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FIELD METHODS Midterm Reviewer

1. Qualitative research involves collecting and analyzing non-numerical data through methods like interviews, observations and focus groups to understand peoples' experiences and perspectives. It aims to explore and explain phenomena. 2. Quantitative research involves collecting and analyzing numerical data through structured methods like surveys and experiments to describe, predict or control variables. It aims to establish general laws by testing theories. 3. There are various research designs for both qualitative and quantitative research including case studies, grounded theory and longitudinal surveys. Validity and reliability are important concepts to ensure research accurately measures what it intends to.

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Vallada, Febrose
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
69 views3 pages

FIELD METHODS Midterm Reviewer

1. Qualitative research involves collecting and analyzing non-numerical data through methods like interviews, observations and focus groups to understand peoples' experiences and perspectives. It aims to explore and explain phenomena. 2. Quantitative research involves collecting and analyzing numerical data through structured methods like surveys and experiments to describe, predict or control variables. It aims to establish general laws by testing theories. 3. There are various research designs for both qualitative and quantitative research including case studies, grounded theory and longitudinal surveys. Validity and reliability are important concepts to ensure research accurately measures what it intends to.

Uploaded by

Vallada, Febrose
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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FIELD METHODS b.

allows the respondent to talk in some depth,


choosing their own words.
Research c. helps the researchers develop real sense of a
- process of executive various mental acts for person’s understanding of a situation
discovering and examining facts & informations.
- prove accuracy 2. Structured Interviews
RESEARCH = INQUIRY a. consists of series of pre-determined questions
that all interviewees answer in same order
Characteristics of Research b. tends to be direct
1. Accuracy – give accurate / correct data (using
numbers) Quali = follow scientific process 3. Semi-structured interviews
2. Objectiveness – deal with facts not with mere; a. contains components of both structured &
opinions, assumptions, generalizations, predictions unstructured
or conclusions.
3. Timeliness – fresh, new, interesting to present to 4. Focus-group Discussion
society. a. Discussion on a particular topic organized for
4. Relevance – instrumental is improving society. research purposes
5. Clarity – simple, direct, concise and correct b. Moderator/ facilitator
language c. Collective views
6. Systematic – organized or orderly manner (must use d. Participants’ experiences and beliefs
scientific process)
5. Qualitative surveys
Purpose of Research a. Open-ended questions
• to work how to learn independently and as a b. Write his/her opinion
group
• to work scientifically and systematically 6. Observation
• to have an in-depth knowledge of something a. Gather descriptive text data by observing
• to elevate your mental abilities by letting you people and their behavior at events/ in natural
think in higher-order thinking strategies (HOTS) settings
of inferring, evaluating, synthesizing, b. Completely immersed watching
appreciating, applying and creating. • Covert
• to improve your reading & writing • Overt
• to be familiar with the basic tools of research
and the various techniques of gathering data TYPES OF QUALITATIVE DESIGNS
• to free yourself to a certain extent, from strong 1. Grounded Theory
influence of a single.. a. Develop theory that explains a specific situation
b. Conceptualizes phenomenon
Qualitative Research c. Specific phenomena/ incident not individual
- process of collecting, analyzing & interpreting non- behaviors
numerical data such as language
- subjectively perceives and gives meaning to their 2. Ethnographic Studies (Observation)
social reality. [text (books), video, photographs, audio a. Analyzes & interpret cultures characteristics
rec. – data of Quali]
3. Phenomenology
- Multimethod in focus involving an interpretative, a. Identify phenomena & focus on subjective
naturalistic approach to its subject matter. experiences
(triangulation) b. Describe, in-depth, common characteristics of
- exploratory and seeks to explain ‘how’ & ‘why’ phenomena
c. In-depth interviews
Methods used to obtain Qualitative Data
1. Unstructured interview 4. Case Studies
a. generate qualitative data through use of open a. (1) focus on ‘how’ & ‘why’
questions (2) behavior is to be observed not manipulated
(3) further understand given phenomena 2. Stratified Random Sampling
(4) boundaries between the context & 3. Cluster Sampling - divided into clusters then
phenomena are not clean randomly select one region
b. Multiple methods can be used to gather data, 4. Systematic Random Sampling
including interviews.
Non-Probability Sampling - not all members will be
Quantitative Research selected.
- involves process of objectively collecting & analyzing 1. Convenience Sampling - quick and easy to select
numerical data to describe, predict or control variables 2. Consecutive Sampling - similar to convenience but
of interest. criteria is involved (sasalain)
- systematic investigation of phenomena by gathering 3. Quota Sampling
quantifiable 4. Snowball Sampling
- aim to establish general laws of behavior & 5. Judgmental Sampling - respondents purely based
phenomena causes different settings/ contexts on research
- research is used to test a theory and ultimate by
support or reject it. Validity - how accurately a method measures what it is
- reality is objective and exist separately intended to measure.
- a test is valid if it is measurable
Data collection happened using structured methods and
conducted or larger samples that represent the entire Face Validity - simply whether the test appears (at face
population. value)
To measure what it claims to
DATA COLLECTION AND RESEARCH DESIGNS IN - least sophisticated
QUANTITATIVE METHOD - non-scientific
- “content valid”
1. Cross-Sectional Survey (likert scale to assess face validity)
a. Intends to collect data from sample of the target The test is..
population at ‘given point of time’ • Extremely suitable for a given purpose
b. Evaluate various variables at particular time • Adequate/ inadequate
c. Sampling method -> purposive randomize • Irrelevant therefore, unsuitable
2. Longitudinal Survey
a. Observational but unlike cross-sectional, The implication of items on tests w/ clean face validity is
longitudinal conducts across various time that they are vulnerable
durations observe charge in respondent
behavior and thought-process Hidden question in Face Validity -> “I believe in the
b. Days, months, years, or even decades second coming of Christ”
3. Correlational Research
a. Relationship between two closely-knit entities Content Validity
(how one impacts) - “Is the test fully representative of what it aims to
4. Quasi-Experiment/ Causal-Comparative Research measure?
(low reliability) - questions must match on the content
a. Random assignment - missing from the measurement
b. Establish a cause-and-effect relationship - valid confession
between an independent and dependent
variable e.g. “know the meaning of self-esteem”
c. Useful tool in situations where true experiments “parameters of self-esteem”
can’t be used for ethical on practice reasons
5. Experiment Research on True Experimentation Construct Validity
1. Strictly adheres scientific - “does the test measure the concept that..”
Construct – concept/ characteristic that can’t be
SAMPLING METHOD directly observed – but can be measured by observing
Probability Sampling - equal opportunity other indicators that are associated with it
1. Simple Random Sampling - theoretical concept
- must be demonstrated that the phenomena exists III. Parallel Forms Reliability
- factor analysis & correlational methods - measures the correlation between2 equivalent
versions of a test
2 types of Construct Validity - 2 different assessment tools/ sets of questions
1. Convenient Validity - measure particular construct designed to measure the same thing.
correlates same / similar construct IV. Internal Consistency
2. Discriminant Validity - test should not be correlated - supporting content validity
with each other KR 20 formula
3. Criterion Validity - how well a test can predict
criterion variable – established and effective
measurement that is considered valid; -> “gold 2 typical ways to make this:
standard” • Split half Reliability - split to 2 sets
e.g. checking reliability of exam
2 types of Criterion Validity: • Inter-item Reliability (Cronbach Alpha) - assess
1. Concurrent Validity - present – present same construct.
2. Predictive Validity - present – future e.g. likert scale (unidimensional reliability) (atleast 7
questions or more)
COMMON QUESTIONNAIRE ERRORS
1. Leading questions/ statement
2. Confusing questions/ statement (must be direct/
concise)
3. Negative questions/ statement (positive construct-
positive statement, negative construct-negative
statement)
4. Absolute “ (yes or no answers)
5. Ambiguous “
6. Double Barreled “
7. Irrelevant “
8. Relevant but not necessary “

Reliability - how consistently a method measures


something.
- accurate data
- stable & consistent

I. Test-Retest Reliability
- interval” 2 weeks

Guidelines:
1. Pick a consistent research method
2. Create a sample groups
e.g. personality
[Medical - 0.9 +
Behaviors - 0.7 – 0.8]

II.Inter-Rater Reliability
- consistency of a measure across raters/ observers
- criteria/ rubrics
- check per rater not as a whole
- 2 or more user
- Cohen’s Kappa (2 raters)
- Fleiss Kappa ( 3/ more raters) in checking reliability
index

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