Pr1 Lecture
Pr1 Lecture
In conclusion, you can say that Inquiry-based Learning gives you the following
advantages:
1. Elevates interpretative thinking through graphic skills
2. Improves student learning abilities
3. Widens learners’ vocabulary
4. Facilitates problem-solving acts
5. Increases social awareness and cultural knowledge
6. Encourages cooperative learning
7. Provides mastery of procedural knowledge
8. Encourages higher-order thinking strategies
9. Hastens conceptual understanding
Meaning of Research
One school activity that every college student has to excel in is research. This is a
hallmark of a university or college education. Your research abilities reflect the quality of
your school. If you graduate from a school with superb knowledge of research work,
you can tell yourself that, “I am a product of a quality college or university.” Hence,
the greatness of a higher education institution depends on how knowledgeable its
faculty and students are about the ins and outs of research; more so, on the application
of this to their everyday life for the progress of the whole world.
What is research?
A number of books on research define this term in many
ways, but such varied definitions boil down to the primary meaning of this word,
which is:
To sum up your concepts about the nature of research, the following will give
you the characteristics, purposes, classification, types of, and approaches to research.
(Badke 2012; Silverman 2013; De Mey 2013)
Characteristics of Research
1. Accuracy. It must give correct or accurate data, which the footnotes, notes,
and bibliographical entries should honestly and appropriately documented
or acknowledged.
2. Objectiveness. It must deal with facts, not with mere opinions arising from
assumptions, generalizations, predictions, or conclusions.
3. Timeliness. It must work on a topic that is fresh, new, and interesting to the
present society.
Purposes of Research
Types of Research
The kind of data you want to work on reflects whether you wish to do
a quantitative or a qualitative research.
Qualitative research
requires non-numerical data, which means that the
research uses words rather than numbers to express the results, the inquiry,
or investigation about people’s thoughts, beliefs, feelings, views, and
lifestyles regarding the object of the study. These opinionated answers from
people are not measurable; so, verbal language is the right way to express
your findings in a qualitative research.
Approaches to Research
After choosing your topic for research, what is your next move? In other words,
how are you going to approach or begin your research, deal with your data, and
establish a connection among all things or activities involved in your research?
The first is the scientific or positive approach, in which you discover and measure
information as well as observe and control variables in an impersonal manner. It
allows control of variables. Therefore, the data gathering techniques appropriate
for this approach are structured interviews, questionnaires, and observational
checklists.Data given by these techniques are expressed through numbers,
which means that thismethod is suitable for quantitative research.
Combining these two approaches in designing your research leads you to the
third one,called triangulation approach. In this case, you are free to gather and
analyze data usingmultiple methods, allowing you to combine or mix up research
approaches, researchtypes, data gathering, and data analysis techniques.
Triangulation approach givesyou the opportunity to view every angle of the
research from different perspectives.
(Badke 2012; Silverman 2013)
a. Theory of Relativity
b. University Belt Street Foods
c. Landline vs. Cellphone
d. Reasons Behind Tuition Fee Increases
e. Manila Flash Flood Solutions
f. College Assessment Practices
g. Critical Thinking and Creative Thinking in Learning-Teaching
Situations
h. The Why and How of Internet Use
i. Effects of Korean Telenovelas on Filipino TV Viewers
j. Digital Age
k. Teaching Through PowerPoint Presentations
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
As a curious student, you want to know so many things about your surroundings
as well as the people, places, and things you find interesting, intriguing,
mysterious, or unique. Try looking at the people around you. Perhaps, you are
interested in knowing these people’s ideas, views, feelings, attitudes, or lifestyle.
The information these people give you reflect their mental, spiritual, emotional, or
social upbringing, which in turn, show how they view the world.
Resulting from internal aspects, people cannot measure worldviews but can
know them through numbers. Obtaining world knowledge in this manner directs
you to do a research called Qualitative Research. This is a research type that puts
premium or high value on people’s thinking or point of view conditioned by their
personal traits. As such, it usually takes place in soft sciences like social
sciences, politics, economics, humanities, education, psychology, nursing, and
all business-related subjects.
4. Specificity to generalization
5. Contextualization
Words, words, and more words come in big quantity in this kind of
research. Data gathering through interviews or library reading, as well as
the presentation of data analysis results, is done verbally. In some cases, it
resorts to quoting some respondents’ answers. Likewise, presenting people’s
world views through visual presentation (i.e., pictures, videos, drawings,
and graphs) are significantly used in a qualitative research.
8. Internal analysis
Here, you examine the data yielded by the internal traits of the subject
individuals (i.e., emotional, mental, spiritual characteristics). You study
people’s perception or views about your topic, not the effects of their physical
existence on your study. In case of objects (e.g., books and artworks) that are
subjected to a qualitative research, the investigation centers on underlying
theories or principles that govern these materials and their usefulness to
people.
Types of Qualitative Research
1. Case Study
This type of qualitative research usually takes place in the field of
social care, nursing, psychology, rehabilitation centers, education, etc. This
involves a long-time study of a person, group, organization, or situation. It
seeks to find answers to why such thing occurs to the subject. Finding the
reason/s behind such occurrence drives you to also delve into relationships
of people related to the case under study. Varieties of data collection methods
such as interviews, questionnaires, observations, and documentary analysis
are used in a case study.
2. Ethnography
Falling in the field of anthropology, ethnography is the study of a
particular cultural group to get a clear understanding of its organizational
set-up, internal operation, and lifestyle. A particular group reveals the nature
or characteristics of their own culture through the world perceptions of the
cultural group’s members.
3. Phenomenology
Coming from the word “phenomenon,” which means something
known through sensory experience, phenomenology refers to the study of
how people find their experiences meaningful. Its primary goal is to make
people understand their experiences about death of loved ones, care for
handicapped persons, friendliness of people, etc. In doing so, other people
will likewise understand the meanings attached to their experiences. Those
engaged in assisting people to manage their own lives properly often do this
qualitative kind of research.
5. Historical Analysis
Central to this qualitative research method is the examination of
primary documents to make you understand the connection of past events
to the present time. The results of your content analysis will help you specify
phenomenological changes in unchanged aspects of society through the
years.
6. Grounded Theory
Grounded theory takes place when you discover a new theory to
underlie your study at the time of data collection and analysis. Through
your observation on your subjects, you will happen to find a theory that
applies to your current study. Interview, observation, and documentary
analysis are the data gathering techniques for this type of qualitative
research.