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Research Process

The document outlines the key phases of the research process: 1) the conceptualization phase where the literature is reviewed and hypotheses are formulated; 2) the design phase where the study methods and procedures are developed; 3) the empirical phase where data is collected; 4) the analysis phase where the data is interpreted and conclusions are drawn; and 5) the dissemination phase where research reports are prepared and results are shared. Following these standard phases helps ensure a rigorous research process and legitimate research findings.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
30 views3 pages

Research Process

The document outlines the key phases of the research process: 1) the conceptualization phase where the literature is reviewed and hypotheses are formulated; 2) the design phase where the study methods and procedures are developed; 3) the empirical phase where data is collected; 4) the analysis phase where the data is interpreted and conclusions are drawn; and 5) the dissemination phase where research reports are prepared and results are shared. Following these standard phases helps ensure a rigorous research process and legitimate research findings.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Research Process

In order to provide a legitimate research result, the following procedures must be

followed when doing research:

Conceptualization Phase:

The conceptualization phase is the initial phase of research which involves the

intellectual process of reviewing the related literature, formulation of hypothesis and

hypothesis formulation.

The review of literature will aid in determining the study's theoretical or

conceptual framework. The theoretical framework guides the study's design and allows

the findings to be applied to other groups and circumstances not included in the study

(Polit & Beck, 2009). Theoretical frameworks identify study variables, propose

relationships to be tested, and might lead the intervention strategy for an experimental

study. They can be implicit or explicit (Polit & Beck, 2004).

A research hypothesis is similar to a prediction statement, and it is the statement

made by a researcher while speculating on the outcome of his or her study. In the

preceding section, research difficulties and questions were formulated in a study.

However, as statements, they are far too broad and untestable by any credible scientific

method.

Next, create a research problem. The researcher should ask himself or herself the

following questions when developing a research problem: is it fascinating to you? Is this

a viable option? What are the study's chances of contributing new information? What is

the study's real-world application? After the researcher has a good understanding of

what his or her research challenge is, he or she must come up with a title for the study.

The research title must be qualitative, and it should be a full explanation of your

primary hypothesis, which should be created before beginning the study. A good title

should be long enough to be descriptive but short enough to be memorable, usually no

more than 14 words in length. Please bear in mind that while creating a title, you should

make it more comprehensible so that the main problem may be identified quickly. At

least one research problem is required while formulating. The researcher must be able to

discern between the important and minor issues. In a broad sense, the major problem is
the central theme of your research, and it might be expressed as a statement or a

question. After you've discovered the overall issue, break it down into 3-4 particular

issues that may be expressed in both statement and question form.

Designing Phase:

The researcher plans the study's techniques to efficiently examine and address the

problem during the designing phase. This phase involves the following: methods and

techniques of the study, data gathering procedures, ethical compliance, instrumentation

and respondents.

The major research strategy used for the study is described under the study's

methodology and procedures. It also contains references to sources in the literature that

employed methods and procedures comparable to those used in the current study. This

is also where we decide the research design to employ for the study.

The portion of the research paper where a researcher includes inclusion and

exclusion criteria for respondent participation is known as the respondents of the study.

It's also where you'll find information on participant characteristics like age and gender,

as well as crucial demographic and study-related information.

The study's instruments detail the formal features of the instrument, such as the

number of items, components, scoring systems, and interview protocols. It also covers
any type of paperwork used to collect information from research participants.

The data gathering procedure is the stage in which the researcher reveals the

study's specific methodology. This is where the researcher will comprehensively discuss

all the procedure included in the study.

Empirical Phase:

The researcher employs the methodology developed during the designing phase in

empirical phase. This step entails putting the data collection techniques laid forth in the

designing phase into action while being ethically compliant. This section includes the

tests with which qualitative data will be analyzed.

Analysis Phase:
The researcher formulates conclusions and interpretations based on the data

acquired in this phase. It entails data interpretation and analysis, as well as conclusions

and recommendations. In any research, the analytic and empirical phases are tightly

linked. The data is readied for analysis after it has been gathered. To ease data analysis,

quantitative data is generally put into a statistical software program, while qualitative

material is frequently transcribed verbatim. There are a variety of software packages

available to help in qualitative data analysis. To assure the correctness of this process,

procedures must be in place.

Dissemination Phase:

The preparation of research reports is the final step in the research process, and it

is used to disseminate results to the right audience. Dissemination reports should be

peer-reviewed by independent peers in the same area of research who have not engaged

in the study's conduct, just as they should be for a final research plan. The peer review

procedure will assure objectivity and enhance the chances of a valid and accurate

report.

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