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CHOOSING A RESEARCH PROJECT

CHOOSING A RESEARCH PROJECT. © LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION, KEITH MORRISON. STRUCTURE OF THE CHAPTER. What gives rise to the research project? (Choosing a research project) The importance of the research The purposes of the research Is the research practicable? Research questions

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CHOOSING A RESEARCH PROJECT

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  1. CHOOSING A RESEARCH PROJECT © LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION, KEITH MORRISON

  2. STRUCTURE OF THE CHAPTER • What gives rise to the research project? (Choosing a research project) • The importance of the research • The purposes of the research • Is the research practicable? • Research questions • The scope of the literature review

  3. CHOOSING A RESEARCH PROJECT • A problem encountered in everyday work or outside everyday work; • An issue that the researcher has read about or seen; • A problem that has arisen in the locality, e.g. in response to government policy or practices or to local developments; • An area of the researcher’s own interest; • An area of the researcher’s own experience; • A perceived area of importance; • An interesting question; • A testable guess or hunch; • A topical matter; • Disquiet with a particular research finding that one has met in the literature or a piece of policy;

  4. CHOOSING A RESEARCH PROJECT • An awareness that a particular issue or area has been incompletely studied, and a wish to plug the gap; • A wish to apply a piece of conceptual research to actual practice, or to test a theory in practice; • A wish to rework the conceptual or theoretical frameworks that are often used in a specific area; • A wish to revise or replace the methodologies that are often used in researching a specific area; • A desire to improve practice in a particular area; • A desire to involve participants in research and development;

  5. CHOOSING A RESEARCH PROJECT • A desire to test out a particular methodology in research; • An interest in seeing if reported practice holds true for the researcher’s own context (e.g. a comparative study); • An interest in investigating the causes of a phenomenon or the effects of a particular intervention in the area of the phenomenon; • A priority identified by funding agencies; • An issue identified by the researcher’s supervisor or a project team of which the researcher is a member.

  6. THE IMPORTANCE OF THE RESEARCH • Is the research significant? • What difference will the research make? • Does the originality of the research render it significant? • How and where does the research move forward the field? • Where do originality and significance lie in the research: • Conceptually • Theoretically • Methodologically • Substantively

  7. THE IMPORTANCE OF THE RESEARCH • What is the likely impact of the research? • What is the use of the research – what will it ‘deliver’? • What benefit will the research bring, and to whom? • Is the research worth doing?

  8. THE PURPOSES OF THE RESEARCH • What are the ‘deliverables’ in the research? • What does the research seek to do? • What do you wish to come from the research?

  9. EXAMPLES OF DIFFERENT PURPOSES OF RESEARCH To examine effects of causes To evaluate an intervention To examine causes of effects To look at an issue in detail To generalize To look at long-term effects Classroom-based research To investigate sensitive issues or groups To develop theory To see what happens if . . . • To test a theory/hypothesis • To test practice • To clarify concepts • To identify common features • To investigate and examine • To collect opinions • To model • To compare • To look at trends • To collect views • To critique policy/practice

  10. FITNESS FOR PURPOSE: PURPOSES OF RESEARCH DRIVE DIFFERENT KINDS OF RESEARCH Grounded theory Historical research Ideology critique Interpretive research Literature-based research Longitudinal research Meta-analysis Multi-level research Multiple regression Network analysis Observational study • Accounts • Action research • Case study • Comparative study • Correlational research • Covert research • Descriptive research • Discourse analysis • Ethnography • Evaluative research • Experiment

  11. FITNESS FOR PURPOSE: PURPOSES OF RESEARCH DRIVE DIFFERENT KINDS OF RESEARCH • Observational study • Personal constructs • Research synthesis • Role play • Simulation • Structural equation modelling and causal modelling • Survey • Testing

  12. IS THE RESEARCH PRACTICABLE? • Access • People • Institutions • Data sources • Permission • People • Institutions • Review panels • Informed consent and ethical issues • Scope of research • Disposition, commitment and expertise of researcher • Duration of research • Availability of resources (human, material, temporal, administrative, supervision)

  13. RESEARCH QUESTIONS Research questions must be operational, yielding concrete answers to research purposes and research objectives. • Clarity • Complexity • Comprehensibility • Comprehensiveness • Concreteness • Contents • Difficulty, • Ease of answering • Focus • Kinds of data required to answer them • Purposes • Specificity • Utility of the answers provided

  14. TYPES OF RESEARCH QUESTION • How to achieve outcomes • How to achieve something • How to do something • How to improve or develop something • Prediction • Processes • Properties and characteristics • Relations (e.g. between variables, people, events) • Stages of something • Structures of something; • Testing • Types of something • Understanding • ‘How?’ • ‘Wh’ questions: who, where, why, what, what if, when • Achievement • Alternatives to something • Causation • Comparisons • Correlations • Description • Evaluation • Explanation • Exploring • Factors • Function or purpose

  15. SCOPE OF THE LITERATURE REVIEW • Gives credibility and legitimacy to the research; • Shows that the research is up-to-date, focuses on key issues, is aware of the theoretical, conceptual, methodological and substantive problems in the field; • Clarifies key concepts, issues, terms and meanings; • Leads into the researcher’s study, raising issues, showing where there are gaps in the research field, how to move the field forwards, and justifying the need for the research; • Shows the researcher’s own critical judgment on prior research or theoretical matters in the field;

  16. SCOPE OF THE LITERATURE REVIEW • Provides new theoretical, conceptual, methodological and substantive insights and issues for research; • Sets the context for the research and establishes key issues to be addressed; • The literature must inform the research, not simply stand alone with no relation to what comes after.

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