Research Methodology Module 1
Research Methodology Module 1
Module 1
1. Introduction
2. Meaning of research
3. Objectives of research
4. Motivation in research
5. Types of research
6. Research approaches
7. Significance of research
8. Research methods v/s methodology
9. Research and scientific method
10. Importance of knowing how research is done
11. Research process
12. Criteria of good research
13. Problems encountered by researchers in India
Meaning of Research
• INTRODUCTION
1. Research may be very broadly defined as systematic gathering of
data and information and its analysis for advancement of
knowledge in any subject. Research attempts to find answer
intellectual and practical questions through application of
systematic methods. Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary defines
research as "studious inquiry or examination; esp: investigation or
experimentation aimed at the discovery and interpretation of
facts, revision of accepted theories or laws in the light of new
facts, or practical application of such new or revised theories or
laws". Some people consider research as a movement, a
movement from the known to the unknown.
2. It is actually a voyage of discovery. We all possess the vital instinct
of inquisitiveness for, when the unknown confronts us, we
wonder and our inquisitiveness makes us probe and attain full
and fuller understanding of the unknown. This inquisitiveness is
the mother of all knowledge and the method, which man
employs for obtaining the knowledge of whatever the unknown,
can be termed as research.
• What is the meaning of Research Methodology ?
1. Research is an academic activity and as such the term should be
used in a technical sense.
2. According to Clifford Woody research comprises defining and
redefining problems, formulating hypothesis or suggested
solutions; collecting, organizing and evaluating data; making
deductions and reaching conclusions; and at last carefully testing
the conclusions to determine whether they fit the formulating
hypothesis.
3. D.. Steiner and M. Stephenson in the Encyclopedia of Social
Sciences define research as “the manipulation of things, concepts
or symbols for the purpose of generalizing to extend, correct or
verify knowledge, whether that knowledge aids in construction of
theory or in the practice of an art.”
4. Research is, thus, an original contribution to the existing stock of
knowledge making for its advancement. It is the per suit of truth
with the help of study, observation, comparison and experiment.
5. In short, the search for knowledge through objective and
systematic method of finding solution to a problem is research.
The systematic approach concerning generalization and the
formulation of a theory is also research. As such the term
‘research’ refers to the systematic method consisting of
enunciating the problem, formulating a hypothesis, collecting the
facts or data, analyzing the facts and reaching certain conclusions
either in the form of solutions(s) towards the concerned problem
or in certain generalizations for some theoretical formulation.
formulation
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Objectives of Research
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Motivation in Research
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Types of Research 1
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Types of Research 2
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Research Approaches
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Significance of Research 1
“All progress is born of inquiry. Doubt is often better than overconfidence, for
it leads to inquiry, and inquiry leads to invention” is a famous Hudson Maxim
in context of which the significance of research can well be understood.
Increased amounts of research make progress possible. Research inculcates
scientific and inductive thinking and it promotes the development of logical
habits of thinking and organization.
• The role of research in several fields of applied economics, whether
related to business or to the economy as a whole, has greatly increased
in modern times. The increasingly complex nature of business and
government has focused attention on the use of research in solving
operational problems. Research, as an aid to economic policy, has
gained added importance, both for government and business.
1. Research provides the basis for nearly all government policies in our
economic system. For instance, government’s budgets rest in part on
an analysis of the needs and desires of the people and on the
availability of revenues to meet these needs. The cost of needs has to
be equated to probable revenues and this is a field where research is
most needed. Through research we can devise alternative policies and
can as well examine the consequences of each of these alternatives.
2. Decision-making
making may not be a part of research, but research certainly
facilitates the decisions of the policy maker.. Government has also to
chalk out programmes for dealing with all facets of the country’s
existence and most of these will be related directly or indirectly to
economic conditions. The plight of cultivators, the problems of big and
small business and industry, working conditions, trade union activities,
the problems of distribution, even the size and nature of defence
services are matters requiring research. Thus, research is considered
necessary with regard to the allocation of nation’s resources.
3. Another area in government, where research is necessary, is collecting
information on the economic and social structure of the nation.
nation Such
information indicates what is happening in the economy and what
changes are taking place. Collecting such statistical information is by no
means a routine task, but it involves a variety of research problems.
These day nearly all governments maintain large staff of research
technicians or experts to carry on this work.
• Thus, in the context of government,research as a tool to economic
policy has three distinct phases of operation, viz.,
1. investigation of economic structure through continual compilation of
facts;
2. diagnosis of events that are taking place and the analysis of the forces
underlying them; and
3. the prognosis, i.e., the prediction of future developments.
developments
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Significance of Research 2
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Significance of Research 3
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Research Method V/S Methodology 1
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Research Method V/S Methodology 2
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Research and Scientific Method 1
• For a clear perception of the term research, one should know the
meaning of scientific method. The two terms, research and
scientific method, are closely related. Research, as we have
already stated, can be termed as “an inquiry into the nature of,
the reasons for, and the consequences of any particular set of
circumstances, whether these circumstances are experimentally
controlled or recorded just as they occur.
• Further, research implies the researcher is interested in more
than particular results; he is interested in the repeatability of the
results and in their extension to more complicated and general
situations.” On the other hand, the philosophy common to all
research methods and techniques, although they may vary
considerably from one science to another, is usually given the
name of scientific method.
• In this context, Karl Pearson writes, “The scientific method is one
and same in the branches (of science) and that method is the
method of all logically trained minds … the unity of all sciences
consists alone in its methods, not its material; the man who
classifies facts of any kind whatever, who sees their mutual
relation and describes their sequences, is applying the Scientific
Method and is a man of science.” Scientific method is the pursuit
of truth as determined by logical considerations.
• The ideal of science is to achieve a systematic interrelation of
facts. Scientific method attempts to achieve “this ideal by
experimentation, observation, logical arguments from accepted
postulates and a combination of these three in varying
proportions.”
• In scientific method, logic aids in formulating propositions
explicitly and accurately so that their possible alternatives
become clear .Further, logic develops the consequences of such
alternatives, and when these are compared with observable
phenomena, it becomes possible for the researcher or the
scientist to state which alternatives most in harmony with the
observed facts. All this is done through experimentation and
survey investigations which constitute the integral parts of
scientific method.
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Research and Scientific Method 2
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Importance of Knowing how research is done
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Research Process
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Problems Encountered by Researchers in India
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