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Presentation, Analysis and
Interpretation of Data
Presented By:
Lovely Ann F. Hezoli
Objectives
After studying this lesson you are expected to:
1.Be able to present the results of your collected
data.
2.Make good analysis of the tabulated or
graphically presented data,
3.Make effective interpretation of the
data/finding/results, and
4.Draw implications or inferences and generations
from the analysis and interpretation of findings.
This chapter presents the
findings of the study.
Presentation should be clear and scholarly
done and may come in the form of tables, figures
or charts. Analysis refers to the skill of the
researcher in describing, delineating similarities
and differences, highlighting the significant
findings or data and ability to extract information
or messages out of the presented data.
Interpretation is the explanation or suggestions
inferred from the data, their implications but not
conclusions.
Lesson 1: Presentation of findings
Two forms of communicating your findings in
research:
Verbal – describes and narrates to readers what the
researcher has done and the results that he or she
has obtained
Symbolic – uses graphic representation, tables or
statistical values.
The Format
The immediate purpose of writing a research report is
to tell other scientists about your work, about the new
knowledge you have discovered. The research report
should be clear enough that any scientist could
replicate your study without telephoning you to ask for
details. In addition, the research must be explained
clearly enough that a scientist could evaluate its merits
and flaws, solely on the basis of the written word.
The American Psychological Association
(APA) Format or style
The APA Style is the format approved by the Open University
Academic Council to be adopted at the PUP Open University,
however, in the Graduate School, each discipline has a preferred
format. The Public Administration Programs use the APA
Format.
The American Psychological Association (APA) has strict
guidelines for the editorial style and organizational format of
written research reports. There are accepted conventions for the
mechanics of writing the report. For example, how will you write
the title of your table? Should the table number be written in
Arabic or Roman numeral? Will the title be indented and in
capital letters or in small letters except the first letter of the key
words? A more detailed discussion of the APA will be found in
the last module dealing with references.
Organization of your presentation
The organization of the presentation and interpretation of
findings vary according to the research method used. In
descriptive research, especially the survey type, the presentation
of results follow a pattern. The findings presented will follow the
sequence of the sub-problems raised in Chapter 1. It would be a
good idea if reports assist in the analysis, interpretation and
clarification of the next materials. Properly chosen, carefully
drawn, and accurately presented, they can make many of the
statements appearing in the body of the report more
meaningful.
Do not present your findings by recasting your sub-problems in
Chapter 1. Remember that your whole Chapter 4 is the exposition
of the answers of findings to your research questions specially
stated in Chapter 1. Your answers become the subheadings of
your Chapter 4.
Examples:
For Research Problem 1. What is the profile of the respondents in
terms of age, sex, educational attainment, civil status and position?
Your subheading in Chapter 4 should be:
1. Profile of the Respondents In Terms of Age, Sex, Educational
Attainment, Civil Status and Position
For research Problem No. 2
What is the leadership styles of the local government officials in
manila as assessed by the officials themselves and their
subordinates, using the following five dimensions of McPhee
Andrewartha’s Rating scale: 2.1 Focus,2.2 Emphasis 2.3 Relationship,
2.4 timing and 2.5 Thinking
The External Format
The use of tables and graph
ď‚— Tables and graphs are both ways to organize and
arrange data so that it is more easily understood by
the viewer.
ď‚— Tables and graphs are related in the sense that the
information used in tables is frequently also used for
the basis of graphs.
ď‚— When designing table, keep the format clear and
simple. Line up decimal places, note units clearly, use a
large enough typeface and construct a clean orderly
arrangement of rows and columns.
ď‚— Bar graphs are an excellent way to show the results that
are one time, that are not continuous—especially
samplings such as surveys and inventories.
ď‚— Bar graphs are used to get an overall idea or trends in
responses which categories get, many versus few
responses.
• Bars in a graph should be wider than the
spaces between them.
•All bars should be of equal width, and all
spaces including the space between the axis
and the first bar, should be equal of width.
•Bars should be neither very thin nor very
wide.
•Use the same color for all the bars in a graph
that are in a single data set.
•Use different fill colors for positive and
negative values.
• Line graph is most useful in displaying data
or information that change continuously
over time.
ď‚— The column graph is more similar
ď‚— Circle or pie graphs are particularly good
illustrations when considering how
many parts of a whole are inception.
ď‚— Each slice should be easily distinguished
from the rest and clearly labeled.
ď‚— Use 6 or fewer slices in a graph.
ď‚— Emphasize a slice in a pie graph by
exploding it or by choosing a color
different from the rest of the slices.
ď‚— Number of segments or slices in a pie
graph should be limited to those that
can be seen and labeled.
ď‚— Components that are too small to be shown
individually can be grouped into one segment
labeled other or miscellaneous.
ď‚— The largest segment conventionally begins at 1200
or at a quarter hour and runs clockwise. Remaining
segments continue clockwise.
ď‚— The most important slice is in the upper-right
quadrant.
Other Conventions Regarding
Graphics
1. Keep graphics simple. Design the graphic to help others
understand your point.
2. Simplify your data
3. Use consistent symbols
4. Avoid special effects if they do not enhance the point to
be made.
Tables
Tables are numbered consecutively in Arabic numeral.
Table number should be written at the top and the
caption should be placed at the bottom just right above
the table box.
In typing tables, never cut table in two pages. You may
decrease the size of the font of your table to fit the size in
a short coupon bond or you may use landscape so that you
will have one table in a page. Avoid enlarging the font size
of your table in order to fit in such page.
Caption, Labels And Lines
Table caption should be the same as that which appears in
the list of tables. It is placed above the table unlike that
which is used in figures. The caption should tell in precise
terms what the table contains.
PUP format
Table 1
Frequency and Percentage Distribution of the
Respondents According to Age
Apa format
Table 1. Frequency and percentage distribution of the
respondents according to age.
Other Rules in Caption
1. No terminal punctuation.
2. Unusual abbreviation are not allowed in the table, if
necessary, put a legend at the bottom of the table.
3. Captions should be worded as concisely as clarity
permits.
4. When a table is placed broadside on a page the
caption should be on the binding side.
5. Be consistent in label size, font and style.
The Internal Format
A horizontal line should be placed one space below the
last line of the caption. Below the line are the box
headings-descriptive headings for each column
heading and headings are centered between the
vertical lines that enclosed them. One space at least
should be allowed on either side of each heading.
Example
Table 2
Title
BOXHEAD
Stub Head Column
Head
Column Head Column Head Column Head
Sapanner
Stub Column Field or Body
Sex
BLPO Personnel
Factory
Owners/Managers
TOTAL
1 % 1 % 1 %
Male 9 69.23 78 65 87 65.41
Female 4 30.77 42 35 46 34.59
Total 13 100 120 100 133 100
Age in years
19-28
29-39
40-49
50 and above
0
9
3
0
0
69.23
23.08
0
14
36
61
3
11.67
30.00
50.83
2.50
14
45
64
3
10.53
33.83
48.12
2.26
No. Response 1 7.69 6 5.00 7 5.26
Total 13 100 120 100 133 100
Columns that consist of words are placed on the left and
those that consist of numbers particularly those with
decimals should be aligned and at least one space should
be left on each side of the largest number in the column.
Area
s
Male Female Total
Mean Mean Mean Rate of
Increase
1st
recordin
g
Last
recordin
g
Increase % 1st
recordin
g
Last
recordin
g
Increase % 1st
recordin
g
Last
recordin
g
Increase %
Physical 2.74 3.69 .95 19 2.72 3.84 3.84 1.12 22.4 2.73 3.73 3.78
Emotion
-al
2.58 3.67 1.09 21.8 2.54 3.78 1.24 24.8 2.56 3.72 1.16 23.2
Table 4
The Extent Of Behavioral Development Of The
Grade One Pupils During The School Year
According To Sex
Lines
The line at the bottom of the table is omitted on all the
pages except the last when a table is continued in a
series of pages.
Vertical lines are used for grouping, separating closely
spaced columns. When two equal parts of the table are
placed side by side, double vertical lines should be
placed between them. Horizontal lines are not usually
placed between lines of items in typed tables.
Figure (Chart, Graph And Illustration)
These should be done judiciously. The research reporter
must ask himself the following questions: is the
illustration necessary? Does it simply repeat what the
text said?
Illustrative materials shall be called figures. The figure
number and caption should be centered below the
illustration. An Arabic numeral is written after the
word “Figure” followed by a period.
The caption should be brief and explanatory.
Size and Proportion of Figure
Figures should not be larger than 8 ½ x 11 inches or
smaller than 2x2 inches. Figures of equal importance
in the report should be approximately equal size.
Smaller size photographs may be mounted two or more
to a page or regular typing paper. If photographs are
8 ½ x 11 inches in size, they need not to be mounted.
If the detail is not shown in an illustration, it is
recommended that the original drawing be made
much larger than the page’s size and then reduce page
size by photography.
Placement and Paging
As with tables, illustrations or figures should follow as
closely as possible the first references to them in the text.
On the four sides of a page carrying illustrative materials,
a margin of least one inch should be allowed. The figure
caption, descriptive matter and legends should fall within
the margin.
In case of illustration or figures occupying half or less than
half a page, textual material may be typed on the same
page. In no case should less than five lines of typewritten
text be put in the same page as an illustration.
Lesson 2: Analysis of Data or Findings
In analyzing data, stress only those important result that
gives information that could answer the problem you
raised or posed in your study which you stated in
Chapter 1. you highlight only those important and
unique findings. You have to be consistent and
coherent in your approach as well as logical, based on
certain academic conventions.
Lesson 3: Interpretation of Findings/Results,
Implications and Inferences
Sufficient data should be used to justify your inferences
or generalizations. The implications suggested by the
data should be explained and discussed thoroughly in
this portion of your thesis or dissertation.
The data analysis involves comparing values on the
dependent measures in statistical cases. In the non
statistical approach, these comparisons usually involve
visual inspection of data. Evaluation depends on
projecting from baseline data what findings would be
like in the future if some variables were not
experimented.
Presentation_Analysis_and_Interpretation.ppt

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Presentation_Analysis_and_Interpretation.ppt

  • 1. Presentation, Analysis and Interpretation of Data Presented By: Lovely Ann F. Hezoli
  • 2. Objectives After studying this lesson you are expected to: 1.Be able to present the results of your collected data. 2.Make good analysis of the tabulated or graphically presented data, 3.Make effective interpretation of the data/finding/results, and 4.Draw implications or inferences and generations from the analysis and interpretation of findings.
  • 3. This chapter presents the findings of the study. Presentation should be clear and scholarly done and may come in the form of tables, figures or charts. Analysis refers to the skill of the researcher in describing, delineating similarities and differences, highlighting the significant findings or data and ability to extract information or messages out of the presented data. Interpretation is the explanation or suggestions inferred from the data, their implications but not conclusions.
  • 4. Lesson 1: Presentation of findings Two forms of communicating your findings in research: Verbal – describes and narrates to readers what the researcher has done and the results that he or she has obtained Symbolic – uses graphic representation, tables or statistical values.
  • 5. The Format The immediate purpose of writing a research report is to tell other scientists about your work, about the new knowledge you have discovered. The research report should be clear enough that any scientist could replicate your study without telephoning you to ask for details. In addition, the research must be explained clearly enough that a scientist could evaluate its merits and flaws, solely on the basis of the written word.
  • 6. The American Psychological Association (APA) Format or style The APA Style is the format approved by the Open University Academic Council to be adopted at the PUP Open University, however, in the Graduate School, each discipline has a preferred format. The Public Administration Programs use the APA Format. The American Psychological Association (APA) has strict guidelines for the editorial style and organizational format of written research reports. There are accepted conventions for the mechanics of writing the report. For example, how will you write the title of your table? Should the table number be written in Arabic or Roman numeral? Will the title be indented and in capital letters or in small letters except the first letter of the key words? A more detailed discussion of the APA will be found in the last module dealing with references.
  • 7. Organization of your presentation The organization of the presentation and interpretation of findings vary according to the research method used. In descriptive research, especially the survey type, the presentation of results follow a pattern. The findings presented will follow the sequence of the sub-problems raised in Chapter 1. It would be a good idea if reports assist in the analysis, interpretation and clarification of the next materials. Properly chosen, carefully drawn, and accurately presented, they can make many of the statements appearing in the body of the report more meaningful. Do not present your findings by recasting your sub-problems in Chapter 1. Remember that your whole Chapter 4 is the exposition of the answers of findings to your research questions specially stated in Chapter 1. Your answers become the subheadings of your Chapter 4.
  • 8. Examples: For Research Problem 1. What is the profile of the respondents in terms of age, sex, educational attainment, civil status and position? Your subheading in Chapter 4 should be: 1. Profile of the Respondents In Terms of Age, Sex, Educational Attainment, Civil Status and Position For research Problem No. 2 What is the leadership styles of the local government officials in manila as assessed by the officials themselves and their subordinates, using the following five dimensions of McPhee Andrewartha’s Rating scale: 2.1 Focus,2.2 Emphasis 2.3 Relationship, 2.4 timing and 2.5 Thinking
  • 9. The External Format The use of tables and graph ď‚— Tables and graphs are both ways to organize and arrange data so that it is more easily understood by the viewer. ď‚— Tables and graphs are related in the sense that the information used in tables is frequently also used for the basis of graphs.
  • 10. ď‚— When designing table, keep the format clear and simple. Line up decimal places, note units clearly, use a large enough typeface and construct a clean orderly arrangement of rows and columns. ď‚— Bar graphs are an excellent way to show the results that are one time, that are not continuous—especially samplings such as surveys and inventories. ď‚— Bar graphs are used to get an overall idea or trends in responses which categories get, many versus few responses.
  • 11. • Bars in a graph should be wider than the spaces between them. •All bars should be of equal width, and all spaces including the space between the axis and the first bar, should be equal of width. •Bars should be neither very thin nor very wide. •Use the same color for all the bars in a graph that are in a single data set. •Use different fill colors for positive and negative values. • Line graph is most useful in displaying data or information that change continuously over time.
  • 12. ď‚— The column graph is more similar ď‚— Circle or pie graphs are particularly good illustrations when considering how many parts of a whole are inception. ď‚— Each slice should be easily distinguished from the rest and clearly labeled. ď‚— Use 6 or fewer slices in a graph. ď‚— Emphasize a slice in a pie graph by exploding it or by choosing a color different from the rest of the slices. ď‚— Number of segments or slices in a pie graph should be limited to those that can be seen and labeled.
  • 13. ď‚— Components that are too small to be shown individually can be grouped into one segment labeled other or miscellaneous. ď‚— The largest segment conventionally begins at 1200 or at a quarter hour and runs clockwise. Remaining segments continue clockwise. ď‚— The most important slice is in the upper-right quadrant.
  • 14. Other Conventions Regarding Graphics 1. Keep graphics simple. Design the graphic to help others understand your point. 2. Simplify your data 3. Use consistent symbols 4. Avoid special effects if they do not enhance the point to be made.
  • 15. Tables Tables are numbered consecutively in Arabic numeral. Table number should be written at the top and the caption should be placed at the bottom just right above the table box. In typing tables, never cut table in two pages. You may decrease the size of the font of your table to fit the size in a short coupon bond or you may use landscape so that you will have one table in a page. Avoid enlarging the font size of your table in order to fit in such page.
  • 16. Caption, Labels And Lines Table caption should be the same as that which appears in the list of tables. It is placed above the table unlike that which is used in figures. The caption should tell in precise terms what the table contains.
  • 17. PUP format Table 1 Frequency and Percentage Distribution of the Respondents According to Age Apa format Table 1. Frequency and percentage distribution of the respondents according to age.
  • 18. Other Rules in Caption 1. No terminal punctuation. 2. Unusual abbreviation are not allowed in the table, if necessary, put a legend at the bottom of the table. 3. Captions should be worded as concisely as clarity permits. 4. When a table is placed broadside on a page the caption should be on the binding side. 5. Be consistent in label size, font and style.
  • 19. The Internal Format A horizontal line should be placed one space below the last line of the caption. Below the line are the box headings-descriptive headings for each column heading and headings are centered between the vertical lines that enclosed them. One space at least should be allowed on either side of each heading.
  • 20. Example Table 2 Title BOXHEAD Stub Head Column Head Column Head Column Head Column Head Sapanner Stub Column Field or Body
  • 21. Sex BLPO Personnel Factory Owners/Managers TOTAL 1 % 1 % 1 % Male 9 69.23 78 65 87 65.41 Female 4 30.77 42 35 46 34.59 Total 13 100 120 100 133 100 Age in years 19-28 29-39 40-49 50 and above 0 9 3 0 0 69.23 23.08 0 14 36 61 3 11.67 30.00 50.83 2.50 14 45 64 3 10.53 33.83 48.12 2.26 No. Response 1 7.69 6 5.00 7 5.26 Total 13 100 120 100 133 100
  • 22. Columns that consist of words are placed on the left and those that consist of numbers particularly those with decimals should be aligned and at least one space should be left on each side of the largest number in the column.
  • 23. Area s Male Female Total Mean Mean Mean Rate of Increase 1st recordin g Last recordin g Increase % 1st recordin g Last recordin g Increase % 1st recordin g Last recordin g Increase % Physical 2.74 3.69 .95 19 2.72 3.84 3.84 1.12 22.4 2.73 3.73 3.78 Emotion -al 2.58 3.67 1.09 21.8 2.54 3.78 1.24 24.8 2.56 3.72 1.16 23.2 Table 4 The Extent Of Behavioral Development Of The Grade One Pupils During The School Year According To Sex
  • 24. Lines The line at the bottom of the table is omitted on all the pages except the last when a table is continued in a series of pages. Vertical lines are used for grouping, separating closely spaced columns. When two equal parts of the table are placed side by side, double vertical lines should be placed between them. Horizontal lines are not usually placed between lines of items in typed tables.
  • 25. Figure (Chart, Graph And Illustration) These should be done judiciously. The research reporter must ask himself the following questions: is the illustration necessary? Does it simply repeat what the text said? Illustrative materials shall be called figures. The figure number and caption should be centered below the illustration. An Arabic numeral is written after the word “Figure” followed by a period. The caption should be brief and explanatory.
  • 26. Size and Proportion of Figure Figures should not be larger than 8 ½ x 11 inches or smaller than 2x2 inches. Figures of equal importance in the report should be approximately equal size. Smaller size photographs may be mounted two or more to a page or regular typing paper. If photographs are 8 ½ x 11 inches in size, they need not to be mounted. If the detail is not shown in an illustration, it is recommended that the original drawing be made much larger than the page’s size and then reduce page size by photography.
  • 27. Placement and Paging As with tables, illustrations or figures should follow as closely as possible the first references to them in the text. On the four sides of a page carrying illustrative materials, a margin of least one inch should be allowed. The figure caption, descriptive matter and legends should fall within the margin. In case of illustration or figures occupying half or less than half a page, textual material may be typed on the same page. In no case should less than five lines of typewritten text be put in the same page as an illustration.
  • 28. Lesson 2: Analysis of Data or Findings In analyzing data, stress only those important result that gives information that could answer the problem you raised or posed in your study which you stated in Chapter 1. you highlight only those important and unique findings. You have to be consistent and coherent in your approach as well as logical, based on certain academic conventions.
  • 29. Lesson 3: Interpretation of Findings/Results, Implications and Inferences Sufficient data should be used to justify your inferences or generalizations. The implications suggested by the data should be explained and discussed thoroughly in this portion of your thesis or dissertation. The data analysis involves comparing values on the dependent measures in statistical cases. In the non statistical approach, these comparisons usually involve visual inspection of data. Evaluation depends on projecting from baseline data what findings would be like in the future if some variables were not experimented.