This document discusses the research process and variables in research. It outlines 6 key steps in the research process: 1) identifying a research problem, 2) reviewing literature, 3) specifying a research purpose, 4) collecting data, 5) analyzing and interpreting data, and 6) reporting and evaluating research. It also differentiates between quantitative and qualitative variables, and describes the different levels that variables can be measured at, including nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio. Key variables discussed include independent, dependent, and moderator variables.
This document discusses the research process and variables in research. It outlines 6 key steps in the research process: 1) identifying a research problem, 2) reviewing literature, 3) specifying a research purpose, 4) collecting data, 5) analyzing and interpreting data, and 6) reporting and evaluating research. It also differentiates between quantitative and qualitative variables, and describes the different levels that variables can be measured at, including nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio. Key variables discussed include independent, dependent, and moderator variables.
This document discusses the research process and variables in research. It outlines 6 key steps in the research process: 1) identifying a research problem, 2) reviewing literature, 3) specifying a research purpose, 4) collecting data, 5) analyzing and interpreting data, and 6) reporting and evaluating research. It also differentiates between quantitative and qualitative variables, and describes the different levels that variables can be measured at, including nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio. Key variables discussed include independent, dependent, and moderator variables.
This document discusses the research process and variables in research. It outlines 6 key steps in the research process: 1) identifying a research problem, 2) reviewing literature, 3) specifying a research purpose, 4) collecting data, 5) analyzing and interpreting data, and 6) reporting and evaluating research. It also differentiates between quantitative and qualitative variables, and describes the different levels that variables can be measured at, including nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio. Key variables discussed include independent, dependent, and moderator variables.
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The Research Process
and the Variables in
Research Lesson 3 —Intended Learning Outcome/s:
•Discuss the steps in a research process.
•Differentiate quantitative and qualitative variables. •Identify whether a variable is in nominal, ordinal, interval, or ratio level. The Research Process All researchers engage in a number of similar activities in conducting educational research. Almost all research plans include, for example, a problem statement, a hypothesis, definitions, a literature review, a sample of subjects, fests or other measuring instruments, a description of procedures to be followed, including a time schedule, and a description of intended data analyses. Creswell (2002) gives six (6) steps in the research process 1. Identifying a research problem 2. Reviewing the literature 3. Specifying a purpose for research 4. Collecting data 5. Analyzing and interpreting the data 6. Reporting and evaluating research 1. Identifying a research problem We begin a research study by identifying a topic to study- typically an issue or problem in education that needs to be resolved. Identifying a research problem consists of specifying an issue to study, developing a justification for studying it, and suggesting the importance of the study for select audiences who will read the report. By specifying a "problem," we limit the subject matter and focus attention on a specific aspect of study 2. Reviewing the literature Reviewing the literature means locating summaries, books, journals, and indexed publications on a topic; selectively choosing which literature to include in our review; and then summarizing the literature in a written report. The skills required for reviewing the literature develop over time and with practice. We can learn how to locate journal articles and books in an academic library. access computerized databases, choose and evaluate the quality of research on your topic, and summarize it in a review. Library resources can be overwhelming, so having a strategy for searching the literature and writing the review is important. 3. Specifying a purpose for research The purpose for research consists of identifying the major intent or objective for a study and narrowing it into specific research questions or hypotheses. The purpose statement contains the major focus of the study, the participants in the study, and the location or site of the inquiry. This purpose statement is then narrowed to research questions or predictions that we plan to answer in our research study. 4. Collecting data Collecting data means identifying and selecting individuals for a study, obtaining their permission to study them, and gathering information by asking people questions or observing their behaviors. Of paramount concern in this process is the need to obtain accurate data from individuals and places. This step will produce a collection of numbers (test scores, frequency of behaviors) or words (responses, opinions, quotes). Once we identify these individuals and places, we write method or procedure sections into our research studies. It can be found in the Methodology part of our research which offers detailed, technical discussions about the mechanics and administration of data collection 5. Analyzing and interpreting the data During or immediately after data collection, we need to make sense of the information supplied by individuals in the study. Analysis consists of "taking the data apart" to determine individual responses and then "putting it together" to summarize it. Analyzing and interpreting the data involves drawing conclusions about it representing it in tables, figures, and pictures to summarize it; and explaining the conclusions in words to provide answers to our research questions. We report analysis and interpretation in sections of a research report usually titled Presentation, Analysis, and Interpretation of Data. 6. Reporting and evaluating research After conducting our research, we will develop a written report and distribute it to select audiences (such as teachers, administrators, parents, students) that can use our information Reporting research involves deciding on audiences, structuring the report in a format acceptable to these audiences, and then writing the report in a manner that is sensitive to all readers. Our structure for the research report will vary for each audience, from a formal format for theses and dissertations to a more informal document for in- house school reports. In all types of reports, however, researchers need to be respectful and to avoid language that discriminates on the basis of gender, sexual orientation, race, or ethnic group. The audience for our report will have its own standards for judging the quality and utility of the research. Evaluating research involves assessing the quality of a study using standards advanced by individuals in education. Although there are no definite standards for evaluating educational research in the academic research community; in school districts; or in local or national agencies, still, we need some means of determining the quality of studies, especially published research or reports presented to practitioner audiences. Research Variables The research variable is a quantity or a characteristic that has two or more mutually exclusive values of properties. It is a characteristic or property that takes on different values which is observable or measurable on each and every element of the population. If a characteristic assumes only one value then it is a constant. The values or levels of the variable is called the data. A. Quantitative (Numerical) Variable It is a variable that takes on numerical values or levels which connotes quantity, magnitude, amount, or measure. Some examples of quantitative variable are weight, height, score in a test, age, number of students, number of absences, speed, length, population density, drop-out rate, etc. Quantitative variable is either discrete or continuous. Discrete variable is a quantitative variable which assumes an exact value. It is countable. Examples of discrete variable are number of teachers, size of the family, performance rated as 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5, temperature rounded to the nearest degree, etc. Continuous variables is a quantitative variable which cannot assume an exact value. It is measurable however cannot be exactly counted. Examples include age, height, weight, speed, length, etc.
B. Qualitative (Categorical) Variable
It is a variable which values or levels do not connote quantity, magnitude, amount, or measure. Usually, it does not take on numerical values or levels. Examples of qualitative variable are course, specialization, skin color, gender, method of teaching, religious affiliation, etc. C. Dependent and Independent Variables The dependent (criterion) variable is the one that the independent variable is presumed to affect or influence. It is the variable a researcher is interested in. The changes to the dependent variable are what the researcher is trying to measure using various techniques. An independent (predictor) variable is a variable believed to affect the dependent variable. This is the variable that you, the researcher, will manipulate to see if it makes the dependent variable change. Let's say our experiment will examine four people's ability to throw a ball when they haven't eaten for a specific period of time -6, 12, 18 and 24 hours. We can say that in our experiment, we are going to do something and then see what happens to other things. Our dependent variable is the person's ability to throw a ball. We're trying to measure the change in ball throwing as influenced by hunger. In our example of hungry people throwing a ball, our independent variable is how long it's been since they've eaten. To reiterate, the independent variable is the thing over which the researcher has control and is manipulating. In this experiment. the researcher is controlling the food intake of the participant. The dependent variable is believed to be dependent on the independent variable. Table 1.4 Examples of independent and dependent variables as used in educational research. D. Moderator Variable It is a special type of independent variable. It is a secondary independent that has been selected for study to determine if it affects or modifies the basic relationship between the primary independent variable and the dependent variable. Further, moderator variable is a variable which can affect the degree or extent by which the independent variable will exert its effects on the dependent variable. Table 1.5 Examples of Independent and Dependent Variables with Moderator Variables In an experiment, if the moderating variable could be controlled or its bias effect could be eliminated, then it is called controlled variable. But if its bias effect could not be eliminated or controlled, it is called an intervening (extraneous) variable. The following are examples of intervening variables: 1. Size of class 2. Gender of students/teachers 3. Age of teacher 4. Time of day class meets 5. Length of class 6. Textbooks used Levels of Measurement Any variable, whether quantitative or qualitative, independent, dependent or moderator, can be classified according to their level or scale. A variable could be nominal, ordinal, interval or ratio 1. Nominal A nominal variable (sometimes called categorical variable) is one that has two or more categories, but there is no intrinsic ordering to the categories. It refers to categories such as gender, civil status, name of schools, type of car you drive, type of books, etc. This one is easy to remember because nominal sounds like name. For instance, gender is a categorical variable having two categories (male and female), and these two categories cannot be ordered. We can code the two categories if we want (male =1, female 2), but the order is by chance. Similarly, civil status (single, married, or widow/er) can be coded as single = 1, married = 2, and widow/er=3, in which these codes have no relative order, size nor meaning 2. Ordinal An ordinal variable has a clear ordering or ranking of the variables. The ranking of favorite sports, the order of people's position in a line, the order of runners finishing a race or more often the choice on a rating or Likert scale from 1 to 5. For example, you might ask a student about his/her perception on K to 12 curriculum. He/she may respond to your statements as Strongly Agree – 4, Agree - 3, Disagree - 2, and Strongly Disagree-1. Likewise, you might ask patients to express the amount of pain they are feeling on a scale of 1 to 10. A score of 7 means more pain than a score of 5, and that is more than a score of 3. But the difference between 7 and 5 may not be the same as the difference between 5 and 3. The values simply express an order. Academic Rank is also an ordinal variable. Teacher 1, II, III, Head Teacher I, II, III, IV, and Master Teacher I, II, III can be ranked accordingly but the difference between Master Teacher I and Head Teacher IV is not the same as the difference between Teacher II and Teacher 1 3. Interval An interval variable has values that are equally spaced, that is, distance or difference between two values can be measured. However, an interval variable has no true zero value. Temperature and test scores are interval variables. The difference between 100°C and 90°C is the same as the difference between 90°C and 80°C. Similarly, a the difference between the scores 30 and 20 is the same as the difference between the scores 20 and 10. Moreover, 0°C does not mean there is no temperature and a score of 0 in a test does not follow that a student has no knowledge at all. The values of interval variable can be added or subtracted 4. Ratio Ratio variable is the highest level of measurement and allows for all basic arithmetic operations, including division and multiplication. Data measured on a ratio scale have a fixed or true zero point. When the variable equals 0, there is nothing of that variable. Examples include business data, such as cost, revenue and profit. Height, weight, age, area, volume, income, etc. are also ratio variables. It is important to know the kind of variable we are dealing with, so that the data gathered can be properly interpreted and the appropriate statistics are used.