Research Methodology Lecture No :32 (Revision Chapters 8,9,10,11,SPSS)

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Presentation transcript:

Research Methodology Lecture No :32 (Revision Chapters 8,9,10,11,SPSS)

Data Collection The Data is collected from primary and secondary sources The primary data collect via Observation, panels, interviews, questionnaires etc Interview are structure and unstructured While interviewing there are certain guidelines There are structured and unstructed interviews There are some advantages / disadvantages of face to face vs telephone interviews. 2

Questionnaire Design Questionnaires Personally Administered Questionnaires Mail questionnaires Guide line for wordings – Content and purpose (Subjective vs Objective) – Language and wording ( slang/technical) – Types of formats (open / closed ended) – Positively worded and Negatively worded – Bias/ Favoritism(Leading, loaded, ambiguous, double barrel, socially desirable) Length of the question Funneling

Sampling Sampling is the process of selecting the right individuals Sample is used to represent the whole data or population Sampling process include defining population, sample frame, sampling design, sample size and sampling process

Sampling Simple random sampling and restricted sampling are two basic types of probability sampling. Probability: Probability of selection is known Non Probability : Probability is not known

Sampling Precision we estimate the population parameter to fall within a range, based on sample estimate. Confidence is the certainty that our estimate will hold true for the population. Sample size. Some sampling designs are more efficient than the others. The knowledge about sampling is used for different managerial implications.

Types of Sampling Designs Sampling Designs Non-probability Probability ConvenienceJudgmentalQuotaSnowball SystematicStratifiedCluster Other Sampling Techniques Simple Random

Experimental Design Causal vs Correlations Experimental Design Field Experiment vs Lab Experiments

Experimental Design

Experimental Designs When to use experimental designs Pretest and Posttest Experimental Group Design Posttests only with Experimental and Control Group Pretest and Posttest Experimental and Control Group Design Solomon Four Group Design

(Data Analysis) Getting Data Ready Questionnaire checking involves eliminating unacceptable questionnaires. These questionnaires may be incomplete, instructions not followed, missing pages, past cutoff date or respondent not qualified. Editing looks to correct illegible, incomplete, inconsistent and ambiguous answers. Coding typically assigns alpha or numeric codes to answers that do not already have them so that statistical techniques can be applied.

Cleaning data for consistencies. Inconsistencies may arise from faulty logic, out of range or extreme values. Statistical adjustments applies to data that requires weighting and scale transformations.

(DATA ANALYSIS) Hypotheses Testing using SPSS How to use SPSS for Data entry – Defining variables – Assigning them values – Assigning sizes and constraints – Data entry using data from coded Questionnaires – Serial number the questionnaire How to generate simple descriptive summaries

SPSS Frequency refers to number of times various sub categorizes occur in the same pattern. Frequencies can also be visually displayed as bar charts, histograms, or pie charts. Histogram is graphical bar chart. The stem-and-leaf presents actual data values that can be inspected directly.

SPSS A boxplot reduces the detail of the stem-and-leaf display. Cross-tabulation is a technique for comparing data from two or more categorical variables. Percentages serve two purposes in data presentation.

SPSS Three measures of central tendency: mean, median and mode. Dispersion is the variability. Three measures of dispersion are: range, variance and standard deviation. Correlation Goodness of data is measured by reliability and validity. SPSS Cronbach Alpha (Reliability) Factor Analysis (Validity)

SPSS-Hypotheses Testing Hypothesis testing(Difference between groups, Relationship) Null and Alternate Hypotheses Choose appropriate test Significance Group difference – Testing single mean – Testing two related means (ratio) – Testing two related samples when data is in ordinal / nominal – Testing two in unrelated means – Testing when more than two groups on their mean scores

Hypothesis Testing Hypothesis testing the relationship/Association Correlations Regression

Research Proposal The purpose of the study The specific problem to be investigated/problem statement/ Research Questions The scope of the study/what is covered and not covered. The relevance of the study/importance The research design offering detail on – Sampling, data collection methods, data analysis, Time frame The budget

Research Report Layout Title Introduction A literature review Research Questions Theoretical Framework Hypothesis Method section – Study Design (cross sectional, …) – Population and Sample

– Variables and measures – Their reliability and Validity Data Collection Data Analysis Discussion of Results Recommendations

Final Words You have by now developed basic research skills not necessarily become an expert. But as a managers / students should be able differentiate between good or bad research. You also by now recognized research is an integral part of the organization reality and can improve the organization. Should be able to appreciate that for any problem a scientific way to address is by identifying its factors and collecting data systematically on it so that the results would be have some credibility in the industry and academia as well

By now you should be able to logically conceptualize the relationships among variables And able to carry out a small research project With this WISH YOU BEST OF LUCK