Research Design in Quantitative Method
Research Design in Quantitative Method
Research Design in Quantitative Method
Design in
Quantitative
Method
Quantitative Research
Babbie, Earl R. The Practice of Social Research. 12 th ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Cengage, 2010; Muijs, Daniel. Doing Quantitative
Research in Education with SPSS. 2 nd edition. London: SAGE Publications, 2010.
What is Quantitative Research?
Type of Data
-if you are conducting a quantitative Research, what will most likely appear in
your discussion are tables containing data in the form of numbers and statistics.
Approach
French sociology Pierre Bourdieu followed a typical arc to the narrative research
by first investigating economic class in an open-ended fashion. Once he established
what he thought going on, he tested these ideas with large surveys.
The main activity for which quantitative research is especially suited is the testing
of hypotheses.
Quantitative Data
• Some example of quantitative data are your height, your shoe size, and the length
of your fingernails.
• Quantitative data defines whereas qualitative describes.
Units and variables in Quantitative data
Units:
Variables:
The data that we are collecting from these units are known as variables. Variables
are any characteristic of the unit we are interested in and want to collect (e.g. gender,
age, self-esteem).
Units and Variables
• The label ‘variable’ refers to the fact that these data will differ between units.
For example, achievement will differ between pupils and schools, gender will
differ between pupils, and so on.
• If there are no differences at all between the units we want to study, we probably
aren’t going to be able to do any interesting research (for example, studying
whether pupils are human would not yield interesting findings).
Quantitative research Design
They are most commonly used by physical scientists, although social sciences,
education and economics have been known to use this type of research. It is the
opposite of qualitative research.
Quantitative experiments all use a standard format, with a few minor inter-
disciplinary differences, of generating a hypothesis to be proved or disproved. This
hypothesis must be provable by mathematical and statistical means, and is the basis
around which the whole experiment is designed.
Quantitative research Design
• Ideally, the research should be constructed in a manner that allows others to repeat
the experiment and obtain similar results.
The Design Based of the number of contact
1. Cross-sectional studies
2. Before-and-after studies
3. Longitudinal studies
Cross-sectional studies
1. Retrospective
2. Prospective
3. Retro-
prospective
Retrospective study design
This applies to study wherein available data are analyzed and used as bases
of future projections. It does not involve a control group. Trend studies fall
under this category.
Study based on the nature of investigation
Experimental
Non-
Experimental
Semi-
Experimental
Experimental Study
First path i.e. starting from the cause to establish the effects
(involving researcher to assume changes).
Non- Experimental study
1. Descriptive
2. Correlational
3. Causal-
Comparative/ Quasi-
Experimental
4. Experimental
Research
DESCRIPTIVE RESEARCH
• This type of research describes what exists and may help to uncover new facts and
meaning. The purpose of descriptive research is to
Observe, describe, document
aspects of situation as it naturally occurs.
• This involves the collection of data that will provide an account or description of
individuals, groups or situations. Instruments we use to obtain data in descriptive
studies include questionnaires, interviews (closed questions), observation
(checklists, etc.)
• The characteristics of individuals and groups such as nurses, patients and families
may be the focus of descriptive research. It can provide a knowledge base which
can act as a springboard for other types of quantitative research methods.
CORRELATIONAL RESEARCH
• Correlational research studies go beyond simply describing what exists and are
concerned with systematically investigating relationships between two or more
variables of interest (Porter 7 Carter 2000).
• Such studies only describe and attempt to explain the nature of relationships that
exist, and do examine causality (i.e. whether one variable causes the other).
Causal-comparative/quasi-experimental research
• often called true experimentation, uses the scientific method to establish the cause-
effect relationship among a group of variables that make up a study.
• The true experiment is often thought of as laboratory study, but this is not always
the case; a laboratory setting has nothing to do with it. A true experiment is any
study where an effort is made to identify and impose control over all other
variables except one.
step 1:
Choose the type of quantitative research question (i.e., descriptive, comparative or relationship)
you are trying to create
step 2:
Identify the different types of variable you are trying to measure, manipulate and/or control, as
well as any groups you may be interested in
step 3:
Select the appropriate structure for the chosen type of quantitative research question, based on the
variables and/or groups involved
step 4:
Write out the problem or issues you are trying to address in the form of a complete research
question
Structure of descriptive research questions
4. Decide whether the dependent variable or group(s) should be included first, last
or in two parts
You can start descriptive research questions with any of the following phrases:
How many?
How often?
How frequently?
How much?
What percentage?
What proportion?
To what extent?
What is?
What are?
Some of these starting phrases are highlighted in blue text in the
examples below:
Name of the dependent variable How the dependent variable is written out
All descriptive research questions have at least one group, but can have multiple
groups. You need to identify this group(s). In the examples below, we have
identified the group(s) in the green text.
How many calories do American men and women consume per day?
How often do British university students use Facebook each week?
What are the most important factors that influence the career choices of Australian
university students?
What proportion of British male and female university students use the top 5 social
networks?
What percentage of American men and women exceed their daily calorific
allowance?
Decide whether the dependent variable or group(s) should be included
first, last or in two parts
Sometimes it makes more sense for the dependent variable to appear before the group(s) you are
interested in, but sometimes it is the opposite way around. The following examples illustrate this,
with the group(s) in green text and the dependent variable in blue text:
Sometimes the name of the dependent variable provides all the explanation we need to
know what we are trying to measure. Take the following examples:
How many calories do American men and women consume per day?
• How many calories do American men and women consume per day?
• How often do British university students use Facebook each week?
• What are the most important factors that influence the career choices of Australian
university students?
• What proportion of British male and female university students use the top 5 social
networks?
• What percentage of American men and women exceed their daily calorific
allowance?
References
https://www.slideshare.net/ToobaSalman/quantitative-research-56914253?fbclid=IwAR0TB79bxf
r45p6KdQChP85dnydLoyoeGjZ4U3KJJBi3goKZgBhF_nCmDNk
http://dissertation.laerd.com/how-to-structure-quantitative-research-questions.php#step1
https://www.slideshare.net/kangsophanna/research-design-78264610?fbclid=IwAR3WN-Usqi2tV
VnNBSAsMkW-pLQQ6Qo9uGvpdGRRcQ6nSR-Y7AQLWg24Gvs