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Business Communication Research Class 1 : What is Research? Leena Louhiala-Salminen, Spring 2013
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Business Communication Research 1.What is research? 2.Conducting research 3. Research perspectives
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What is research? Consider : 1) An article in the business section of the Helsingin Sanomat on the challenges involved in implementing a new strategy in a multinational corporate context. Three top executives have been interviewed about strategy implementation processes in their organizations; all talk about the significance of communication overall, and emphasize face-to-face contact on the one hand but also well-planned utilization of the new media on the other hand.
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What is research? Consider : 2) An article in The Journal of Business Communication. The writer has used interviews as his main method, and he concludes by highlighting the importance of communication in the implementation of a new corporate strategy. The findings suggest that the role of face-to-face interaction is still crucial in creating shared understanding and action. However, the significance of new media also emerges.
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What is research? = creating scientific knowledge Scientific knowledge vs. other knowledge? – Scientific knowledge achieved by systematic and organized use of scientific methods – Scientific knowledge achieved in processes that strictly follow the rules of the scientific community (eg peer review, criticism, explicitness)
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What is research? Scientific reasoning: previous, related studies used as a basis explicit presentation of the research framework concepts used systematically and consistently methodological rules observed trustworthiness issues (eg reliability and validity) explicitly discussed
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Conducting research 1) Explore the area of interest 2) Draft a Research Plan 3) Implement the plan
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Conducting research 1) Explore the area of interest a. Decide on a general, wide area b. Read, discuss, interview, find out c. Narrow your topic, focus on a more specific area d. Get to know earlier studies, theories and concepts in the specific area
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Conducting research 2) Draft a Research Plan a. Motivate the plan, define your niche b. Specify research problems c. Choose the methods d. Plan data collection
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Conducting research Why write a plan ? gets you started helps you to focus on the essentials helps you to manage the process as a whole helps you to keep the timing boosts the process, doesn’t limit it (= subject to changes throughout the process)
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Conducting research 3) Implement the Plan a. Collect data b. Analyze data c. Write the report
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Research perspectives Ontological considerations ontology = what exists ? What is the nature of social entities ? Are social entities objective, do they exist externally to social actors? = objectivism vs. Are social entities produced and constructed by social actors?= constructionism
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Research perspectives Epistemological considerations epistemology = what is acceptable knowledge? Can the social world be studied according to principles of natural sciences? = positivism Should the social world be studied differently from the views in natural sciences? = interpretivism
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Research perspectives Positivism only phenomena confirmed by the senses can be knowledge hypotheses created and tested laws science is value free, objective
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Research perspectives Interpretivism Research procedure reflects the distinctiveness of humans and their actions Understanding human behaviour (vs explaining) Researcher needs to grasp the subjective meaning of social action
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Research perspectives Quantitative research emphasizes measurement, numbers important tests theories sees the world as an external, objective reality
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Research perspectives Qualitative research emphasizes words (text and talk) generates theoretical insights sees the world as a constantly shifting emergent property of individuals’ creation
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