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The document provides an overview of research methods in education, covering definitions, purposes, types of knowledge, research designs, and data analysis methods. It emphasizes the importance of systematic and ethical research processes, including qualitative and quantitative approaches, and highlights key steps in conducting research. Additionally, it discusses the significance of clear research writing and dissemination of findings.
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Lesson 1: Introduction to Educational Research
© What is Research?
Research is a careful, organized process used to find new knowledge or solve problems. It is
‘© Systematic — follows step-by-step procedures
* Objective — based on facts, not personal opinions
* Scientific ~ relies on evidence and logic
Definitions:
© Oxford Dictionary: ‘A systematic investigation into the study of materials or sources to
establish facts and reach new conclusions.”
* Kerlinger (1975): “A systematic, controlled, empirical, and critical investigation of natural
phenomena guided by theory and hypothesis,
© Leedy (1974): Research is a way of thinking—what to study, how to gather data, and how
to understand what the data tells us.
@ Example: A teacher wants to know why students are disengaged in online learning and
conducts surveys and observations to find solutions.
© Why Do We Do Research in Education?
Solve real classroom problems
© Improve teaching and learning
© Support curriculum development
© Create education policies
‘* Enhance student and teacher performance
@ Example: A principal may conduct action research to reduce dropout rates in secondary
schools.
* Types of Knowledge
1. Explicit — Clearly stated (e.9., in textbooks)
2. Implicit — Implied, not directly stated
3. Tacit Personal experience-based; hard to express
‘Flash Fact: Tact knowledge is gained through practice, not theory© How We Acquire Knowledge
Method Explanation
Belief
Based on tradition or culture
Intuition Gut feeling without evidence
Authority From experts or institutions
Empiricism — From personal experience
Rationalism Logical reasoning
Scientific Using data and experiments
© Most educational research uses scientit
ic, empirical, and rational methods.
* Characteristics of Good Research
Begins with a clear, focused problem
‘Systematic and logical
Based on evidence
Verifiable and repeatable
Can be generalized and modified
© Common Mistake: Starting without a proper problem leads to poor outcomes
¢ Research Paradigms
Paradigm Features Used in
Positivism Objective truth; numeric data Quantitative
Interpretivism Subjective experiences; Qualitative
meaning-based
Pragmatism Practical, mixed-methods approach Mixed
@ Example: A pragmatic study may use both surveys (quantitative) and interviews (qualitative).* Positivism vs Interpretivism
Aspect Positivism Interpretivism
View of realty Fixed and Socially constructed
measurable
Approach Deductive Inductive
Data type Numeric Words, meaning
Example Experiments, surveys Interviews,
methods observations
© Tp: Positivism = stats + testing; Interpretivism = meaning + context
* Research Strategies
«Quantitative — Uses stats and measurable data
© Qualita
/e — Explores experiences and meanings
‘ed Methods - Combines both
Lesson 1 Summary
Term Key Point
Research ‘Systematic search for knowledge
Purpose Solve education problems
Knowledge Types Explicit, Implicit, Tacit
Paradigms Positivism, Interpretivism, Pragmatism
Strategies Quantitative, Qualitative, MixedLesson 2: Research Designs
© What is a Research Design?
A blueprint or plan of how research is conducted. It includes:
© What, when, where, how, and whom to study
* Categories of Research Design
4. Non-Experimental
3. Applied (Action Research)
© Non-Experimental Designs
Historical
‘Studies past events using documents or records
® Example: History of female education in Sri Lanka
Descriptive
© Describes current phenomena (e.g., surveys, case studies)
Developmental
Studies changes over time
‘© Cross-sectional: Different groups at once
© Longitudinal: Same group over time
Correlational
«Examines relationships between variables (no cause-effect)
Ethnographic
In-depth study of cultures/groups
Grounded Theory
‘* Builds new theory from data (used when no theory exists)
Gl Experimental Designs
Used to test cause-effect relationships by manipulating variables.
Type Description
Pre-experimental Weak design, no control group
True experimental Randomized control + experimental groups
Quasi-experimenta No random assignment, but has controlicomparison
1 ‘group+ Variables:
Independent: Manipulated (.g., teaching method)
© Dependent: Measured (e.g., test score)
© Applied Design — Action Research
Used by educators to solve practical classroom problems.
@ Example: A teacher tests new reading strategies to help struggling students
© Stops: Plan — Act -» Observe -» Reflect
Lesson 2 Summary
Design Type Purpose Examples
Historical Study past Education reform history
Descriptive Current facts Surveys, case studies
Experimental Cause-effect Now teaching method impact
Correlational Find relationships Study time vs test scores
Action Solve real-world problems Low attendance
Research improvementLesson 3: The Research Process
© What is It?
A step-by-step guide for conducting research effectively and ethically.
Key Steps
1. Identify the Problem
© Clear, focused, researchable
® Ex: Why are rural students underperforming?
2, Review Literature
© Understand past research
© Find gaps and build framework
3. Ethical Considerations
© Get consent
© Ensure no harm or deception
© Respect participant rights
4, Research Proposal Writing
© Explains what, why, and how youll study
© Includes: Title, background, aims, research questions, methodology, timeline,
references
@ Hypotheses
Type Meaning
Null (Hs) No effect or difference
Alternative (H:) There is a difference
Directional Specifies direction (1 or |)
Non-directional Shows difference without direction
‘@ Example: “Students using tech score higher than those who don't"Lesson 3 Summary
Step
Problem
Literature
Ethics
Proposal
Hypothesis
What to Do
Choose issue worth
investigating
Leam from others
Protect participants
Write your research plan
Predict outcomesLesson 4: Research Tools and Sampling
@ Research Tools
Used to collect data in a study.
Tool Use
Questionnaires Gather standard responses from
many
Interviews Explore opinions, deeper meanings
Observations Record behavior directly
Tests Measure knowledge or skill
Scales (e.g. Likert) Assess attitudes or beliefs
Documents Use existing records
© Choose tools that match your research design,
* Questionnaire Tips
* Avoid complex, leading questions
* Choose open or closed format
Pilot test before use
© Types of Data
Type Example
Quantitative Numbers,
scores
Qualitative Words, feelings
* Sampling
Sampling = choosing a small group (sample) from a larger group (population).
Term Meaning
Population Entire group you want to study
Sample ‘Subgroup you actually study
‘Sampling Frame List of population
Target Population Ideal group for generalizationOD Probal
Method Description
ity Sampling (Random)
Simple Random Everyone has equal chance
Systematic Every Nth person
Stratified Grouped by traits, then sampled
Cluster Entire groups selected
Muttistage ‘Combination of sampling techniques
© Non-Probability Sampling (Non-Random)
Method Description
Purposive Specific people with criteria
Convenienc Easily accessible people
e
Snowball Referrals from existing participants
Quota Like stratified but not random
Lesson 4 Summary
Concept Meaning
Tool Used to collect data
Quantitative Data Measurable (e.g., test marks)
Qualitative Data Descriptive (e.g., opinions)
‘Sampling Select group to represent
others
Probability Random selection
Non-Probabilily Based on access or purposeLesson 5: Quantitative Data Analysis
¢ What Is Quantitative Data Analysis?
Itis the process of organizing, summarizing, and interpreting numerical data using
mathematical and statistical methods. It helps:
© Describe patterns
Test hypotheses
‘* Make comparisons and predictions
® Example: Measuring average test scores of students across three schools.
© Types of Measurement Scales
Scale Description Example
Nominal Categories without order Gender, Religion
Ordinal Ordered categories Rank in class (1st, 2nd...)
Interval Equal gaps, no true zero. Temperature (°C)
Ratio Equal gaps, has absolute Height, exam marks, weight
zero
© Tip: Most educational data (scores, age) are ratio scale.
@ Descriptive Statistics
Used to summarize and describe a data set.
Measure Explanation Example
Mean Average value Total + No. of items
Median Middle value Useful for skewed data
Mode Most frequent value Good for categorical data
Range Highest—Lowest value Spread of marks
Standard Deviation (SD) How spread out values. Higher SD = more variability
are
‘+ Tip: Use mean when data is symmetrical; median when data is skewed.
Inferential Statistics
Helps researchers draw conclusions from a sample and generalize to a population.@ Common Inferential Tests
Test Purpose Example Use
Test (Compare two group means Boys vs Girls in math scores
ANOVA Compare more than two group 3 teaching methods and their
means impact
Chi-Square Compare frequencies across Gender vs participation in
Test groups activities
Correlation (r) Measures strength of relationship Study time and exam scores
@ Correlation Values:
© +1.0= perfect positive
© 1.0 = perfect negative
© 0=no relationship
@ Hypothesis Testing Recap
Term Meaning
Null Hypothesis (Ho) No effect or relationship (status quo)
Alternative Hypothesis (H:) There is an effect or difference
p-value Probability result is by chance (p < 0.05 = significant)
@ If p< 0.05, reject the null hypothesis,
© Example Scenario
Research Question: Does teaching method affect student scores?
© Method A: 60, 62, 63
* Method B: 70, 72, 74
© Use t-test or ANOVA to compare means
© Ifp <0.05, result is significant
® Statistical Software
Software Use
SPSS Popular for social science data analysis
Used for technical/industrial data
MLwiN Used for multi-level statistical modeling
Excel Basic analysis (mean, SD, graphs)
You don't need to know how to operate them—just understand why they are used.Lesson 5 Summary
Term Meaning
Descriptive Stats Mean, median, mode, SD, range
Inferential Stats T-test, ANOVA, Chi-square, correlation
Hypothesis Testing Decide if diference is real or random
Statistical Software Helps organize and analyze numerical
data
+ Exam Tip: Be ready to match the correct statistical test tothe research design and questionLesson 6: Qualitative Data Analysis
What Is Qualitative Data?
Qualitative data refers to non-numerical information like’
© Words
© Ideas
© Experiences
© Observations
© Emotions
©@ Example: Students' feelings about classroom discipline policies shared during interviews.
© What Is Qualitative Data Analysis?
Itis the process of:
© Organizing and interpreting text-based data
* _Identitying patterns, themes, and meanings
© Descri
ing the social reality of participants
© Often inductive (builds theory from the data)
@ Key Features of Qualitative Analysis
Feature Description
Non-stati
1
ica Focuses on meanings over numbers
Flexible No fixed steps; adapts as data evolves
Contextual _Looks at data in real-life settings
Interpretive Involves the researcher's
understanding
Subjective Involves human interpretation¢ Common Qualitative Analysis Approaches
© Thematic Analysis
* Most widely used method in educational research
© Focuses on identifying themes or patterns
Steps:
1. Familiarization with data
2. Generating initial codes
3. Searching for themes
4, Reviewing themes
5. Defining and naming themes
6. Writing the report
®@ Example: Analyzing student interviews to identify themes like “teacher support,” “stress,” or
‘peer relationships”
G Grounded Theory
‘© Used to develop a theory from raw data
Useful when no existing theory explains the topic
Steps:
© Open coding -+ Categorization —+ Constant comparison —+ Theory development
® Example: Developing a theory on how students handle academic failure from interviews.
@ Tools for Qualitative Data Analysis
Tool Purpose
Manual Coding Reading and highlighting themes on paper
NVivo Software to organize, code, and visualize
data
Field Notes Notes taken during observations or
interviews
© You don't need to use NVivo in the exam—just know that it helps manage large sets of
qualitative data,@ Data Collection Tools (Revisited)
Tool Description
Interview Face-to-face, open-ended conversation
Observation Watch and record behaviors in real
settings
Document Analyze reports, diaries, logs
Review
Focus Groups Group discussions for diverse views
Coding - The Gore of Qualitative Analysis
Coding = Breaking dala into meaningful chunks
Each “code” represents a concept, idea, or recurring phrase
@ Example: Code the phrase ‘feel lef out in class” as “social isolation.”
@ Inductive vs Deductive Approach
Approach Meaning Example
Inductive Start with data, build theory Thematic analysis, grounded
theory
Deductive Start with existing theory Confirming a known framework
‘®@ Common Challenges
* Interpretation may be subjective
© Time-consuming and iterative
© Requires familiarity with context and culture
Use strategies like peer review, member checking, or triangulation to increase trustworthiness.
Lesson 6 Summary
Concept Meaning
Thematic Analysis Identify recurring themes in text
Grounded Theory —_ Build a new theory from data
NVivo Software for organizing qualitative data
Coding Labe
1g text segments with meaningful tags
Inductive Approach Data —> Codes —+ Categories — Themes —>
Theory
+ Exam Tip: You may be asked to describe how you would analyze interview data—mention
coding, theme-building, and tools like NVivo or field notesLesson 7: Research Wri
g and Dissemination
® What Is Research Writing?
Research writing is the process of presenting your research in a structured, clear, and academic
way. It involves:
‘© Organizing your findings
© Backing claims with evidence
‘* Communicating clearly to the academic audience
°®@ Example: Writing a report on how student performance improved after a new teaching method.
* Characteristics of Good Research Writing
© Clarity — Easy to understand
Conciseness ~ No unnecessary details
Logical flow ~ Smooth transitions between sections
Evidence-based ~ Backed by data and literature
Properly cited — Using correct referencing style
Original - Free from plagiarism
» Structure of a Standard Research Report
Sei Deser
Title Page Title, name, institution, date
Abstract Brief summary (150-250 words) of objectives, method, findings
Introduction Background, problem, objectives, research questions
Literature Review Summary of relevant past studies and theoretical framework
Methodology Design, participants, tools, sampling, data collection
Results Presentation of findings (charts, tables, explanations)
Discussion Interpretation of results, comparison with past studies
Conclusion ‘Summary, limitations, suggestions for future research
References List of sources (APA format)
Appendices Questionnaires, raw data (optional)
© Not at reports require ail sections—follow your university’ format if given.@ Academic Writing Tips
© Avoid informal language
* Use academic vocabulary (e.g,, “the data suggests” instead of I think")
‘© Use third person and passive voice (e.9., ‘was conducted")
© Define technical terms
© Write in paragraphs with topic sentences
'& APA Referencing (7th Edition)
Citation In-Text Reference List Format
Type Example
Book (Creswell, Creswell, J. W. (2014). Educational research.
2014)
Journal (Cohen, 2009) Cohen, M. L. (2009). Choral singing... Journal of
Article Correctional Education, 60, 52-65.
Website (UNESCO, —_ UNESCO. (2022), Global education report.
2022)
@ Always list full references in alphabetical order on a separate page.
@ What Is Plagiarism?
Plagiarism is using someone else’s work without proper credit.
Examples:
© Copy-pasting without citation
© Rewording a source but not citing
© Using someone's ideas or data as your own.
@ Tip: Use plagiarism detection tools and cite all sources.
© How to Avoid Plagiarism
* Use quotation marks for di
sot quotes
© Paraphrase properly (rephrase in your own words)
© Always cite the source
© Keep track of all references while writing
© Even paraphrased content needs a citation!} Dissemination of Research
Aer finishing your research, is important to share your findings with others.
Method
Description
Research Report Submitted to university or supervisor
Conference
Paper
Journal Article
Policy Brief
Online Sharing
Presented at academic gatherings
Published in peer-reviewed journals
For stakeholders and decision-makers
Blogs, research websites, digital
libraries
@ Example: Publishing an article on how digital fools affect student writing skils in a teacher
journal,
Lesson 7 Summary
Topic
Research Report
APA Referencing
Plagiarism
‘Academic Writing
Dissemination
Key Points
Formal, structured, academic document
Required format for citing sources
Must be avoided—cite all ideas and texts
Clear, formal, third-person style
Sharing findings with public or scholarly audiences:
»@ Exam Tip: Know the parts of a research report and how to cite using APA style.