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Research
Methods STA630
VU
Lesson
1
INTRODUCTION,
DEFINITION & VALUE OF
RESEARCH
Whether
we are aware of it or not, we
are surrounded by research.
Educators, administrators,
government
officials, business leaders, human
service providers, health care
professionals, regularly use
social
research findings in their
jobs. Social research can be
used to raise children,
reduce crime,
improve
public health, sell products,
improve workers' efficiency, or
just understand one's
life.
Assume
for the moment that you are
the Manager of a restaurant. You are
experiencing a significant
turn
over in your waiter/waitress
pool, and long-time customers have
been commenting that the
friendly
atmosphere
that has historically drawn
them to your door is changing.
What will you do? Where
will
you
try to solve this problem?
The problem of high turn
over and decline in the friendly
atmosphere at
the
restaurant has to be
researched.
The
study of research methods
provides you with the
knowledge and skills you
need to solve the
problem
and meet the challenges of a fast-paced
decision-making environment. A systematic
inquiry
whose
objective is to provide information to
the problems (be they managerial as in
our example) is one
way
to explain research.
What
is Research?
General
image of the research is that it has
something to do with the laboratory where
scientists are
supposedly
doing some experiments. Somebody who is
interviewing consumers to find
out their
opinion
about the new packaging of
milk is also doing research.
Research is simply the process
of
finding
solutions to a problem after
through study and analysis of the
situational factors. It is
gathering
information
needed to answer a question, and
thereby help in solving a
problem. We do not do study
in
any
haphazard manner. Instead we try to
follow a system or a procedure in an
organized manner. It is
all
the more necessary in case we want to
repeat the study, or somebody else
wants to verify our
findings.
In the latter case the other
person has to follow the
same procedure that we followed.
Hence
not
only we have to do the study in a
systematic manner but also
that system should be known
to others.
What
is the value of
Research?
The
nature of research problems could vary.
Problems may refer to some
undesirable situation or
these
may
refer to simply a curiosity of the
researcher that may be
agitating his or her mind.
For example, in a
recent
BA/BS examination of the Punjab
University 67 percent of the students
failed. That is a
colossal
wastage
of the resources, hence an undesirable
situation that needs
research to find a solution.
The
researcher
may come up with a variety
of reasons that may relate
with the students, the teachers,
the
curricula,
the availability of books, the
examination system, the family
environment of the student, and
many
more. So a study may be carried
out diagnose the situation, and the
recommendations to be
applied
to overcome the undesirable situation of
mass failure of
students.
In
the same examination result
one finds that girls have
captured a good number of top positions;
and
that
is happening for the last couple of
years. One gets curious and
tries to do research for
finding out
the
reasons. This is an academic
problem but certainly a
research problem. Conducting
such research
offers
the pleasure of solving a
puzzle. Why
the girls are catching most
of the top positions in
different
examination? This might be a puzzle
that the research may like
to explain. Such
findings
make
a good contribution to the body of
knowledge i.e. making some
good discoveries as part of the
basic
research. Finding answer to
any enigma is self
satisfying.
The
researchers try to make use
of their findings for
generating
theories and models that
could be used
for
understanding human behavior and the
functioning of different structures
both at the micro
(organizational)
and macro (societal)
level.
1
Research
Methods STA630
VU
Therefore,
research may be considered as an
organized,
systematic, data based,
critical, objective,
scientific
inquiry or investigation into a specific
problem,
undertaken with the purpose of
finding
answers
or solutions to it. In this
way research provides the
needed information that guides the
planners
to
make informed decisions to successfully
deal with the problems. The
information provided could
be
the
result of a careful analysis of data
gathered firsthand or of the data that
are already available with
an
organization.
.
The
value of research for policy
makers, planners, business managers,
and other stakeholders is that
it
reduces
uncertainty by providing information
that improves the decision-making
process. The decision
making
process associated with the
development and implementation of a strategy
involves four
interrelated
stages:
1.
Identifying
problems or opportunities;
2.
Diagnosing
and assessing problems or
opportunities;
3.
Selecting
and implementing a course of action;
and
4.
Evaluating
thee course of
action.
Identifying
problems and solutions to the
same problems is in fact applying the
research findings to
overcome
an undesirable situation. Initially a
problem may appear to be
simply a `tip of the iceberg'
but
the
study by a professional might
help locating the magnitude of the
issue as well as its
solutions. Such
research
is usually referred to as applied
research, which shall be
discussed in detail in the
coming
lectures.
Research
helps in developing
methodologies
By
now we know that the
researchers have to develop methodologies
for carrying out the
research.
These
methodologies are for the
collection of data, data processing
and data analysis. For the
new
researchers
these methodologies are
already available, most of the
researchers just use
these.
Nevertheless,
there is always a scope for
improvement and certainly new
methodologies are
developed.
Also
we try to borrow methodologies
from sister subjects.
Managers
and administrators with knowledge of
research have an advantage over those
who are
without.
Though a manager/administrator
him/herself may not be doing
any major research yet
he/she
will
have to understand, predict, and control
events that are
dysfunctional to the organization.
For
example,
a new product developed may
not be "taking off," or a
financial investment may not
be
"paying
off" as anticipated. Such
disturbing phenomena have to be understood and
explained. Unless
this
is done, it will not be possible to
predict the future of that
product or the prospects of
that
investment,
and how future catastrophic outcomes
can be controlled. A grasp of
research methods will
enable
managers/administrators to understand, predict, and
control their
environment.
Managers
may not be doing the
research themselves, in fact
they could hire the services
of
professionals,
and still they should be
well conversant with research
methodologies. The manager
who
is
knowledgeable about research
can interact effectively
with outside researchers or
consultants.
Knowledge
about research processes, design, and
interpretation of data also helps
managers to become
discriminating
recipients of the research findings
presented, and to determine
whether or not the
recommended
solution are appropriate for
implementation.
We
are surrounded by research
For
the understanding of the professional
works, incorporation of the new
findings in the practical
situations,
and for the implementation of the recommendations in
policy/planning, the managers have
to
be
well conversant with researchers.
Many of you may be preparing
yourselves for such
managerial
positions,
I am sure training in research
methodology will certainly be
helpful in your
career.
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