 2008 publication).
If there is no author the title moves to that position and the entry is alphabetised
by the first significant word, excluding words such as “A” or “The”. If the title is
long, it may be shortened when citing in text.
Use “&” instead of “and” when listing multiple authors of a source.
The first line of the reference list entry is left-hand justified, while all
subsequent lines are consistently indented.
Capitalise only the first word of the title and of the subtitle, if there is one, plus
any proper names – i. e. only those words that would normally be capitalised.
Italicise the title of the book, the title of the journal/serial and the title of the web
document.
Do not create separate lists for each type of information source. Books,
articles, web documents, brochures, etc. are all arranged alphabetically
in one list.
Your reference list should be ordered alphabetically by author and then chronologically by
year of publication. The APA 6th style requires the references to be indented as illustrated
below in the examples.
For instances of multiple articles with the same authors and years of publication, please see
the complete guide. If you have the DOI for the journal article, you should include it in the
reference, otherwise, it is not necessary.
Book
Lumby, J. (2001). Who cares? The changing health care system. Sydney, Australia: Allen
& Unwin.
Book chapter
McKenzie, H., Boughton, M., Hayes, L., & Forsyth, S. (2008). Explaining the complexities
and value of nursing practice and knowledge. In I. Morley & M. Crouch (Eds.), Knowledge as
value: Illumination through critical prisms (pp. 209-224). Amsterdam, Netherlands: Rodopi.
Journal article
Boughton, M., & Halliday, L. (2008). A challenge to the menopause stereotype: Young
Australian women's reflections of 'being diagnosed' as menopausal. Health & Social Care in
the Community, 16(6), 565-572. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2524.2008.00777.x
Webpage with an author
Welch, N. (2000, February 21). Toward an understanding of the determinants of rural
health. Retrieved from http://www.ruralhealth.org.au/welch.htm
Government publication
The Health Targets and Implementation (Health for All) Committee. (1988). Health for all
Australians. Canberra, Australia: Australian Government Publishing Service.
Referencing a quotation
Indeed, one researcher commented that “technological innovations have saved or extended
the lives of many patients” (Lumby, 2001, p. 44).
Source: