Introduction
In life, there are universal laws that govern everything we do. These laws are so perfect that if you were to align yourself with them, you could have so much prosperity that it would be coming out of your ears. This is because God created the universe in the image and likeness of him. It is failure to follow the universal laws that causes one to fail. The laws that were created consisted of the following: ·
Law of Gratitude: The Law of Gratitude states that you must show gratitude for what you have. By having gratitude, you speed your growth and success faster than you normally would. This is because if you appreciate the things you have, even if they are small things, you are open to receiving more.
Law of Attraction: The Law of Attraction states that if you focus your attention on something long enough you will get it. It all starts in the mind. You think of something and when you think of it, you manifest that in your life. This could be a mental picture of a check or actual cash, but you think about it with an image.
Law of Karma: the Law of Karma states that if you go out and do something bad, it will come back to you with something bad. If you do well for others, good things happen to you. The principle here is to know you can create good or bad through your actions. There will always be an effect no matter what.
Law of Love: the Law of Love states that love is more than emotion or feeling; it is energy. It has substance and can be felt. Love is also considered acceptance of oneself or others. This means that no matter what you do in life if you do not approach or leave the situation out of love, it won't work.
Law of Allowing: The Law of Allowing states that for us to get what we want, we must be receptive to it. We can't merely say to the Universe that we want something if we don't allow ourselves to receive it. This will defeat our purpose for wanting it in the first place.
Law of Vibration: the Law of Vibration states that if you wish on something and use your thoughts to visualize it, you are halfway there to get it. To complete the cycle you must use the Law of Vibration to feel part of what you want. Do this and you'll have anything you want in life.
For everything to function properly there has to be structure. Without structure, our world, or universe, would be in utter chaos. Successful people understand universal laws and apply them daily. They may not acknowledge that to you, but they do follow the laws. There is a higher power and this higher power controls the universe and what we get out of it. People who know this, but wish to direct their own lives, follow the reasons. Successful people don't sit around and say "I'll try," they say yes and act on it.
Chapter - 1
The Law of Attraction
The law of attraction is the most powerful force in the universe. If you work against it, it can only bring you pain and misery. Successful people know this but have kept it hidden from the lower class for centuries because th
1. SCHOOL OF GOVERNANCE AND
DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
Advanced Research Methods- Quantitative and
qualitative
John W. Creswell (2012). Educational Research: Planning, Conducting, and
Evaluating Quantitative and Qualitative Research, 4th ed: Pearson Education Inc.
Chapter II The Process of Conducting Research: An introduction
2. CHAPTER 2.1: INTRODUCTION TO THE RESEARCH PROCESS
2.1. Identify the Research Problem
2.2. Review the Literature
2.3. Specify a Research Purpose
2.4. Collect Data
2.5. Analyze and Interpret Data
2.6. Report and Evaluate Research
3. THE PROCESS OF CONDUCTING
RESEARCH
By the end of this session, you should be able to
Describe the six steps in the process of research
Identify the characteristics of quantitative and qualitative research
in the six steps
Identify the type of research designs associated with quantitative
and qualitative research
Discuss important ethical issues in conducting research
Recognize skills needed to design and conduct research
4. UNDERSTANDING RESEARCH
“…the systematic & objective analysis & recording of controlled observations
that may lead to the development of generalizations, principles, or theories,
resulting in prediction &possibly ultimate control of events
a process of steps used to collect and analyze information to increase our understanding
of a topic or an issue.
a process of interrelated activities rather than the application of an isolated, un-related
concepts and ideas.
a general sequence of procedures- from identification of problems to the final report of
research. Understanding the sequence or flow of activities is central to the inquiry.
Overall Research consists of three steps:
1. Pose a question,
2. Collect data to answer the question, and
3. Present an answer to the question.
Addressing problems and searching for potential solutions
5. UNDERSTANDING…
Research is important for three important reasons
1. Adding knowledge - contribute to existing knowledge on a given
issue.
Fill void in existing knowledge
Confirm or disconfirm prior studies
Add to the literature
Provide info about people or places that have not been
previously studied
2. Research also improve practices and provide new ideas –research
findings and suggestions
3. Research informs policy makers
6. PROBLEMS WITH RESEARCH TODAY
Contradictory and vague findings
An expression of a confusion (an education aide to the Education and Labour
Committee of the US House of Representatives for 27 years)
“I read through every single evaluation…looking for a hard sentence- a
declarative sentence-something that I could put into the legislation, and there
were very few”. (Viadero, 1999, p.36).
Questionable data -
Information gap- due to ambiguous and vague
Unclear statement
Small Sample
Inappropriate analysis method
Lack of full disclosure of data collection procedures
7. THE PROCESS OF RESEARCH
Identify the
Research Problem
Review the
Literature
Specify a
Research
Purpose
Collect Data
Analyze and
Interpret
Data
Report
and
Evaluate Research
Fig. 2.1 research process
8. THE PROCESS OF RESEARCH:
IDENTIFY THE RESEARCH PROBLEM
Identify a topic to study- an issue or a problem that need to be resolved.
Select and properly define the problem.
Develop justifications for studying the problem.
Suggest the importance of the study for select audiences that will read the
report
9. THE PROCESS OF RESEARCH:
REVIEW THE LITERATURE
Reviewing the literature - Who has studied the research problem you plan to
examine?
Locate resources i.e. Books, Journals, Electronic resources, etc.
Choose resources to include in the review
Review concepts and theories, methods and previous research finding
Summarize the literature in a written report
10. THE PROCESS OF RESEARCH:
SPECIFY A RESEARCH PURPOSE
If the research problem covers a broad topic of concern, need to focus it so that you
can study it.
A focused restatement of the problem is the Purpose Statement
The purpose of research consists of :
Identifying the major intent/objective of the study
Narrowing it into specific research questions or hypothesis
The major focus of the study, participants, location and site of the inquiry
11. THE RESEARCH PROCESS:
COLLECT DATA
Evidence helps provide answer to your research questions and hypothesis
Data collection involves
Identifying and selecting individuals for a study
Obtaining their permissions to study them
Design data collection instruments and outline data collection procedures
Gather information by asking people question or obtaining their behaviors
Of paramount concern in this process is the need to obtain accurate data
from individuals and places
12. THE RESEARCH PROCESS:
ANALYZE AND INTERPRET DATA
During or immediately after data collection the researcher need to make
sense of the information supplied by the individuals in the study.
Analysis consists of “taking the data apart” to determine individual
responses, and then “putting it together” to summarize it.
Represent the data in tables, figures, and pictures
Explain conclusions from the data that address the research questions
Usually titled result, findings or discussions
13. THE RESEARCH PROCESS:
REPORTING AND EVALUATING RESEARCH
Reporting research
Determine the audience for the report- academic researchers, educational agencies
Structure the report
Write the report sensitively and accurately
Evaluating research
Assess the quality of research using recognized standards in a discipline
Standards can come from the academic community, school districts, or federal or
state agencies
14. RESEARCH PROCESS
Research Problem
Research Questions Questions
Literature Review
Quantitative Research Qualitative Research
Research Designs
Quantitative Designs
-Experimental
-Correlational
-Survey
Combined Designs
-Mixed methods
-Action research
Qualitative Designs
-Grounded theory
-Ethnography
-Narrative
Sampling Instruments/protocols
/Protocols
N Data Analysis Interpretation
Discussion, Conclusions, Limitations, Future Research
Fig 2.2 Flow of research process through qualitative and quantitative research
15. IMPORTANT ETHICAL ISSUES IN CONDUCTING
RESEARCH
Learn about the procedures involved in applying for approval
from your campus institutional review board
Recognize guidelines from professional associations
Use ethical practices throughout research
Use respectful data collection procedures
Show respect to audiences who read and use research study
information
16. SKILLS NEEDED FOR RESEARCH
Curiosity to solve puzzles
Long attention spans
Library and computer resource skills
Writing and editing skills