Week 1-Module
Week 1-Module
Content Standards
The learners demonstrate a n understanding of the characteristics, strengths, weaknesses, and
kinds ofquantitative research.
Performance Standards
The learners should be able to decide on suitable quantitative research in different areas of interest.
Lesson Presentation/Discussion
Terminologies
● Quantitative Research -Quantitative research designs use numbers in stating generalizations about
a given problem or inquiry in contrast to qualitative research that hardly uses statistical treatment
instating generalizations
● Replication – the action of copying or reproducing something.
● Researcher – a person who carries out academic or scientific research.
● Objective – not influenced by personal feelings or opinions in considering and representing facts.
What do we research?
We research people and their behavior, opinions, attitudes, trends, and patterns, also politics, animals, health,
and illness. Research can be conducted informally for our benefit, through asking questions, watching,
counting, or reading, and formally, for medical or academic purposes, as a marketing strategy, to inform and
influence politics and policy.
Research may be carried out in our own lives, through the media, in our place of work, with our friends and
family, or through reading past research. Our views - personal, social, community, and worldwide - and our
own identities are socially constructed through our theorizing.
Quantitative Research
Quantitative research designs use numbers in stating generalizations about a given problem or
inquiry in contrast to qualitative research which hardly uses statistical treatment in stating generalizations.
The numbers in quantitative research are the results of objective scales of measurements of the units of
analysis called variables.
1. Objective. Quantitative research seeks accurate measurement and analysis of target concepts. It is
not based on mere intuition and guesses. Data is gathered before proposing a conclusion or solution to a
problem.
2. Clearly Defined Research Questions. The researchers know in advance what they are looking for. The
research questions are well-defined for which objective answers are sought. All aspects of the study
arecarefully designed before data are gathered.
3. Structured Research Instruments. Standardized instruments guide data collection, thus ensuring the
accuracy, reliability, and validity of data. Data are normally gathered using structured research tools such
as questionnaires to collect measurable characteristics of the population like age, socio-economic status,
and numberof children, among others.
4. Numerical Data. Figures, tables, or graphs showcase summarized data collection to show trends,
relationships, or differences among variables. In sum, the charts and tables allow you to see the
evidencecollected.
5. Large Sample Sizes. To arrive at a more reliable data analysis, a normal population distribution curve is
preferred. This requires a large sample size, depending on how the characteristics of the population
vary.Random sampling is recommended in determining the sample size to avoid the researcher’s bias in
interpretingthe results.
6. Replication. Quantitative methods can be repeated to verify findings in another setting, thus
strengtheningand reinforcing the validity of findings and eliminating the possibility of spurious conclusions.
7. Future Outcomes. By using complex mathematical calculations and with the aid of computers, if-then
scenarios may be formulated thus predicting future results. Quantitative research emphasizes proof,
rather than discovery.
The following are the various kinds of quantitative research designs that a researcher may employ:
1. Non-experimental Design
In this kind of design, the researcher observes the phenomena as they occur naturally, and no
external variables are introduced. In this research design, the variables are not deliberately
manipulated nor is the setting controlled. Researchers collect data without making changes or
introducing treatments. This may also be called DESCRIPTIVE RESEARCH DESIGN because it is the only one
under non-experimental design.
Descriptive Research Design’s main purpose is to observe, describe and document aspects of a
situation as it naturally occurs and sometimes to serve as a starting point for hypothesis generation or
theory development.
A. Survey
It is used to gather information from groups of people by selecting and studying samples
chosen from a population. This is useful when the objective of the study is to see the general picture of
the population under investigation in terms of their social and economic characteristics, opinions, and
their knowledge about the behavior toward a certain phenomenon.
B. Correlational
It is conducted by researchers whose aim would be to find out the direction, associations,
and/or relationships between different variables or groups of respondents under study.
Correlational Research has three types; these are:
b. Prediction Studies
It uses a correlation coefficient to show how one variable (the predictor variable)
predictsanother (the criterion variable).
Example: Which high school applicants should be admitted to college?
A. Pre-Experimental Design
A type of research applies to an experimental design that has the least internal validity. One type of
pre-experiment, the simple group, pretest-posttest design, measures the group two times, before
and after the intervention. Instead of comparing the pretest with the posttest within one group, the
posttestof the treated group is compared with that of an untreated group.
Two classes of experimental design that can provide better internal validity than pre-experimental designs
arequasi-experimental and true experimental design (Dooly, 1999).
C. True-Experimental Design
It controls both time-related and group-related threats. Two features mark true experiments: two or more
differently treated groups; and random assignment to these groups. These features require that the
researchers have control over the experimental treatment and the power to place subjects in groups. The
true experimental design employs both treated and control groups to deal with time-related rival
explanations. A control group reflects changes other than those due to the treatment that occurs during
the time of the study. Such changes include the effects of outside events, maturation by the subjects,
Conclusion/Summary
We research to understand society and social processes, as well as to test and or create theories so
that we are better able to inform about social action and potentially 'improve' social conditions.
The overarching aim of a quantitative research study is to classify features, count them, and
construct statistical models to explain what is observed.
Four kinds of quantitative research are survey research, correlational research, causal-comparative
research,and experimental research.