Week 2 (Research paradigms) Flashcards
What is the research process:
1.Develop a research question
2.Conduct a literature review
3.The role of theory
4.Research design
A) Data collection method
B) Sampling technique
C) Data analysis strategy
5.Collect data
6.Analyze and interpret the data
7.Knowledge dissemination
What are the three elements of research methodology:
1)Standpoint
A) Social position
B)Paradigm
B1)Ontological assumptions: the perception of reality, how we understand the world to exist
B2)Epistemological assumptions: ways of knowing or forms of knowledge
B3)Axiological assumptions: values that shape our research
2.Theoretical frame
3.Methods
3 Common paradigms
Positivist (Objective reality)
Critical ( Social world is shaped by inequality and power struggles)
Interpretive (Reality is socially constructed)
4 influences of paradigms on research:
-Help determine which concepts and concerns are important
-Shape the kinds of methods likely to be used
-Impact the sorts of facts researchers seek to discover
-Influence the conclusions drawn from the facts
The role of Social Theory:
Paradigms
and Theory
Paradigms
General theoretical frameworks or “points from which to view”
They offer a way of looking
Theory
A set of interrelated propositions used for understanding observed realities
They aim at explaining what we see
Elements of Theories:
-What are propositions
-What makes up theories
-Propositions (ideas): Statements expressing relationships between abstract concepts
-Theories are abstract (Because propositions and concepts are abstract)
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-The propositions (ideas) in a theory are interrelated
The ideas are connected or knit together
-Theories help us understand the real world
Deductive approach:
A)Empirical Deduction: The logical process for transforming a theoretical proposition into a research hypothesis
B)Operationalization: The process of translating abstract concepts into variables that indicate the concepts
C)Observation
D) Develop a hypothesis and test it empirically
-Hypothesis: A theoretically informed expectation about empirical patterns expressed as a relationship between variables
-A hypothesis must be falsifiable