Caps Na Bato Flashcards

1
Q

a very important undertaking that may potentially stimulate.

A

Scientific Problem Research

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2
Q

is a methodological or systematic endeavor aimed at generating new ideas, developing creative designs and processes,
finding solutions to real-life situations and challenges and producing technology-based devices and products.

A

Scientific Problem

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3
Q

t - is anchored on creativity, originality, and flexibility.

A

Research Project

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4
Q

To develop new knowledge from a tested hypothesis.

A

Basic Or pure Research

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5
Q

To address a specific research problem, resulting in a new device or a new process.

A

Applied Research

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6
Q

TWO TYPES OF SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY

A

Basic or Pure Research and Applied Research

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7
Q

Follows a carefully chosen to set of procedures to measure variables and establish a cause-and-effect relationship among several factors.

A

Quantitative Approach

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8
Q
  • Is generally descriptive in nature, as it deals more with the perceptions, opinions, views.
A

Qualitative Research

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9
Q

is adopted.must be disseminated through a science-related publication.

A

Mixed Approach

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10
Q

BASIC STAGES OF RESEARCH PROCESS

A

1.Formulation 2.Manipulation 3.Activation 4.Assilimation 5.Dissemination

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11
Q

Means your way of thinking is flexible enough to go beyond borders.

A

Creative Thinking

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12
Q

Goes beyond the traditional way of doing, evaluating, and seeing things.

A

Divergent Thinking

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13
Q

Mostly used in the conduct of research, focuses on what is more useful and relevant rather than on the timeliness of concepts.

A

Convergent Thinking

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14
Q

This is a map that connects ideas related ideas about a particular subject matter.

A

Mind Mapping Method

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15
Q

This makes use of six colored imaginary hats.

A

Six Thinking Hats Method

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16
Q

– This requires listing and discussing both positive and negative forces .

A

Force Field analysis method

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17
Q

– This is used to ensure all possible approaches or techniques.

A

Attribute Listing Method

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18
Q

This is like a reverse engineering process.

A

Assumption Reversal Method

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19
Q

This involves the use of diagrams to illustrate how specific research problem progress.

A

Storyboard Method

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20
Q

This is a simple technique for raising questions.

A

Checking Method

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21
Q

Wherein a team leader proposes a general idea.

A

Crawford slip method

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22
Q

Represents negative ideas such as challenges and limitations.

A

Black Hat

23
Q

– It focuses on positive thoughts or advantages of the study.

A

Yellow Hat

24
Q

Covers facts or figures that can be acquired.

A

White Hat

25
Q

contains possible alternatives, fresh ideas, and anticipated changes.

A

Green Hat

26
Q

May be useful when it comes to developing hypothesis.

A

Red Hat

27
Q

To look at the whole research process as an overview.

A

Blue Hat

28
Q

here are various places to search for sources of information such as universities, libraries, research institutes, museums, and government offices.

A

Source of information

29
Q

Gives firsthand data or raw knowledge about a phenomenon, an object.

A

Primary Source

30
Q

Gives the processed or analyzed form of a primary source.

A

Secondary Source

31
Q

An industry that distributes fake journals for the sake of gaining revenues.

A

Predatory Publishing

32
Q

designed to link your own. research problem to the findings and theories of previous studies.

A

Conceptual Framework

33
Q
  • is an intelligent expression of an assumption or assertion about a specific phenomenon or problem.
A

Hypothesis

34
Q

Means to prepare a brief description of what the literature is about and write an explanation on the relevance of that literature to your study.

A

Annotating the review

35
Q

With those questions you will be able to scrutinize the literature you will review based on your research framework.

A

Research Framework

36
Q

you may also use the scholarly materials to help you make the necessary adjustments to integrate and to improve the methodological approach you plan to implement.

A

Theoretical Framework

37
Q
  • An experimental design can
    adopt this design.
A

Comparative Design

38
Q
  • Is the one receiving the newly developed drug.
A

The experimental Group

39
Q

Can be the patient receiving a known drug commercially available to cure the same disease.

A

The control group

40
Q

Typically observed during the clinical trials of a newly developed drug.
Faith belief

A

The placebo group

41
Q

Involves doing work under controlled conditions such as those that are performed in the laboratory or in a pilot plant.

A

Experimentation

42
Q

Is a systematic and scientific way of recording what you have witnessed when an experiment commences. Observation usually accompanies experimentation.

A

Observation

43
Q

Pertains to the closeness of the results to the true value.

A

Accuracy

44
Q

Refers to the closeness of experimental data (from replicate runs) with one another.

A

Precision

45
Q

Demonstrates conformance of your results with those results obtained by other researchers, thus signifying the objectivity of your study.

A

Reproducibility

46
Q

CLASSIFICATION OF SAMPLING METHODS

A

Random Sampling Stratified Sampling Systematic sampling batch sampling

47
Q

Is the appropriation of another person’s ideas, processes, results, or words without giving appropriate credit.

A

Plagiarism

48
Q
  • Is an act of composing data or results and recording or reporting them.
A

Fabrication

49
Q
  • Is an act manipulating materials, equipment, or processes, or changing or omitting data or results such that the research is not accurately represented in the research record.
A

Falsification

50
Q

Sets out information of what you have planned to do over a specific period and how you are going to accomplish it

A

Research Proposal

51
Q

DELINEATING THE DATA-COLLECTION PROCESS

A

Reliability Transferability Objectivity Credibility

52
Q

ACCORDING TO THE RESEARCH INFORMATION NETWORK:

A

Reference data simulation data experimental data observational data compiled data

53
Q

Pertains to the consistency of the results obtained from replicate runs performed by the same researchers using the same set of equipment.

A

Repeatability