Lesson 01 - Nature and Inquiry of Research
Lesson 01 - Nature and Inquiry of Research
Lesson 01 - Nature and Inquiry of Research
Characteristics of Research
Our world cannot advance without research. Its importance transcends even to the smallest
detail of our everyday lives. Research is critical to our economic, sociopolitical, environmental, and
medical development. Economically, research can be used in developing human capital, new
products, technology, and services. In turn, these can help improve the quality of life. In terms of
sociopolitical development, research can provide information relevant to policymaking and
governance, as well as the improvement of relations among people. Research can also help us better
understand our culture and values, as well as those of others. From an environmental perspective,
research findings provide necessary information on how to attain sustainable development without
degrading our natural resources. Finally, there are research studies that promote a better
understanding of health issues and lead to advancements in medical practices.
As a student, you will reap personal and academic benefits from doing research. First, it will
increase your understanding of phenomena that you find interesting and relevant. Let's say you
want to understand why many people in your community experience gambling addiction. You may
survey your neighbors to identify ways to help them overcome their addiction. Second, research will
instill in you the values of discipline, resourcefulness, hardwork, and patience. When conducting
research, you need to strictly follow your timeline and procedure and be resourceful enough in
gathering necessary information for your study. In some cases, these pieces of information may be
hard to find; you need to practice patience and hard work to overcome such a challenge. Third,
research will instill academic honesty in you. Finally, it will improve your communicative,
organizational, and other practical skills.
As mentioned earlier, research is a recursive and complex process that involves a series of
steps. The first step of this process is the selection of the research topic. When selecting a topic, it
should be relevant (i.e., addresses a need or problem), interesting, and manageable in terms of your
ability, required time of completion, and the availability of resources. After selecting potential topics,
these should be narrowed down to your actual topic through freewriting, clustering, or listing.
Freewriting involves randomly writing your research ideas on a sheet of paper; clustering involves
generating ideas through visuals; and listing involves enumerating concepts that are related to your
topic.
Afterwards, you may conduct preliminary research on your chosen topic. When conducting
preliminary research, consult updated and reliable references such as scholarly books and journals.
The information that you will gather during this stage will be useful in formulating your thesis
statement and research questions. The thesis statement is the central idea of your research paper
while your research questions are the specific inquiries that you would like to investigate on.
After identifying your thesis and research questions, draft a preliminary outline for your
paper and use it as a guide in gathering additional references. At this stage, you should be able to
get model papers. A model paper is a research paper that is similar to yours in terms of topic and
methodology. Use this model paper and your references as a guide in writing your introduction and
literature review.
The next major step that you need to embark on is planning your methodology. Here, you
will specify your research design, participants, the context of your study, the instruments you will
use, and the procedure for gathering and analyzing the data.
Then, develop your research instruments. Instruments are tools used for gathering data.
They vary depending on the type of research you are conducting. Research instruments can be self-
made, modified, or adopted. Self-made instruments are prepared by the researchers themselves;
modified instruments are existing instruments slightly modified to cater to the study; and adapted
instruments are existing instruments that are used without any modification.
Once you have developed your research instruments, you may start gathering your data. The
encode, tally, tabulate, and analyze your data. Revisit your introduction and literature review if there
are other important concepts, principles, theories, or research findings that you need to add in light
of the data you have gathered. This way, you can make your discussion and literature review
consistent with each other.
After revisiting and refining your literature review, begin writing your results and discussion.
Make sure that the presentation of your results and discussion matches the flow of your specific
research questions or objectives. Once you have completed your results and discussion, begin
writing you summary, conclusions, and recommendations. Then, put all the parts of your paper
together and edit them. The research process ends with the dissemination of your research findings,
be it through a paper presentation or through a publication.
Research ethics refers to the moral principles and code of conduct that define what good
and acceptable research practice is. When conducting research, you have to conform to ethics
standard to uphold integrity and maintain the good reputation of your name and your school. Below
are some of the ethical standards that you need to comply with.
General Research Practice:
1. Be objective in your research. Do not let your personal biases cloud your
judgment.
2. Disclose any potential conflict of interest.
Data Management and Plagiarism:
1. Avoid fabricating or making up data or results.
2. Avoid falsifying data or changing or deleting data just to prove your point.
3. Always cite your sources. Avoid taking another person's ideas as your own.
4. Avoid self-plagiarism or reusing your own research.
5. Avoid ghostwriting or asking someone to write a research paper for you.
6. Ensure confidentiality of collected data. Refrain from sharing your data to
any unauthorized person.
Authorship:
Remember that authorship is neither a commodity nor a gift. Avoid including someone as an
author if he or she did not have any significant contribution to the paper. A person significantly
contributes to a research work if he or she is greatly involved in conceptualizing the study,
conducting the methodology, analyzing, and interpreting the data, and writing the paper.
Use of Humans and Animals:
1. Inform and ask permission from the people who will be the subject of your
research. This can be done by using an informed consent form, a document that
gives the participants information regarding the study and ensures the
confidentiality of data.
2. Refrain from inflicting harm on human participants.
3. Animals can only be harmed if there are legitimate scientific benefits from
doing so.
4. When it comes to personal information, collect only those that are relevant
to the study.
5. Refrain from forcing anyone to participate in your research.
6. Avoid choosing participants based on convenience alone.
CLASS PARTICIPATION
Bacatan 2
Escober 1
Lim 1
Majuelo 1
Sulapas 2
Tumbaga 1