Module 1 PR 1
Module 1 PR 1
Module 1 PR 1
Quarter 1- Module 1:
Nature of Inquiry and Research
Every day you encountered various problems in any facets of life be it social,
political, environmental and personal. It may link between persons, groups or an
organization. In this case, there must be a solution not only to resolve it but can be a
progress that everybody benefited from it. As a learner how can you find a solution to
these problems that is based on knowledge not on ordinary beliefs, predictions or
theories? You need to have this knowledge through organized and well-planned
procedures that are accurate and useful. Thus, you need to do research.
Research is asking what you know and think. It helps us to inquire on the right
information. It is of great importance to man in everyday life. The quality of man’s life
is improved through research making it easier and valuable from simple to modern.
Research develops you to an attitude to not believe everything easily available and
seek for truth - Research sharpens our mind to give a judicious vision to look. It is a
catalyst in solving complex issues in different sectors including health,
communications, business and the environment.
Learning Objectives
After going through this module, you are expected to be able to:
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What I know
Direction:
A. Read the following statements. Answer TRUE if the statement describes a
research, FALSE if you think it is not. Write your answers on the blank.
_______1. There should be adequate data before conducting a research.
_______2. To have an objective view of his or her study, the researcher should avoid
listening to another researcher.
_______3. A researcher must read literature that relates to the problem he or she is
studying.
_______4. An opinion from any person is recognized and considered as an answer to
the question asked by the researcher.
_______5. The researcher has the final say in his findings.
B. Underline the words in the box that are related to the definition of research.
C. Using the words encircled, formulate your own definition of research. Use the
blanks provided.
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Lesson The Importance of Research in
1 Daily Life
What’s in?
What’s New?
I. What is Research?
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Investigation has a deeper meaning compared to “inquiry”.
It is a systematic examination of a certain event or phenomenon.
Inquiry is a term that is synonymous with the word ‘investigation’. When you inquire or
investigate, you tend to ask questions to probe or examine something to request for
truth, information, or knowledge.
V. Purpose of Research
1. To inform action.
2. To prove or generate a theory.
3. To augment knowledge in a field or study.
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Activity 1: Question and Answer
Directions: Answer the questions briefly. Write your answers on your answer sheets,
1. What is Research?
2. What is inquiry and its nature?
3. What is the difference between inquiry and research?
4. How important is research in your daily life activities?
5. Why is there a need to conduct research?
What is it?
Discussion of Activity 1
You just learned the importance of research in daily life. Answer the following
questions briefly on the blanks provided.
1. Was there an instance in your life when you did an inquiry or research? Share
and describe your experiences. What are your challenges and difficulties?
2. As a learner in senior high school, how important is research in your daily life?
What’s more?
Direction: What makes these images a portrayal of what research is? Write
your reflection on your answer sheets.
1.
2.
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3.
4.
Let’s check how well do you know about research. Write your answers on the space
provided.
1. Research is different from inquiry because the later will ask you a question. If
inquiring is synonymous with investigation then what makes inquiry different
from research which also investigates?
2. Research in our daily life help us to understand various issues in life leading
to a solution, in what way does research empowers you with knowledge to
learn new things?
What I can do
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Additional Activities
Interview your classmate or a friend about their plans after senior high school.
Ask them how research played a major role in their chosen track or strand. Make a
report about it and share it to your teacher.
Write your report using a narrative format. Make use of the notes you wrote
down before and after you conducted your interview to flesh out the report. The first is
the brief detail about what the report is, who is the interviewee and the location of the
interview. Then break up the interview into paragraphs, like narrating a story and finally
a conclusion paragraph to end your report.
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Lesson The Characteristics, Processes, and
2 Ethics of Research
What’s in?
In the previous lessons, you learned the meaning of research and its importance in your
daily life. Research is different from inquiry. When you inquire or investigate, you tend to
ask questions to probe or examine something to request for truth, information, or
knowledge. The importance of research helps improved life as well as finding a solution
to problems through reliable and validated information.
What’s New?
I. Characteristics of Research
1. Empirical. Research is based on direct experience or observation by the researcher.
2. Logical. Research is based on valid procedures and principles.
3. Cyclical. Research is a cyclical process because it starts with a problem and ends
with a problem.
4. Analytical. Research utilizes proven analytical procedures in gathering the data,
whether historical, descriptive, and experimental and case study.
5. Critical. Research exhibits careful and precise judgment.
6. Methodical. Research is conducted in a methodical manner without bias using
systematic method and procedures.
7. Replicability. The research design and procedures are replicated or repeated to
enable the researcher to arrive at valid and conclusive results
Research ethics are guidelines for the responsible conduct of research which
educates and monitors researchers to ensure high standard. It promotes the aim of
research, such as expanding knowledge and supports the values required for
collaborative work, such as mutual respect and fairness.
1. Informed Consent. This is required to secure in order protect the rights of the
participants in your study. Inform your participants about the criteria set for
choosing them as informants and the schedule of one-on-one interview at the
convenient time they are available. Participation to the study will be completely
voluntary.
2. Honesty. It reports data, results, methods and procedures, and publication status.
Do not fabricate, falsify and misrepresent the data.
3. Objectivity. Avoid bias in experimental design, data analysis, data interpretation,
peer review, personnel decisions, grant writing, expert testimony, and other
aspects of research.
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4. Integrity. Keep your promises and agreements; act with sincerity; strive for
consistency of thought and action.
5. Carefulness. Avoid careless errors and negligence; carefully and critically
examine your work and the work of peers. Keep good records of research
activities.
6. Openness. Share data, results, ideas, tools and resources. Be open to criticism
and new ideas.
7. Respect for Intellectual Property. Honor patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade
secrets and other forms of intellectual property. Do not use published or
unpublished data, methods, or results without permission. Give credit where credit
is due. Never plagiarize, fabricate and falsify.
8. Confidentiality. Protect confidential communications, such as papers or grants
submitted for publication, personnel records, trade or military secrets, and patient
records.
9. Responsible Mentoring. Help to educate, mentor, and advise others. Promote
their welfare and allow them to make their own decisions.
10. Responsible Publication. Publish in order to advance research and scholarship,
not to advance your own career. Avoid wasteful and duplicative publication.
11. Respect for Colleagues. Respect your colleagues’ opinion, treat them fairly and
do not outsmart others.
12. Social responsibility. Strive to promote social acceptance and prevent or mitigate
social harms through research, public education, and advocacy.
13. Non-discrimination. Avoid discrimination against colleagues or students on the
basis of sex, race, ethnicity, or other factors that are not related to their scientific
competence and integrity.
14. Competence. Maintain and improve your own professional competence and
expertise through lifelong education and learning; take steps to promote
competence in science as a whole.
15. Legality. Know and obey relevant laws and institutional and government policies.
16. Animal Care. Show proper respect and care for animals when using them in
research. Do not conduct unnecessary or poorly designed animal experiments.
17. Human Subjects protection. When conducting a research on human subjects,
minimize harms and risks and maximize benefits; respect human dignity, privacy,
and anonymity.
1. Human Rights. They are moral principles or norms that describe certain standards
of human behavior and are regularly protected as natural and legal rights. They
constitute a set of rights and duties necessary for the protection of human dignity,
inherent to all human beings.
2. Intellectual Property. It protects creations of the mind, which have both a moral
and a commercial value.
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3. Copyright Infringement. It is the use or production of copyright-protected material
without permission of the copyright holder. Copyright infringement means that the
rights accorded to the copyright holder, such as the exclusive use of a work for a
set period of time, are breached by a third party
Examples:
a. Downloading movies and music without proper payment for use.
b. Recording movies in a theatre
c. Using others’ photographs for a blog without permission
d. Copying software code without giving proper credit
e. Creating videos with unlicensed music clips
4. Voluntary Participation. People must not be coerced into participating in research
process. Essentially, this means that prospective research participants must be
informed about the procedures and risks involved in research and must give their
consent to participate.
5. Anonymity. It is the protection of people’s identity through not disclosing their name
or not exposing their identity. It is a situation in data gathering activities in which
informant’s name is not given nor known.
6. Privacy. It is someone’s right to keep his personal matters and relationships secret.
It is the ability of an individual to seclude him from disturbance of any research activity.
Plagiarism
Plagiarism refers to the act of using another person’s ideas, works, processes,
and results without giving due credit. It should not be tolerated as the unauthorized
use of original works, a violation of intellectual property rights.
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3. What is the importance of considering those factors in selecting a research
problem?
4. Explain briefly. Research starts with a problem and ends with a new problem.
5. What is the purpose of research ethics in doing research work?
6. A research can be replicated but not the findings. Why?
What is it?
Discussion of Activity 1
You just learned the characteristics, processes and ethics of research.
1. As a researcher, you can play the role of a member of a research team, can
you identify the processes involved in conducting research and its
characteristics? Enumerate those processes.
2. What are the various research ethics and rights of a research participant
What’s more?
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The global public health response to COVID-19 could be significantly
enhanced by safe, effective vaccines and treatments, reliable measures
of correlates of immune protection, and improved scientific knowledge of
the disease and its transmission. It is widely agreed that vaccines would
be particularly important, and over 100 candidate vaccines are currently
being developed. Well-designed human challenge studies provide one of
the most efficient and scientifically powerful means for testing vaccines,
especially because animal models are not adequately generalizable to
humans.
Questions:
1. Based on the article, how will you define ethics in research?
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2. Are SARS-CoV-2 infection and transmission. Study on humans rather than animal
models unethical?
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3. If you were a part of the research teams conducting such phenomenon, what will
you do to correct the unethical feature of the experiment?
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What I know
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Lesson Quantitative and Qualitative
3 Research
What’s in? In the previous lessons, you learned that research should be systematic,
objective, feasible, empirical and clear. These characteristics guide you in realizing the
real nature of research following the processes as well as the factors in selecting your
general problem or topic. As a researcher you need to consider the ethics and unethical
practices in conducting research.
What’s New?
I. When to use Qualitative vs. Quantitative Research
Qualitative data adds the details and can also give a human voice to your survey
results.
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Concept Map showing the Designs of Research.
Qualitative Quantitative
It aims to create new theory The purpose is to test a
based on the gathered data. hypothesis or theory.
Objective
A fact-finding research used to Measures problem using rating
gain understanding of individual scale and other research
differences in terms of feelings parameters of group
and experiences. similarities.
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-natural setting -measurement setting
Data Description -making stories out of a certain -performs measures out of a
phenomenon. certain phenomenon.
Example: Example:
Guide questions for the Strongly agree to strongly
interviews disagree
In quantitative research closed
1. What was your ended questions are the basis
experiences during quarantine of all statistical analysis
period on the COVID-19 techniques applied on
pandemic? How did you handle questionnaires and surveys.
the situation caused by the
pandemic? Sample Question:
2. Was the support of the Do you agree on online
National and Local Government modality class in transitioning
enough for your basic needs? the new normal of education?
Did they conduct evaluation for a. Strongly agree
those who were affected? b. Agree
c. Disagree
d. Strongly disagree
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Inductive Deductive
The researcher starts with the Starts from a hypothesis or
Activities observations, an open mind already created theory
without biases, gathering all emphasizing the previously
exact details of the topic and researched phenomenon from
generalization or new theory is different views (tested against
given towards the end of the observations).
research process.
Subjective Objective
Data Analysis
Data analysis is influenced by The researcher employs
the personal experiences and standard criteria in analyzing
views. data.
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For more information on these Designs of Research, see Abdullah, S.N. (2018).Practical Research 1:
Qualitative Research [PowerPoint slides].Retrieved from http://www.academia.edu./ppt
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For more information on “Differentiate Qualitative and Quantitative Research”, see Abdullah, S.N.
(2018).Practical Research 1: Qualitative Research [PowerPoint slides].Retrieved from
http://www.academia.edu./ppt
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III. Similarities: Qualitative Research and Quantitative Research
1. How do you define the two designs of research: qualitative and quantitative?
2. What are the differences and similarities between these methods?
What is it?
Discussion of Activity 1
You just learned to differentiate quantitative from qualitative research.
1. In one sentence, differentiate a quantitative research from qualitative research?
2. Tell whether the following statement is a quantitative research or qualitative
research. Explain your answer.
a. Prefer for statistical summary of results.
b. Prefer for narrative summary of results.
What’s more?
Direction: Using a Venn Diagram below, illustrate the differences and similarities
between a quantitative and qualitative method of research by filling in completely the
Venn diagram presented in the next page.
Similarities
Natural Dependent on
Setting Both are rigorous & statistical tool
uses textual form in
data analysis
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Complete the box by filling out the missing description of qualitative or quantitative
research.
Qualitative Research Quantitative Research
1. Dependent on statistical tools
No conclusions formulated. 8.
What I can do
What do the figures below mean? Explain and write your answer below.
Additional Activities
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Decide whether the following topics or research questions is qualitative or
quantitative. Explain why and what is your basis. Write your answers on the
spaces provided.
Modified Identification
Direction: For the following research titles, identify from which field it belongs to by
choosing your answers from the box below. Write only the letter as your answer on
the space provided below each number.
A. Science Research
B. Fisheries research
C. Information & Communication Technology Research
D. Arts Based Research
E. Business Research
F. Humanities Research
G. Agriculture Research
H. Sports Research
I. Mathematics Research
J. Social Science Research
_______1 Scouring: Habitat Destruction of Coral Reefs and other Marine Animals
_______2.The Role of Computers in Digital Health Indicators
_______3. Students’ Misconceptions in Calculus
_______4. Making Bricks Out of Paper Strips
_______5.The Influence of Sports Activities on Learners Efficiency in Academics
_______6. Financial Attitude and Practices of Teachers
_______7. Psychosocial Stress Management of Senior High School Students
_______8. Effect of Classroom Environment through Classroom Structuring
_______9. Effect of Green Leaves as Nitrogen Fertilizers on Growth of Selected
Vegetables
_______10.Parenting Needs, Goals and Strategies for Single Parents
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Lesson
The Kinds of Research Across
4
Fields
Developing an interest in different kinds of research will help you look into
something that affects your personality or your life in some important way. If you are
interested on a topic you are researching, you will enjoy reading and learning about it.
To define clearly the types of research in areas of interest you want to embark, focus
your scientific skills, your passion and ideas. It supports you to connect to your career
path. The examples of research in areas of interest will lead you to choose specific
topic of your research study which you will be exploring to create new knowledge.
What’s in?
In the previous lessons, you learned about research methods to be used in your
particular field of study. Whatever methods are used, there are many resources to
support research, and any number of variations to the basic methods. Choosing a
method of research that is adaptable in your study as a learner guides you to start
deciding on what topic you want to pursue.
What’s New?
I. Kinds of Research across Fields
Areas of Description Example of Studies
Interest
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Deals with human culture such
Research in as philosophy, religion, 1 Values Education in the Public
Humanities literature, linguistics and history Schools: Practices and
Challenges
It includes ancient and modern
languages, human geography, 2. Children In-Conflict with the
laws, politics and other social Law: A Resolution and
sciences. Intervention
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It may also assist to find new
methods to simplify 2.A Systemic Approach to
calculations. Changing Classroom Practices
for Enhancing Mathematics
Outcomes
Information and Aim to adapt current technology 1.The Role of ICT in the New
Communication advancement which enhances Normal Education
Technology (ICT) development of resources.
Research 2.Exploring the Interactive
Computer Simulation in Public
Schools
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Business Acquire information in business 1.Developing a Framework for
Research to maximize the sales and Small Scale Business
profit. It aids business
companies regulates which 2.Business Practices and
product or service is most Strategies of Small Enterprises
profitable or in demand. at Limketkai Mall
2. Implementation of Enhanced
Community Quarantined in Low
Risk Area of Misamis.Oriental.
Discussion of Activity 1
You just learned the kinds and samples of research in areas of interest. Answer the
following questions on the space provided.
1. What are your views in using the samples of the research papers presented
previously in areas of your interest?
2. Can you write your qualitative research proposal through the use of such
pattern from the sample research paper?
Enrichment Activity
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Choose two researches from the different areas of interest like those in the field of
arts, humanities, sports, science, mathematics, business, agriculture, fisheries, ICT
and social science. Be able to differentiate your chosen topics. Highlight their
similarities and differences.
Identify the specific area of interest for each given topic by writing the letter of
each type in the correct column. Likewise, below the letter representing your answer,
write the importance of such research in your daily life.
Arts-Based Humanities Science ICT Business
A. Digital Age
B. Child in Conflict with the Law
C. Classroom Environment
D. Herbal Medicines
E. Financial Management
What I can do
Additional Activities
Think of your own topic for research which you would like to work on. Keep in
mind what you have learned from this lesson to justify the specific research type for
each chosen topic. Write your “top two” most interesting topics below. 1)
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