Developing a Research Method

In order to decide on a research method appropriate to your project, you must study the literature on research methodology as well as that on your topic. You need to understand the various types of research and their suitability for different circumstances. In your dissertation you will need to explain the method you have used and justify the choices you have made. The thought processes involved in developing this rationale will make the way ahead for your project much clearer.

One of the books recommended for purchase on WMG’s Research Methods book list is by David Gray (2009). In Chapter 2, Gray explains some important fundamentals including:

  • inductive and deductive reasoning;
  • research paradigms such as positivism (“the world is external and objective“) and interpretivism (“the world is socially constructed and subjective“);
  • research methodologies such as experimental research, phenomenological research, analytical surveys, action research or heuristic enquiry;
  • how to put these together within a coherent framework that also contains a timeframe and data collection methods.

In Chapter 7, Gray addresses research design based on qualitative methods. He argues that the choice of which strategy or strategies of enquiry to adopt in this approach will depend partly on the research paradigm adopted. He examines the main strategies of enquiry. He discusses various approaches to qualitative design.

An idea put forward by Gray that I find of special value is the use of a conceptual framework. Gray ascribes this idea to Miles and Hyberman (1994). He says that a conceptual framework describes in pictorial and written form “the key factors, constructs and variables being studied – and the presumed relationships amongst them“. The models that my students constructed on the whiteboard in our December tutorial [link1 and link2] were the beginnings of such a conceptual framework. Its power and usefulness lie in helping to establish a boundary for the research, to clarify what is inside and outside that boundary and the relationships which exist, and to enable unambiguous statements about the focus of the research.

Other important points made by Gray concern:

  • the unit of analysis – for example individuals, groups, organisations or communities;
  • types of qualitative data, their characteristics and how they are collected;
  • choice of sampling strategy;
  • when the data analysis processes should be planned.

These ideas merit serious thought. Time devoted to such thought delivers a big pay-back.

References

GRAY, D. E. 2009. Doing research in the real world, Sage Publications Ltd.

MILES, M. B. & HUBERMAN, A. M. 1994. Qualitative data analysis: An expanded sourcebook, SAGE publications, Inc.

 

MyiLibrary

MyiLibrary (get to it via Athens) provides access to collections of books, reports, journals, bulletins and other documents published by inter-governmental organisations such as the World Bank, United Nations and International Labour Organisation. The full text for many of them is available online.

SciVerse

SciVerse is a toolset by Elsevier that combines ScienceDirect (full text journal articles), Scopus (abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed literature) and SciTopics (research summaries).

Digital object identifier

Wikipedia defines a digital object identifier (DOI) as “a character string (a “digital identifier”) used to uniquely identify an object such as an electronic document. Metadata about the object is stored in association with the DOI name and this metadata may include a location, such as a URL, where the object can be found. The DOI for a document is permanent, whereas its location and other metadata may change. Referring to an online document by its DOI provides more stable linking than simply referring to it by its URL, because if its URL changes, the publisher need only update the metadata for the DOI to link to the new URL.

EndNote Web – using Harvard style

To set the Harvard style as one of your favourites for use throughout EndNote web:

  1. Open EndNote Web.
  2. Select the ‘Format’ tab and then ‘Bibliography’.
  3. Click on ‘Select Favourites’ beside the drop down box labelled Bibliographic Style.
  4. Scroll down the list labelled ‘All’ and select ‘Harvard’.
  5. Click on ‘Copy to Favorites’.

The Harvard style will now be available to you in the Cite While You Write plug-in for MS Word.

  1. On the EndNote Web toolbar in MS Word, select ‘Harvard’ in the Style drop-down box .
  2. Put the cursor in the document where you want to enter the citation and click ‘Find Citations’.
  3. A window opens to let you select the reference. When you have done so, click ‘Insert’.
  4. The citation is inserted in the body of the text and the reference is added to the list of references at the end of the text.

 

Citation mapping

Hart (1998) explains the usefulness of citation mapping and analysis in order “to map out the development of an idea, technique or theory“, which is an important aspect of a literature review. See also what Wikipedia has to say about citation index.

Google Scholar is a free tool to help with this. The paper by Noruzi (2005) gives an overview of how to use Google Scholar.

References
Hart C. 1998. Doing a literature review : releasing the social science research imagination. London: SAGE.
Noruzi A. 2005. Google Scholar: The New Generation of Citation Indexes. Libri, International Journal of Libraries and Information Services 55(4):169-253.