Research Design and Methods II
Research Design and Methods II
Focuses on the end-product: What kind of study Focuses on the research process and the kind of
is being planned and what kind of results are tools and procedures to be used.
aimed at. (e.g. 1. Historical - comparative study, (1. Document analysis, survey methods, analysis
exploratory study, inductive or deductive study) of existing (secondary) data/statistics etc)
Focuses on the logic of research: What evidence Focuses on the individual steps in the research
is required to address the question adequately? process and the most objective procedures to
be employed.
Research methods:
(i) Quantitative
(ii) Qualitative
Quantitative research
Entails the use of systematic statistical procedures to test, prove
and verify hypotheses.
Probability theory
A branch of applied mathematics that relies on random processes. It
refers to a process that generates a mathematically random result
that is, the selection process operates in a truly random method and a
researcher can calculate the probability of outcomes. It is a true
random process in that each element has an equal probability of being
selected.
Sampling in quantitative research
I. Descriptive statistics
to test hypotheses
3. State hypotheses
9. Define population
Experimental
o Simple post-test
Observation
Surveys
Use questionnaires
PRE- AND POST- TESTING
What is it?
To inform the researcher about topics that are or are not needed to
Each pre- and post-test question item should be written for each
Measures of validity
Internal validity
External validity
Face validity
Construct validity
Content validity
Measures of validity
Internal validity: The validity with which we can infer that a
relationship between two variables is real and not by chance. It
relates to the possible errors or alternative explanations of results that
arise despite careful controls. High internal validity = few such errors.
External validity: The validity with which we can infer that the
relationship between the variables investigated holds over different
people, settings, times, treatment variables, and measurement
variables. The ability to generalise findings from a specific setting and
sample to a broad range of settings and many population groups.
High external validity means that the results can be widely
generalised, whereas low external validity means that they may apply
only to a very specific context.
TYPES OF EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN
validity.
Treatment Post-test
X O
Two Group, Post-test Comparison
Treatment Post-test
X O
O
One group Pre-test, Post-test
applying the experimental treatment and then measuring after. This design
has minimal internal validity, controlling only for selection of subject and
The main weakness of this research design is that the internal validity is
possibility always exists that some critical difference that are not reflected in
the pretest, is operating to contaminate the post test data. For example, if
motivated.
Experimental group = E O X O
Control Group = C O O
Two groups, Random Selection, Pre-test, Post-test
appear in the post test should be the result of the experimental variable
rather than possible difference between the two groups to start with. This is
the classical type of experimental design and has good internal validity. The
design caused when pre-testing affect the subjects in such a way that
Participant observation
Case studies
Videotaping
Discourse analysis
Narrative analysis
Content analysis
Thematic analysis
Sampling in qualitative research