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Research Seminar for
Educational Sciences
Prof. Dr. Chang Zhu
Department of Educational Sciences
Céline Cocquyt
What is a research proposal?
1. Why this research?
2. What are you going to research?
3. How are you going to do this research?
3
Research proposal
Research proposal
1.Why this research?
Step 1. Selection of/identifying a problem
• Defining your research problem (status of an
educational phenomenon, actor, process;
problem or interests in knowing…)
• Purpose of the study
• Justification of the study
5
Research proposal
1.Why this research?
Step 2. Review of literature
• Review of related literature (existing theory
and research, theoretical and empirical
background)
(eg., what has been done, how and what
results, what knowledge and theory…)
6
Research proposal
Specific steps for literature review
• Best descriptors
• Choose important primary and secondary sources
• Critically reflect on the research results, including the research methodology
• Consider contrary findings and alternative interpretations
• Make connections and synthesis 7
Research proposal
2: What are you going to research?
Step 3. Statement of research questions (RQ)
• Specific
• One question in one RQ
• Can have several specific research questions
in one research
Research proposal
Specific steps:
Identify a research problem
Choose a research topic
Narrow a research topic
Formulate specific research questions
9
Research proposal
3: How to do this research?
Step 4. Choose a research method
• Quantitative research methods
• Qualitative research methods
• Mixed research methods
10
Research proposal
3: How to do this research?
Step 5. Research design and data
collection (evidence from participants)
From whom? (selecting sample/ participants)
How?
What questions?
11
Research proposal
3: How to do this research?
Step 6. Data analysis
Methods of data analysis (how to analyze
and interpret your data)
12
Research proposal
Step 7. Presentation of results
Analyzing and interpreting data
Write/report your findings
Discussions and conclusions
13
Major sections of a research
proposal
14
Title
Summary
Research problem
Literature review
Research questions
Research methods
Expected results &
significance
Planning
Major sections of a research
report/article
15
Title
Summary
Research problem
Literature review
Research questions
Research methods
Results & conclusions
Implications, limitations…
Quantitative research
• Collection and analysis of numerical data
to describe, explain, predict or control…
• A concept/construct that can be
measured…
• Can test hypotheses
• Control over contextual factors
• Sample: representative, large enough
Qualitative research
• Collection, analysis and interpretation of
narrative and nonnumerical data to gain
insights into a phenomenon…
• Concepts to be observed, interviewed…
• Often no hypothesis
• Context not controlled
• Sample: smaller
Quantitative & Qualitative
research
• The two research approaches can be
applied depending on the nature of the
topic, question/problem to be
investigated…
• Can be combined.
• More details regarding mixed-methods
research will be introduced later
Characteristics of quantitative and
qualitative research
23
Quantitative Qualitative
Numerical data Nonnumerical, narrative, visual data
Hypothesis and research
procedures stated before
beginning the study
Research methods and procedures
evolve as understanding of the topic
deepens
Can manipulate the context not manipulate the context
Larger sample size Smaller sample size
Focus on statistical analysis Rely on categorizing and organizing
data into patterns to produce a
descriptive, narrative synthesis
Limited interaction with
participants
Extensive interaction with
participants
Main research methods
24
Quantitative Qualitative
Survey Interviews
Correlational research Focus groups
Group-comparative Case study
Experimental Grounded theory
Quasi-experimental Content analysis
Single-subject Narrative research
Delphi Method
Historical research
Ethnographic research
Quantitative Qualitative
Survey Interviews
Correlational research Focus groups
Group-comparative Case study
Experimental Grounded theory
Quasi-experimental Content analysis
Delphi Method Narrative research
Main research methods
25
Generalizable results In-depth understandings
Survey research (Quan)
Describe and understand current conditions (practices, preferences, attitudes, interests, concerns…)
Collecting numeric data
Test hypothesis or answer questions
Via questionnaires…
Often development of measuring instrument is needed.
Response rate: is it valid?
26
Correlational research (Quan)
Investigate the relations between two or
more variables.
To establish relations (whether or not, to
what degree a relation exists)
Use existing relations to make predictions
(eg. One variable increases, the other also
increases)
Do not suggest cause-effect relations
27
Correlational research
Example:
• The relationship between school culture
and student achievement
28
Group-comparative research
(Quan)
Examine the reason for differences between groups (e.g. gender, public/private school… )
The grouping variable is pre-existing, not controlled (or cannot be controlled).
The presumed cause: independent variable; the presumed effect: dependent variable.
Practical, feasible, however, a clear cause-effect link can be affected by other (extraneous) variables…
29
Group-comparative research
Examples:
• Gender differences in academic achievement
of secondary students
• Class management of novice teachers and
experienced teachers
30
Experimental research (Quan)
At least one independent variable is experimental
Other variables to be controlled;
The effect of the experimental variable on one or
more dependent variables is observed.
Provides strongest results/evidence for linking
variables (draw conclusions about cause and
effect)
Stringent control conditions needed, sometimes
not feasible
31
Experimental research
Example:
• The effect of interactive multimedia on the
achievement of 10th grade Biology students
32
Experimental designs
One-group pretest-posttest design
Randomized posttest design (2 groups: treatment/control group)
• TG: R X1 O
• CG: R O
Randomized pretest-posttest design (2 groups:
treatment/control group)
• TG: R O X1 O
• CG: R O O
Randomized four-group design
33
Quasi-Experimental designs
When random assignment of participants is not
possible;
Static-Group Comparison Design:
• X O
• O
Nonequivalent control-Group Design:
• O X O
• O O
34
Single-subject research (Quan)
Instead of comparing effects on different
groups (treatment vs. no treatment), it
compares a subject/group before and after
or during the treatment.
Focus on studying the behavior change of
an individual/group as a result of an
intervention.
35
Delphi Method (Quan)
• The Delphi method surveys the opinions of
"expert panels".
• The research is usually conducted in three
rounds, where the information is gathered,
refined and then feed back to the expert
participants. The aim of the Delphi method is
to enable the group of experts to arrive at a
consensus forecast or policy making on the
subject being discussed.
Focus groups (Qual)
• A focus group gathers in-depth information by
interviewing a group of participants (vary
between six to twelve) in a group discussion
that lasts one to two hours. An experienced
interviewer gathers opinions of the group.
Focus groups
Benefits of Focus Groups
• Opinions are focused on specific topics
• Immediate feedback or additional questions are
possible
• Can help identify key issues quickly
Problems Using Focus Groups
• The group can be dominated by a particular person or
viewpoint
• Only a limited number of questions can be dealt with
• The interviewer could bias the results.
Case study (Qual)
Case study • a qualitative approach
• focus on a unit of study e.g. individual
teachers, students, a classroom, a school
• not a methodological choice, but a
choice of what to study
(documents, artifacts, interviews, observations
can be incorporated into a case study)
39
Case study
Focus on detailed study of a
phenomenon, a person or a group as an
entity
through observations, description of the
nature of the case, its historical
background, contexts, characteristics, etc.
Qualitative data via interviewing, written
and non-written sources. 40
Case study
Designing case study
• a single case study
• a multiple case study
• a collective case study
• decision about the number of cases (no
strict rules, based on the needs of the study and
particularity of cases)
41
Content analysis (Qual)
• A research methodology that builds on
procedures to make valid inferences from text (Anderson, Rourke, Garrison & Archer, 2001)
• Studying the content of communication
• E.g. transcript analysis
online discussion analysis
Grounded theory research (Qual)
The aim is theory generating
12 steps for grounded theory research,
Gilgun (1990)
Identifying patterns
“theoretical saturation”
Emerging theories are grounded in data
43
Narrative research (Qual)
Study “story lives”
The researcher constructs a narrative (written
account) about one’s experiences and the
meanings this person attributes to the experiences.
Increase understanding of issues related to
teaching and learning through the telling and
retelling of teachers’ stories.
Close relationship between researcher and
participant
44
Ethnographic research (Qual)
Study of cultural patterns and
perspectives of participants in their
natural settings.
Study both the setting and the
participants.
Presents a holistic description and
cultural interpretation of the participants’
everyday activities, values and events. 45
Types of research by purpose
Basic research
Applied research
• Evaluation research
• Action research
47
Basic research
Develop and refine theory
Main motivation is to expand knowledge
Provides the theory that produces the
concepts for solving educational
problems
49
Applied research
Aim to solve practical problems, e.g.
educational problems
Aim to improve practices
Can provide data, feedback that help support
and revise the development of theory
50
Action research
• Systematic inquiry by educational actors in the
teaching and learning environment to gather
information about the ways in which their school
operate, the teachers teach and the students learn.
• The purpose is to provide a method for solving
everyday problems in their own setting.
• Main goal: solution for a given problem, not
contribution to science.
• Often a teacher conducts in his/her own
class/school
51
Evaluation research
• Evaluation: programmes, products or
practices
• Monitor progress
• Judge impact
• Make decisions
52
Possible research groups
You can choose to work in a research group
You can also opt for an individual exercise/
individual track
5
4
Research Groups
Enrol in research groups online in Pointcarré
You can discuss in the “Group Forum” with
your group members
Questions related to the research topic
Who will do what
How to work together
Issues and problems during this process
5
5
Group research
Step 1: Discuss and identify a research topic (
specific, ‘small’ topic)
Step 2: Read relevant literature (literature
review state-of-art related to the research
topic)
5
6