Practical Research 1 - Scientifc Inquiry & Research Paradigms

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41 Terms

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science

a systematic and organized body of knowledge in any area of inquiry that is acquired using the scientific methhod

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natural sciences

-the science of naturally occuring objects or phenomena

- classified into physical sciences, life sciences, etc.

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social science

a field that studies people and the relationships among them

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basic sciences

-pure sciences

-explains basic objects and forces, their relationships, and the laws governing them

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applied sciences

-practical sciences

-sciences that apply scientific knowledge in a physical environment

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scientific knowlegde

a generalized body of laws and theories to explain a phenomenon or behavior of interest, acquired using the scientific method

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research paradigm

-A cluster of beliefs and rules that guide scientists in a discipline, influencing what and how it should be studied, and how results should be interpreted.

-same as research method

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qualitative and quanitiative studies

2 types of research paradigms

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qualitative study

-theory-emergent using inductive reasoning/approach

-data uses words that are analyzed through coding

-sample size is small

-instruments are interviews and FDGs

-question type is open-ended and semi-structured

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quantitative study

-theory-testing using deductive reasoning/approach

-data uses numbers that are analyzed through statistical treatment

-sample size is large

-instruments are survey questionnaires or forms

-question type is closed-ended and structured

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data

information that has been obeserved and collected

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FDG

-focus group discussion

-a group of participants with the same perceptions

-used to confirm info

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primary sources

firsthand information

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observation, interviews, and questionnaires

primary sources include...

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observation

an action of observing a group of people or a phenomenon to understand it/them

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participant observation

the researcher engages in the activities the participants are involved in

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non-participant observation

researcher is a passive observer, not involved or engaged in the activities the participants are involved in

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secondary sources

records that explain or interpret primary sources

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literature and studies from other researchers and authors

secondary sources include...

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hawthorne effect

A change in a subject's behavior caused simply by the awareness of being studied

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interview

conversations used to collect in-depth qualitative data by asking questions to gather information about an individual's experiences, perspectives, and meanings

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structured interview

has predetermined questions

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unstructured interview

no set of predetermined questions

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semi-structured interview

there is a list of predetermined questions, but the researcher can ask different questions

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DOI

data object identifier

-where references are found

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participants

people in a descriptive qualitative research

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respondents

individuals who answer a survey in a descriptive quantitative research

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subjects

people or objects in a experimental qualitative research

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population

collection of people with a common characteristic & the main focus of the study

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sample size

a portion of the population chosen to represent the population

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sampling technique

the method used to obtain the participants for a study from the population

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probability sampling

-everyone has an equal chance of participating

-not biased

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simple random sampling

-everyone having an equal chance of inclusion in the sample

-draw lots or spin the wheel

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stratified sampling

-chosen by group

-must be fairly represented

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systematic sampling

-chosing participants based on a system (e.g. every 10th person)

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cluster sampling

-choosing clusters within the researchers' reach

-for a large population

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Non-Probability Sampling

-involves the researchers' judgement

-acceptible, but might be scrutinized due to possible bias

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Convenience Sampling

choosing individuals who are easiest to reach

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Quota Sampling

based on a predetermined number of participants

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Purposive Sampling

researchers rely on their own judgement to select participants

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Snowball/chain-referral Sampling

participants recruit other participants