Criminology 7 8 Criminological Research 1 2 Research Methods With Applied Statistics
Criminology 7 8 Criminological Research 1 2 Research Methods With Applied Statistics
Research-1 2-Research-Methods-with-
Applied-Statistics
Criminological Research (Taguig City University)
COURSE DESCRIPTION:
This course focuses on how writing research paper/thesis is done, and the
applicable statistical tools, understanding the different parts of the thesis, their
interplay, and the governing rules in writing a technical paper, the
development of a research problem, the instrument, the data gathering
methods, and the treatment of the data collected.
The course covers the presentation, demonstration, proposal and defense of
the study conducted. It includes the research methods, and designs applicable
to the conduct of criminological research, the conduct of qualitative and
quantitative research in the fields of Criminology and Criminal Justice, data
gathering, data analysis and interpretation, conclusions, and
recommendations of the study conducted.
COURSE OUTLINE:
CRIMINOLOGY 7 CRIMINOLOGY 8
TCU_CCJ_SY2022-2023S1_CIP1_CRIMINOLOGY7-8 Page 1 of 19
TABLES OF SPECIFICATION
SUMMARY OF TOPICS, ITEM and PERCENTAGE DISTRIBUTION
The registered criminologist can perform the competencies under Percentag
the following sub-topics: e, Weight
and
Distributio
n
4% 20
1. Recall and explicate the use of the different types, kinds, and 1.0% 5
classification of research, and its methodologies including
the parts of a Thesis/Research/Scientific Article.
Etymology of
Research research
(n.)
1570s, "act of searching closely" for a specific person or thing, from French recerche
(1530s, Modern French recherche), back-formation from Old French recercher
"seek out, search closely". The meaning "diligent scientific inquiry and investigation
directed to the discovery of some fact" is attested by 1630s. The general sense of
"investigations into things, the habit of making close investigations" is by 1690s. The
phrase research and development for "work on a large scale toward innovation" is
recorded from 1923.
research (v.)
1590s, "investigate or study (a matter) closely, search or examine with continued
care," from French recercher, from Old French recercher "seek out, search closely"
from re-, here perhaps an intensive prefix (see re-), + cercher "to seek for," from Latin
circare "go about, wander,
Meaning of Research
•Scientific investigation of phenomena which includes collection, presentation, analysis
and
Needs of Research
•To discover the truth, which is hidden and which has not been discovered as yet; •
To discover the solution of a problem;
•To expand the scope of theoretical knowledge;
TCU_CCJ_SY2022-2023S1_CIP1_CRIMINOLOGY7-8 Page 2 of 19
•To improve the level of living in society;
B. According to Goal
E. According to Scope
1. Under this category i Action Research. This type of research is done on a very
limited scope to solve a particular problem which is not so big. It is almost
problem solving.
TCU_CCJ_SY2022-2023S1_CIP1_CRIMINOLOGY7-8 Page 3 of 19
G. According to Statistical Content
1. Quantitative or statistical research – is one in which inferential statistics are utilized
to determine the results of the study. Inferential statistics such as correlation, chi-
square, analysis of variance, etc. are used to test the hypothesis. This type of
research usually includes comparison studies, cause-and-effect relationships, etc.
2. Non-quantitative research – This is research in which the use of the quantity or
statistics is practically nil. This is especially true in anthropological studies where
description is usually used. Descriptive data are gathered rather than quantitative
data.
Note:
Avoid redundancies like “A Review of…”, “An Analysis of…”, An Evaluation of…”, “An
Assessment….” and the like because even without those terms, the researcher will
review, evaluate, assess or analyze the problem posted in the study.
Avoid Plagiarism
Plagiarism - is an act of incorporating into one’s work the work of another without
indicating the source; the unacknowledged used of somebody else’s words or ideas;
an act wherein the writer uses passages, ideas, writings, and statements of others
without giving due credit
Construction of the Main Problem and Sub-problem of the Study The main problem of
the study may be stated by briefly pointing out the objectives, the subject and the
coverage of the study. Ex. The study aimed to assess the acceptance of an accurate
polygraph results as evidence in court.
Specify the sub-problems of the main problem. Ex. Specifically, it sought to answer
the following sub-problems:
1. To what extent does the application of polygraph examination affect the
attainment of an accurate results to be presented as evidence in court in terms
of:
1.1. examiner’s competency;
1.2. facility and instrument;
1.3. techniques and procedures; and
1.4.subject’s condition?
TCU_CCJ_SY2022-2023S1_CIP1_CRIMINOLOGY7-8 Page 4 of 19
Theoretical Framework
✓ Theoretical framework is the foundation of the study.
✓ The theory should have a relationship with the issues posted in the study
Types of Theories
1. Descriptive Theory = seeks to describe a phenomenon
2. Prescriptive Theory = seeks to tell how and sometimes why one should or ought to
behave in certain ways
Conceptual Framework
✓ an illustration of how research problems are generated from the theoretical
framework of the study
✓ it may be some sort of modification of the theoretical framework or personally
conceptualized by the researcher
TCU_CCJ_SY2022-2023S1_CIP1_CRIMINOLOGY7-8 Page 5 of 19
2. Operational/Alternative (Ha) - stated in
affirmative Three forms of alternative
hypothesis:
1. Non-directional Hypothesis – indicates that the researcher is not interested on
whether one variable is greater or lesser than the other, but only in the
difference.
Ex. Drug A and Drug B have significant effects on the cure of fever.
Ha: A = B
2. Positive Directional Hypothesis
Ex. Drug A is more effective than Drug B on the treatment of fever.
Ha: A > B
3. Negative Directional Hypothesis
Ex. Drug B is more effective that Drug A on the treatment of fever.
Ha: A < B
Formulating Hypothesis
A hypothesis is formulated after the problem has been stated and the literature study
has been concluded. It is formulated when the researcher is totally aware of the
theoretical and empirical background of the problem.
Ex. of Statistical
Hypothesis Sub-
problem:
Is there any significant difference on the assessment of the groups of respondents
with regards to the extent of application of polygraph examination in the attainment
to be accurate results to be presented as evidence in court in terms of examiner’s
competency, facility and instrument, techniques and procedures, and subject’s
condition?
Hypothesis:
The is no significant difference on the assessment of the groups of respondents with
regards to the extent of application of polygraph examination in the attainment of
accurate results to be presented as evidence in court in terms of examiner’s
competency, facility and instrument, techniques and procedures, and subject’s
condition.
RESEARCH DESIGNS
TCU_CCJ_SY2022-2023S1_CIP1_CRIMINOLOGY7-8 Page 6 of 19
Quantitative Research Design
Its focused is to describe problems descriptively and numerically. It utilizes more
statistical tests to explain the nature, characteristics, relationships and differences
of variables. Types of Quantitative Research
1. Descriptive - describes and interprets WHAT is. It is concerned with conditions or
relationship that exist, practices that prevail, beliefs and processes that are going
on, effects that are being felt or trends that are developing.
Sub-types of Descriptive Research
a. Descriptive-Survey - involves collection of information on people, events and
other topics of interest to the researcher.
b. Descriptive-Documentary - involves content analysis because the documentary
technique includes analysis of content. It is used when data cannot be obtained
through questionnaire or observation.
TCU_CCJ_SY2022-2023S1_CIP1_CRIMINOLOGY7-8 Page 7 of 19
Research Instrument - a device designed or adopted by researcher for data gathering
3. Observation - may be defined as perceiving data through the sense: sight, hearing,
taste, touch and smell. Sense of sight is the most important and most used. Most
direct way and most widely used in studying behavior.
Types of Observation
a. Formal Observation - researcher makes a guide on what to observe. Possible
responses may also be outlined
b. Informal Observation - needs critical evaluation of the observation made to
avoid biased results. Recommended for qualitative research
Types of Validity
a. Content-Related Validity - refers to content and format of the instrument which
must answer the following criteria: appropriateness; logical; adequate; and,
proper format; expert judgment ; table of specification
b. Criterion-Related Validity - refers to the relationship between scores obtained
using one or more instruments or measures.
c. Construct-Related Validity - refers to the nature of psychological
construction or characteristics being measured by the instrument
TCU_CCJ_SY2022-2023S1_CIP1_CRIMINOLOGY7-8 Page 8 of 19
Degree to which the research instrument can be satisfactorily used. It may be
determined thru: a. ease of administration
b. ease of scoring
c. ease of interpretation
d. low cost
e. proper mechanical make up
Statistics = science which deals with the systematic process of collecting, organizing,
classifying, presenting, interpreting and analyzing data
Types of Statistics
A. Descriptive Statistics = it is used to determine the nature of variables without any
attempt to critically compare the extent of relationships or differences with other
variables Tools of Descriptive Statistics
1. Frequency Counting/Distribution
TCU_CCJ_SY2022-2023S1_CIP1_CRIMINOLOGY7-8 Page 9 of 19
Data Analysis - an examination of data or facts in terms of quantity, quality,
attribute, trait, pattern, trend, relationship among others so as to answer research
questions which involve statistical techniques and procedures
Types of Data Analysis
1. Univariate - tests a single variable to determine whether the sample is
similar to the population from which it has been drawn
2. Bivariate - it tests two variables on how they differ from each other
3. Multivariate - it tests three or more independent variables at a time on the degree of
TCU_CCJ_SY2022-2023S1_CIP1_CRIMINOLOGY7-8 Page 10 of 19
THESIS FORMAT
Chapter 1
THE PROBLEM AND ITS BACKGROUND
Introduction. Discussion of the problem. What the problem is all about; May include
supporting articles to justify the study ; Discussion of the rational and objectives for
conducting the study
Theoretical Framework. Citing theories, articles or policy that would support the
Scope and Limitation of the Study. Boundaries in terms of the subject of the study,
time, sample respondents, and location (Scope); Weakness of the study beyond the
control of the researcher (Limitation)
Chapter 2
REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURES AND STUDIES
unpublished articles
Chapter 3
RESEARCH METHODS AND PROCEDURES
Research Method. Brief description and justification of the research method used in the
study
Procedures in Gathering Data. Contains the step by step procedures used by the
researcher in reaching the respondents in order to gather data
Chapter 4
PRESENTATION, ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF DATA
Chapter 5
SUMMARY OF FINDINGS, CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
APPENDICES
Curriculum Vitae
Survey
Questionnaire
Letter of
Request/s
Citation. Citations help readers locate your sources. They help to continue the
scholarly conversation. To learn more about how citations can help you avoid
plagiarism, view this interactive tutorial
TCU_CCJ_SY2022-2023S1_CIP1_CRIMINOLOGY7-8 Page 12 of 19
Downloaded by jhune reconoce
APA (AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION) FORMAT
APA style is used in a variety of disciplines including nursing, business, social work,
education, and other behavioral and social sciences. APA values currency of work
and thus cites by author(s) and year (as opposed to MLA, which values authorship
and cites by author and page number). Writers using APA must inform readers not
only of authors they are using, but how current/timely the sources are.
Title page
Title should be between 10-12 words and should reflect content of paper (e.g., IV
and DV). Title, your name, and Hamilton College are all double-spaced (no extra
spaces) Create a page header using the “View header” function in MS Word. On the
title page, the header should include the following:
Flush left: Running head: THE RUNNING HEAD SHOULD BE IN ALL CAPITAL LETTERS.
The
running head is a short title that appears at the top of pages of published articles. It
should not exceed 50 characters, including punctuation and spacing. (Note: on the
title page, you actually write the words “Running head,” but these words do not
appear on subsequent pages; just the actual running head does. If you make a
section break between the title page and the rest of the paper you can make the
header different for those two parts of the manuscript).
Flush right, on same line: page number. Use the toolbox to insert a page
number, so it will automatically number each page.
Introduction
(Do not label as “Introduction.” Title of paper goes at the top of the page—not bold)
The introduction of an APA-style paper is the most difficult to write. A good
introduction will summarize, integrate, and critically evaluate the empirical
knowledge in the relevant area(s) in a way that sets the stage for your study and why
you conducted it. The introduction starts out broad (but not too broad!) and gets
more focused toward the end. Here are some guidelines for constructing a good
introduction:
Don’t put your readers to sleep by beginning your paper with the time-worn sentence,
“Past research has shown (blah blah blah)” They’ll be snoring within a paragraph! Try
to draw your reader in by saying something interesting or thought-provoking right off
the bat. Take a look at articles you’ve read. Which ones captured your attention right
away? How did the authors accomplish this task? Which ones didn’t? Why not? See if
you can use articles you liked as a model. One way to begin (but not the only way) is
to provide an example or anecdote illustrative of your topic area.
Although you won’t go into the details of your study and hypotheses until the end of
the intro, you should foreshadow your study a bit at the end of the first paragraph by
stating your purpose briefly, to give your reader a schema for all the information you
will present next. Your intro should be a logical flow of ideas that leads up to your
Downloaded by jhune reconoce
hypothesis. Try to organize it in terms of the ideas rather than who did what when.
In other words, your intro shouldn’t read like a story of “Schmirdley did such-and-
such in 1991. Then Gurglehoff did something-or-other in
Book example:
Gray, P. (2010). Psychology (6th ed.). New York: Worth
Table
There are various formats for tables, depending upon the information you wish to
include. See the APA manual. Be sure to provide a table number and table title (the
latter is italicized). Tables can be single or double-spaced.
Figure
If you have more than one figure, each one gets its own page. Use a sans serif font,
such as Helvetica, for any text within your figure. Be sure to label your x- and y-axes
clearly, and make sure you’ve noted the units of measurement of the DV.
Underneath the figure provide a label and brief caption (e.g., “Figure 1. Mean
evaluation of job applicant qualifications as a function of applicant attractiveness
level”). The figure caption typically includes the IVs/predictor variables and the DV.
Include error bars in your bar graphs, and note what the bars represent in the figure
caption: Error bars represent one standard error above and below the mean.
In-Text Citations:
(see pp. 174-179 of APA manual)
When citing sources in your paper, you need to include the authors’ names and
Downloaded by jhune reconoce
publication date.
Secondary Sources
“Secondary source” is the term used to describe material that is cited in another
source. If in his article entitled “Behavioral Study of Obedience” (1963), Stanley
Milgram makes reference to the ideas of Snow (presented above), Snow (1961) is the
primary source, and Milgram (1963) is the secondary source.
Try to avoid using secondary sources in your papers; in other words, try to find the
primary source and read it before citing it in your own work. If you must use a
secondary source, however, you should cite it in the following way:
Snow (as cited in Milgram, 1963) argued that, historically, the cause of most criminal
acts... The reference for the Milgram article (but not the Snow reference) should then
appear in the reference list at the end of your paper.
The Do’s:
1. Communicate your work clearly and precisely. Remember you are presenting a
novel work done; you don’t have to write stories.
2. Spotlight the ideas and methodologies involved. Discuss specific reasons to
justify your research.
3. Your innovative ideas and methodologies can be followed by future researchers,
therefore, doubly verify the accuracy and correctness of the data you present.
4. Your presented materials should give a thorough conception of the topic and all its
aspects. 5. Refer diverse sources of research for trustworthy and most up-to-date
information. 6. Do scrutinize your research stuff and information for reliability and
present it with ample analysis and logic to show how it conveys and supports your
research.
7. Provide solid evidences and sufficient supporting arguments to reinforce your
findings. 8. Fill your paper with scientific terminologies. Write your paper with only
enough detail about the research work.
9. Maintain a track of the bibliography and references. Sort data by source or mark
your notes so as to remember where individual facts came from.
10. Proof read the paper several times. Do not hesitate to take help of your
friends/peers/colleagues/professional editors in proof reading and fine tuning the
paper.
Before starting to write a research paper, keep a clear mind for the topic that you
have chosen. Sometimes, you might get results that may not be in conformity with
the result you are expecting. Don’t get disheartened. Because one needs utmost
sincerity while writing a research paper.
Step 5: After completing the first draft version of the paper, read it thoroughly. Re
write wherever required
Go through the paper multiple times to make sure that there are no mistakes. Ensure
that the correct figures have been quoted. Following are few checkpoints which can
be cross checked: • Is the thesis statement correct and holds valid?
•Has the correct outline been followed?
Step 6: Proofread your paper, make sure all the relevant references of data have been
included Give a final reading to the paper ensuring that all the important
information, experiments, results and conclusion has been included. Check for any
grammatical, spelling and punctuation errors. Make sure that all the sources have
been captured. And finally try to submit your paper before the deadline so that there
is no last minute rush.
References:
Saleem, A., Tabusum, S., and Sadik Batcha, M. (2014). Holistic Approach of Research
Work. Research Scholar/Bharathiyar University, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu. India.
International Journal of Scientific and Research Publications, Volume 4, Issue 7.
https://www.formpl.us/blog/applied-research
https://www.questionpro.com/blog/exploratory-
research/
https://research-methodology.net/research-methodology/research-design/exploratory-
research/ https://www.formpl.us/blog/descriptive research#:~:text=Descriptive
%20research%20is%20a%20type,problem%2C%20rather%20th an%20the%20why
https://explorable.com/experimental-research
https://cemast.illinoisstate.edu/downloads/hsrs/types_of_research.pdf
https://www.reference.com/business-finance/analytical-research
94534a536bf46028#:~:text=Analytical%20research%20is%20a
%20specific,find%20the
%20m ost%20relevant%20information
https://www.disability-researchers.com/analytical-
research
https://www.questionpro.com/blog/evaluation-research-definition-methods-and
examples/#:~:text=Evaluation%20research%2C%20also%20known%20as,order%20to
%20ac hieve%20a%20goal
https://allpsych.com/research
methods/otherresearchdesigns/developmentalresearch/#:~:text=The%20purpose%20of
%20de velopmental%20research,income%20versus%20high%2Dincome
%20neighborhoods https://libguides.usc.edu/APA7th