IT 243 - Quantitative Methods
IT 243 - Quantitative Methods
Lesson 1: Introduction
What is Research
ICT Research
What is a scientific method?
Difference between qualitative and quantitative methods
Purpose of statistics
What is Research
The word Research is derived from the root word search, which means to try to
find something by looking or otherwise seeking carefully and thoroughly; to
examine something thoroughly; to look into or over something carefully – to look
for information.
Therefore, Research can be said to mean to search again; to try to find
something by looking further; to seek again more carefully and thoroughly; to
examine further – to look for further information.
Research is a sign of intelligence
o Intelligence can be defined as the adaptation of an environment to suit
needs, which is why humans can be acknowledged as the most
'intelligent' of species.
o Humans observe, identify, plan and then effect change. Humans have
social gain through information as well as resource sharing.
o As apart from any other species, humans have complex language
structures and the written word to share information from one person to
another. Literate societies with well structured, permanent means of
communicating information have immense evolutionary advantage.
We research everyday
o Humans are 'intuitive' scientists ....always asking questions and testing
theories about themselves, others, events, the environment and the world
around them.
o Research is asking a question and finding out the answer….. It is looking
into something. It is looking for something. It is comparing and contrasting
things. It is finding out more information…it is counting things …making
enquiries…being curious…finding out what people think…finding out what
people do….finding out what works.... finding out what doesn’t
work…finding out what people want…
o We do this in making decisions everyday..
o We all engage in or do social research as we act on the basis and results
of our own research and theorising, therefore, what we think affects the
way we behave….
What do we research?
o We research people and their behaviour, opinions, attitudes, trends and
patterns, also politics, animals, health and illness. Research can be
conducted either informally for our own 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.
o 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.
o Our views – personal, social, community and worldwide and our own
identities are socially constructed through our own theorising.
What does research tell us?
o Research gives us information about:
Thoughts and opinions
Attitudes
Habits
Culture
Norms
Scientific facts
Medical information
o What do we do with research?
Have it as interesting fact
Use it to make decisions
Use it to persuade influence others
Use it to affect change
Use it to change behaviour
Use it to better use…medical …improve customer care...write
better funding applications....monitor and evaluate our provision....
o We research in order to understand society and social processes, as well
as to test and or create theories in order that we are better able to inform
about social action and potentially ‘improve’ social conditions.
Research can be carried in virtually every field of endeavour including: Science,
Engineering and Technology, Information and Communication Technology,
Humanities, Art, Economics, Sociology, Business, Marketing, etc.
ICT Research
o Now information and communication technology, ICT, is an amalgamation
of two terms: information technology and communication technology. The
term is generally accepted to mean all devices, networking components,
applications and systems that when combined allow people, systems, and
organizations (i.e., businesses, nonprofit agencies, governments and
criminal enterprises) to interact in the digital world. It underpins innovation
and competitiveness across private and public sectors and enables
scientific progress in all disciplines.
o ICT provides the core enabling technologies for harnessing all other
subject area, including science, engineering, technology, and even arts. It
also provides the tools to organize vast amounts of data that are obtained
experimentally and empirically, as well as enables the generation, through
simulations, of massive amounts of data that drive a deeper insight into
the behavior of systems that exist theoretically or are entirely abstract.
o So it is clear that ICT is a discipline where all of the other disciplines meet
for techniques and expertise requirements that they hold in common.
Modern society not only depends upon ICT for its survival, ICT has proven
to be the pivot for research in all disciplines, since they increasingly turns
to it for their livelihood, convenience and pleasure.
o ICT Research can therefore be said to be the systematic investigation into
and study of materials and sources in all sector of human endeavour using
the instruments of information and communication technology in order to
establish facts, reach new conclusions and produce new products.
Qualitative Method
o Concerned with a quality of information, qualitative methods attempt to
gain an understanding of the underlying reasons and motivations for
actions and establish how people interpret their experiences and the world
around them.
o Qualitative methods provide insights into the setting of a problem,
generating ideas and/or hypotheses.
o Qualitative method is used to collect the in-depth details on a particular
topic. This approach assumes a single person represents the group
feelings and emotions of a person are equally important to interpret which
are ignored by the quantitative method. This approach is usually used by
the interpretive.
o Authors like Tashakkori and Creswell have explained that this approach is
used when researcher wants to observe or interpret an environment with
the intention to develop a theory.
The table below provides a breakdown of the key features of each method.
Purpose of Statistics
“Statistics is the grammar of science” – Karl Pearson
“If your experiment needs statistics, you ought to have done a better experiment”
– Ernest Rutherford