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.

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.

25
contains possible alternatives, fresh ideas, and anticipated changes.
Green Hat
26
May be useful when it comes to developing hypothesis.
Red Hat
27
To look at the whole research process as an overview.
Blue Hat
28
here are various places to search for sources of information such as universities, libraries, research institutes, museums, and government offices.
Source of information
29
Gives firsthand data or raw knowledge about a phenomenon, an object.
Primary Source
30
Gives the processed or analyzed form of a primary source.
Secondary Source
31
An industry that distributes fake journals for the sake of gaining revenues.
Predatory Publishing
32
designed to link your own. research problem to the findings and theories of previous studies.
Conceptual Framework
33
- is an intelligent expression of an assumption or assertion about a specific phenomenon or problem.
Hypothesis
34
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.
Annotating the review
35
With those questions you will be able to scrutinize the literature you will review based on your research framework.
Research Framework
36
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.
Theoretical Framework
37
- An experimental design can adopt this design.
Comparative Design
38
- Is the one receiving the newly developed drug.
The experimental Group
39
Can be the patient receiving a known drug commercially available to cure the same disease.
The control group
40
Typically observed during the clinical trials of a newly developed drug. Faith belief
The placebo group
41
Involves doing work under controlled conditions such as those that are performed in the laboratory or in a pilot plant.
Experimentation
42
Is a systematic and scientific way of recording what you have witnessed when an experiment commences. Observation usually accompanies experimentation.
Observation
43
Pertains to the closeness of the results to the true value.
Accuracy
44
Refers to the closeness of experimental data (from replicate runs) with one another.
Precision
45
Demonstrates conformance of your results with those results obtained by other researchers, thus signifying the objectivity of your study.
Reproducibility
46
CLASSIFICATION OF SAMPLING METHODS
Random Sampling Stratified Sampling Systematic sampling batch sampling
47
Is the appropriation of another person’s ideas, processes, results, or words without giving appropriate credit.
Plagiarism
48
- Is an act of composing data or results and recording or reporting them.
Fabrication
49
- 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.
Falsification
50
Sets out information of what you have planned to do over a specific period and how you are going to accomplish it
Research Proposal
51
DELINEATING THE DATA-COLLECTION PROCESS
Reliability Transferability Objectivity Credibility
52
ACCORDING TO THE RESEARCH INFORMATION NETWORK:
Reference data simulation data experimental data observational data compiled data
53
Pertains to the consistency of the results obtained from replicate runs performed by the same researchers using the same set of equipment.
Repeatability