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Formulating A Problem

The document discusses formulating a research problem. It states that a research problem is a perceived gap between what is and what should be. Some key steps in formulating a research problem are to identify a broad field of interest, dissect it into sub-areas, select an interested sub-area, assess objectives, raise questions, and double check the research problem formulation. Objectives should be clear, specific goals and there are main objectives and sub-objectives. Working definitions are also important to define concepts in a measurable way for the study.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
35 views

Formulating A Problem

The document discusses formulating a research problem. It states that a research problem is a perceived gap between what is and what should be. Some key steps in formulating a research problem are to identify a broad field of interest, dissect it into sub-areas, select an interested sub-area, assess objectives, raise questions, and double check the research problem formulation. Objectives should be clear, specific goals and there are main objectives and sub-objectives. Working definitions are also important to define concepts in a measurable way for the study.

Uploaded by

levi0417
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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LEARNING COMPETENCY:

IDENTIFY a research problem.


FORMULATING A RESEARCH
PROBLEM
 Any question that you want answered and any
assumption or assertion that you want to challenge or
investigate.
 However,
◦ not all questions can be transformed into
research problems.
◦ the process of formulating them in a meaningful way is not
at all an easy task.
◦ it requires considerable knowledge of both the subject area
and research methodology.
 A research problem is a perceived gap between
what is and what should be.
 Research problem arise from;
◦ Evolution of theories.
◦ Peers and supervisors etc.
◦ Published research (literature review).
◦ Day-to-day experience
RESEARCH PROBLEM IS THE
FOUNDATION OF THE RESEARCH
STUDY
Clear research problem would result
in clear and economical research
plan.
The way we formulate the research
problem determines every step that
follows;

• type of study design that can be used

• type of sampling strategy that can be employed

• research instrument that can be used or


developed

• type of analysis that can be undertaken


Sources of research problem
Aspects of research problem
 Interest
 Magnitude

 Concept measures

 Expertise

 Relevance

 Data availability

 Ethics
 Relevance
o How important?
o Size, Severity, health & Social consequences?
 Duplication
o Is the answer already available from other studies?
 Feasibility
o Feasible to carry out remedial actions?
o Are the manpower, time and resources available?
 Applicability
o Potential solution is effective under ideal conditions?
 Cost effectiveness
o Are the resources invested worth the outcome?
o Will the solution be too expensive to
implement?
 Timeliness
o Will the answer come quick enough?
 Ethics
o Will the project be acceptable to the respondents?
 Political acceptability
the results?
o Will the managers and community
accept
Steps in formulating research problem

STEP 1 STEP 2 STEP 3


Identify broad Dissect to Select
field sub- interested
areas sub-area

STEP 5
STEP 6 STEP 4
Formulate
Assess objective Raise
questions
objectives

STEP 7
Double
check
 What is an
‘objective’?
◦ A clear and specific goals you set out to attain in your study.
 Two types of objectives;
◦ Main objectives
 Overall statement of the thrust of your study.

 It is also a statement of the main associations and relationships that you seek to
discover or establish.

◦ Sub objectives
 The specific aspects of the topic that you want to investigate within the main
framework of your study.
 One sub-objective contains one aspect only
 Sub-objectives should be numerically listed.
 Worded clearly and unambiguously.
 Use action-oriented words or verbs when writing your
objectives.
 E.g. start with;
◦ ‘to determine’, ‘to find out’, ‘to ascertain’, ‘to measure’,
‘to explore’
 the wording of your objectivesdetermines the type
of research design you need to adopt to achieve
them.
 Focus the study (narrowing it down to

essentials). collection of data which are


 Avoid
not thenecessary
strictly for understanding
and solving the problem you have
identified.
 Organize the study in clearly defined parts or
phases.
 Working definitions or operational definitions are pre-
defined concepts that you plan to use either in your
research problem and/or in identifying the study population
in a measurable form.
 Used only for the purpose of your study and could be
quite different to legal definitions, or those used by others.
 Working definitions will inform your readers what exactly
you mean by the concepts that you have used in your
studyto avoid ambiguity and confusion.
1. Which among the topics?
problems you identified is
researchable?

2. Whata are the


characteristics of a research
problem?

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