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AEREN FOUNDATION’S Maharashtra Govt.
Reg. No.: F-11724
AN ISO 9001 : 2008 CERTIFIED INTERNATIONAL B-SCHOOL
|
SUBJECT : Research Methodology
COURSE : Total Marks : 100
1. Compare
'verification principle' of Logical Positivism with 'Falsifiability' of
KarlPopper and their relevance in Research Method. {5 Marks}
Answer:Karl Popper is
generally regarded as one of the greatest philosophers of science of the 20th
century. He was also a social and political philosopher of considerable stature,
a self-professed critical-rationalist, a dedicated opponent of all forms of
scepticism, conventionalism, and relativism in science and in human affairs
generally and a committed advocate and staunch defender of the ‘Open Society’.
One of the many remarkable features of Popper's thought is the scope of his
intellectual influence: he was lauded by Bertrand Russell, taught ImreLakatos,
Paul Feyerabend and the future billionaire investor and philanthropist George
Soros at the London School of Economics, numbered David Miller, Joseph Agassi,
Alan Musgrave and Jeremy Shearmur
2. Discuss the
concept of hypothesis, in the light of 'Falsifiability Criterion' of
KarlPopper. { 5 Marks}
Answer:For Popper
accordingly, the growth of human knowledge proceeds from our problems and from
our attempts to solve them. These attempts involve the formulation of theories
which, if they are to explain anomalies which exist with respect to earlier
theories, must go beyond existing knowledge and therefore require a leap of the
imagination. For this reason, Popper places special emphasis on the role played
by the independent creative imagination in the formulation of theory. The
centrality and priority of problems in Popper's account of
3. Distinguish
between 'Constitutive' and 'Operational' definitions. {5 Marks}
Answer:Constitutive Defines a
concept with other concepts and constructs, establishing boundaries for the
construct under study and stating the central idea or concept under study.Having
power to enact or establish; instituting.In the Kantian philosophy, principles
according to which an object of pure intuition can be constructed a priori:
opposed to regulative principles (which see, unite regulative).In physical
chemistry, it is a term introduced by Ostwald to denote those properties of a
compound which depend on the constitution of the molecule, or on the mode of
union and arrangement of the atoms in the molecule. A statement of the meaning
of the central idea or concept under study, establishing its boundaries; also
known as a theoretical, or conceptual,
4. What is a
Projective Test? What is the advantage of this test over the other forms
oftests? {5 Marks}
Answer: In psychology, a
projective test is a type of personality test in which the individual offers
responses to ambiguous scenes, words or images. This type of test emerged from
the psychoanalytic school of thought, which suggested that people have
unconscious thoughts or urges. These projective tests were intended to uncover
such unconscious desires that are hidden from conscious awareness.In many
projective tests, the participant is shown an ambiguous image and then asked to
give the first response that comes to mind. The key to projective tests is the
ambiguity of the stimuli. According to the theory behind such tests, clearly
defined questions
5. Discuss the
purpose of 'Research Design'. {5 Marks}
Answer:A research design
is a master plan specifying the methods and procedures for collecting and
analyzing the data. It is a strategy or blueprint that plans the action for
carrying through the research project data. A research design involves a series
of rational decision-making choices depending upon the various options
available to the researchers. Broadly it is composed of different elements
like: the purpose of the study, the unit of analysis, time dimension, mode of
observation, sampling design, observation tools, data processing, and data
analysis. Let us look at each one of these elements.
The purposes and
criteria for formulating a
6. Distinguish
between 'Descriptive Statistics' and 'Inferential Statistics'. {5 Marks}
Answer: Statistical
procedures can be divided into two major categories: descriptive statistics and
inferential statistics. Each of these segments of statistics is important, and
accomplishes different objectives. The names of these subfields are descriptive
and inferential statistics.
Descriptive
Statistics: Descriptive statistics is the type of statistics that
probably springs to most people’s minds when they hear the word “statistics.”
Here the goal is to describe. Numerical measures are used to tell about
features of a set of data.
7. Discuss the
theories of Truth and their relevance to Quantitative and QualitativeResearch.
{ 5 Marks }
Answer: Coherence theory
of truth regards truth as coherence within some specified set of sentences,
propositions or beliefs. There is no single set of such "logical
universes", but rather an assortment of perspectives that are commonly
discussed under this title.[citation needed] The model is contrasted with the
correspondence theory of truth. A
positive tenet is the idea that truth is a property of whole systems of
propositions and can be ascribed to individual propositions only derivatively
according to their coherence with the whole. While modern
8. Discuss 'Case
Study' method in Qualitative Methodology. { 5 Marks }
Answer:Case study does
not claim any particular methods for data collection or data analysis. Any and
all methods of gathering data from testing to interviewing can be used in a
case study, although certain techniques are used more than others. (Merriam,
1988) This study guide is concerned with qualitative case study research as
opposed to quantitative because of two reasons. First, I agree with Merriam
(1988) that research focused on discovery, insight and
9. Explain 'Data
Reduction' and 'Data Display' in Qualitative Research. { 5 Marks }
Answer:Qualitative
research is concerned with nonstatistical methods of inquiry and analysis of
social phenomena. It draws on an inductive process in which themes and
categories emerge through analysis of data collected by such techniques as
interviews, observations, videotapes, and case studies. Samples are usually
small and are often purposively selected. Qualitative research uses detailed
descriptions from the perspective of the research participants themselves as a
means of examining specific issues and problems under study.
Qualitative
research differs from quantitative research in that the latter is characterized
by the use of large samples, standardized measures, a
10 Discuss the
philosophical foundation of Qualitative Methodology. { 5 Marks }
Answer: Although new and
still emerging for us, qualitative research approaches have been receiving
considerable attention for some time in other disciplines. Along with
philosophical debates, there are debates about whether there needs to be a
debate. On a philosophical level, there is irreconcilable conflict between the
quantitative and qualitative paradigms. It is important to recognize this
conflict, avoiding illogical compromise. Yet, proponents of each paradigm need
to applaud both the existence of the other and the hybrid paradigms that
inevitably are born of conflict. An apt beginning would be broader definitions
of what constitutes science and
11.Choose an area
of your interest in Research and draft a Research Proposal with Title,Research
problems, Hypothesis, Variables, Quantification schemes of variables,
ResearchDesign and Analysis plan. ( 20 marks )
Answer: Health research,
medical education and clinical practice form the three pillars of modern day
medical practice. As one authority rightly put it: ‘Health research is not a
luxury, but an essential need that no nation can afford to ignore’. Health
research can and should be pursued by a broad range of people. Even if they do
not conduct research themselves, they need to grasp the principles of the scientific
method to understand the value and
12. Explain
different levels of measurement giving appropriate example of each level.{ 5
Marks }
Answer: The level of
measurement refers to the relationship among the values that are assigned to
the attributes for a variable. What does that mean? Begin with the idea of the
variable, in this example "party affiliation." That variable has a
number of attributes. Let's assume that in this particular election context the
only relevant attributes are "republican", "democrat", and
"independent". For purposes of analyzing the results of this
variable, we arbitrarily assign the
13. Why is
questionnaire still widely used in spite of its limitations? Mention
someimportant points to be kept in mind while constructing a questionnaire. (10
marks )
Answer:A Questionnaire
is often the heart of a survey operation. If the heart is not properly set up
then the whole operation is bound to fail. Thus studying the main objective of
the questionnaire is important. There are two main objectives in designing a
questionnaire:
1. To maximize
the proportion of subjects answering our questionnaire that is, the response
rate: To maximize our response rate, we have to consider carefully how we
administer the questionnaire, establish rapport, and explain the purpose of the
14. What is
validity of a tool? Describe different types of validity .{ 5 Marks }
Answer: Validity is the
extent to which a measurement tool measures what it's supposed to measure.
Remember your thermometer? It's measuring the room temperature, not your body
temperature. Since it's supposed to be measuring your body temperature, the
thermometer is not valid.
There are four
main types of validity:
·
Face validity is the extent to which a
tool appears to measure what it is supposed to measure.When a tool subjectively
appears to measure a construct. For example, if we give a survey to people to
test how empathetic they are, we might look at the survey and say, 'Yeah, this
looks like it measures empathy.'
15. Compare the
steps of a qualitative & quantitative research. { 5 Marks }
Answer: There are two
categories of research methods: qualitative and quantitative. Quantitative data
collection usually involves numbers, graphs and charts, whereas, qualitative data
collection methods deals with feelings and other non-quantifiable elements. The
most popular qualitative methods of data collection and analysis in business
studies are interviews, focus groups, observation, case studies, games and role
playing etc.
16. Discuss
Interview as a technique of data collection. { 5 Marks }
Answer: Interview is
verbal questioning. In research, Lindzey Gardner has defined interview as “a
two-person conversation, initiated by the interviewer for the specific purpose
of obtaining research-relevant information and focused by him on the content
specified by the research objectives of description and explanation”.
Functions of
interview:Two major functions of the interview
Dear
students get fully solved assignments
Send
your semester & Specialization name to our mail id :
“
help.mbaassignments@gmail.com ”
or
Call
us at : 08263069601
(Prefer
mailing. Call in emergency )
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