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Writing a Research Paper for Publication Problem Formulation Guide for preparing and writing paper, review and publication Bobby D. Gerardo, Ph.D. PSITE NCR Seminar October 10, 2011, TIPQC
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Problem Formulation Guide in choosing a field of study and research topics. How do we formulate research questions based on the chosen topic?
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Practical problems in the field Where do research topics come from?
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Practical problems in the field Literature in the field Where do research topics come from? (cont)
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Practical problems in the field Literature in the field Your own thinking Where do research topics come from? (cont)
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Tradeoff between rigor and practicality How long it will take Ethical constraints Needed cooperation Costs Is the study feasible?
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Review the scientific literature Do the review early The review can help you ◦ See if your idea has been tried ◦ Include all relevant constructs ◦ Select instruments ◦ Anticipate common problems The Literature Review
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8 Definitions Theory: "A set of interrelated constructs (concepts), definitions, and propositions that present a systematic view of phenomena specifying relations among variables, with the purpose of explaining and predicting the phenomena.” Scientific Research: "Scientific research is systematic, controlled, empirical, and critical investigation of hypothetical propositions about the presumed relations among natural phenomena.” Hypothesis: "A conjectural statement, a tentative proposition, about the relation between two or more phenomena or variables.” "If X occurs...then Y will follow." Concept: "Expresses an abstraction formed by generalization from particulars. E.g. "weight expresses numerous observations of things that are more or less "heavy or "light." Others: Mass, energy, force, achievement, intelligence, motivation, extraversion., aggressiveness, conformity. Construct: "is a concept with added meaning, deliberately and consciously invented or adopted for a special scientific purpose.“ E.g. intelligence – used for a special purpose to relate to school achievement and to other variables of interest. Operational definition: "assigns a meaning to a construct or a variable by specifying the activities or ‘operations’ necessary to measure it.”
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9 Research Questions Establishing a background Choosing a topic (want to & can do) ◦ Bootstraps approach (lit review cycle) ◦ Your area of interest ◦ Feasibility something you can manipulate (think theory)
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10 Research Question (cont) Formulating the question Definitions Maps: ◦ A good question asks about relationships among constructs Researchable? Operational definitions adequate? Is it important? Will it advance theory? Does it test competing theory Propositions: central or peripheral? ◦ Sources Theory, intuition, prior research, practical problems, analogy
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11 Formulating a Question (cont) Review of literature ◦ Purposes: Provides scientific context Avoid duplication Id potential problems in conducting the research ◦ Types of information Relevant theories Previous research on the topic Previous methods/procedures Types of analyses (quant/qual; corr/experimental/quasi)
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12 Formulating a Question (cont) Formulate hypotheses ◦ Research hypotheses “if…then” Direction (pos v. negative) (one tail or two) ◦ Statistical hypotheses Stated in mean differences (IV-DV), E.g. H1: Gp1 < Gp2 = Gp3 Direction of relationship (corr) E.g. “…will be significantly positively related”
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Workshop 3 – Writing Research Questions Based on the title that you proposed and your abstract, write at least four research questions Make sure that each of the question is measurable and attainable ◦ Could be addressed by formulating a prototype, system design, algorithm, modification of process etc. ◦ There is a possible answer to the question
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End Thank you Bobby D. Gerardo bgerardo@wvsu.edu.ph
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