This document outlines the key aspects of research methods for an exam. It includes:
1) A description of the typical research process and example methods for literature review, data collection, and analysis.
2) The main differences between quantitative and qualitative research, including their data sources and theoretical approaches.
3) Examples of five specific research designs - experimental, cross-sectional, longitudinal, case study, and comparative - along with their advantages and disadvantages.
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This document outlines the key aspects of research methods for an exam. It includes:
1) A description of the typical research process and example methods for literature review, data collection, and analysis.
2) The main differences between quantitative and qualitative research, including their data sources and theoretical approaches.
3) Examples of five specific research designs - experimental, cross-sectional, longitudinal, case study, and comparative - along with their advantages and disadvantages.
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BUACC5931 2017 Sem1 exam paper
1) Describe the research process and give an example. (2 times)
• Literature Review • Concepts and Theories • Research Questions • Sampling: E.g. In survey research or case study research • Data Collection : E.g. structure interview and particular observation • Data Analysis: E.g. Transcriptions, coding, thematic analysis, secondary analysis • Writing Up: Generally to include the literature review, research methods, results, discussion and conclusion 2) Outline the main differences between quantitative and qualitative research
Quantitative research Qualitative research
1) Quantitative research is a research 1) Qualitative research is a research study strategy that emphasizes study strategy that emphasizes words quantification in the collection and rather than quantification in the analysis of data. collection and analysis of data. 2) Numerical and statistical data are 2) Word, texts and stories data are used. used.
3) Deductive theory testing. 3) Inductive approach theory emerges
from data. 4) Common research designs are 4) Common methods are interviews surveys and experiments. and ethnography.
3) Give an example of a particular kind of research design, and describe its
advantages and disadvantages. a) Experimental research design: Experimental research design is used to establish a relationship between the cause and effect (E.g. Age groups) of a situation. Advantages Disadvantages - very simple and convenient - Not feasible - suitable research design for the -Not ethical beginners - Powerful for testing cause and effect - Same variables cannot be hypothesis manipulated b) Cross- sectional research design: A cross- sectional study involves looking at people who differ on one key characteristic at one specific point in time. The data is collected at the same time from people who are similar in other characteristics but different in a key factor of interest such as age, income level or geographic location. The collection of data is more than one case. Advantages Disadvantages - Used to prove or disprove - Not used to analyse behaviour assumptions - Cheap and quick -Unless for determining cause and effect -Multi variables at the time of data -Snapshot timing may not be snapshot representative.
c) Longitudinal research design: A longitudinal study is a research design that
involves repeated observations of the same variables (E.g. people) over short or long period of time. Survey of the same sample is for no more than one occasion. Advantages Disadvantages - more powerful than cross-sectional - It required huge amount of time studies -High flexible - It requires large sample size -It provides high accuracy when -More expensive compare with cross- observing changes. sectional studies
d) Case study research design: Case studies are based on an in-depth
investigation of a single individual, group or event It is used for detailed and intensive analysis of one case. Advantages Disadvantages - Relatively low cost. - They required proper control group. - Shorter duration due to events having - Based on previous record already occur information. - Risk approximation by calculating the -Does not allow calculating the relative odds ratio risk. e) Comparative research design: comparative research essentially compares two groups in an attempt to draw a conclusion about them. Using the same methods to compare two or more meaningful contrasting cases.