Chapter 4: Formulating a Research Problem Flashcards
Formulating a research problem
- foundation of the research study
- determines the following steps:
1. study design
2. sampling strategy
3. types of analysis
Considerations in selecting a research problem
- Interest
- Magnitude: manageable withing resources
- Measurement of concepts
- Level of expertise
- Relevance
- Availability of data
- Ethical issues
Steps in formulating a research problem
- identify a broad field of interest
- dissect broad field into subareas
- select what is of most interest
- process of elimination - raise research questions
- formulate objectives out of the research questions
- assess your objectives
- double check for interest and practicability
Descriptive Studies
describe a phenomenon
- example: describe types of psychotherapy provided for depression
Correlational Studies
relationship between two variables
- example: to confirm the influence of parenting styles on depression
Hypothesis-Testing Studies
indicate the direction of the relationship being tested
- example: to demostrate that a treatment with psychotherapy will reduce depression
Characteristics of the Study Population
- needs to be chosen before starting the research process
- clear, specific and well defined
- from global to specific
- more flexible in qualitative than in quantitative studies
Formulating Research Question in Quantitative Research
- specificity is fundamental
- established framework
Formulating Research Question in Qualitative Research
- important to keep flexibility
- not necessary to be specific