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Research Methods, VUB - summary

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​Research Methods​
1​. BUSINESS RESEARCH​
​T heory: generalisation of insights that come from data​

​R esearch may draw on:​
​- ​ ​primary data = gathered first-hand, didn’t exist before​
​- ​ ​s econdary data = previously collected, already exists​

​Applied research​ ​basic research​
​- ​ A ​ nswers to research question related​ ​- ​ D ​ riven by curiosity, more complex​
​to action, performance or policy​ ​- >build theories that may serve as a​
​- > Practical problem-solving of a​ ​f oundation of further studies​
​s pecific business problem​ ​- ​ ​No direct impact on action,​
​- ​ ​More specific and faster answer​ ​performance or policy​
​- ​ ​C onducted by academics,​ ​- > but Innovations or practical​
​practitioners policy makers​ ​implications may occur in long run​
​- ​ ​Mainly conducted by academics​
​= business research mostly​

​ hy managers need to know about research:​
W
​T o identify and solve problems, make the right decisions based on facts rather than vested​
​Interests​

​C haracteristics of scientific research​
​1)​ ​Purposiveness: to answer a question/ solve a problem​
​2)​ ​R igor: Good theoretical base and methodology ->very exact​
​Ex. researcher asks 10-12 employees to indicate what would increase their level of​
​commitment: not very scientific because lacks theoretical en methodological base​
​because simply asking them questions is too vague and no structured instrument is​
​u sed​

​3)​ T
​ estability: Applies to the hypotheses of the study​
​Hypothesis: a testable statement, predicts what you expect to find in empirical data,​
​u sed in quantitative research​
​Ex. “Employees who actively participate in decision making will have a​
​higher level of commitment than employees who do not”​
​<->proposition: not testable because more abstract, used in qualitative research​
​Ex. "Organizational support influences employee attitudes."​

, ​4)​ V​ alidity​
​Internal: are the results accurate? Did X cause Y?​
​External: Can the results be used with other people, in other places, or at other times?​
​- > Generalizability​

​ )​
5 ​ bjectivity: no bias​
O
​6 )​ ​G eneralizability = quantitative (qualitative research cannot be generalised)​
​7)​ ​R epresentativity: Sample with sufficiently large number of elements or events?​
​8 )​ ​R eplicability: Findings and conclusions should be replicable in other studies.​
​= applying methodology to new data​
​- >researcher can contribute to replicability of the research by: making it accessible,​
​clear reporting,...​

​9)​ P
​ arsimony = simplicity​
​- > Ockham’s razor​
​“Three factors explaining commitment by 50%” are more useful than “ten factors​
​e xplaining commitment by 55%”​
​- > Best: greatest possible empirical facts from smallest possible number of​
​Hypotheses​

​2. SCIENTIFIC APPROACH​

2​ .1 The hypothetico-deductive approach​
​A seven-step process:​
​1)​ ​Identify a broad problem area​
​2)​ ​Define the problem statement, incl. objective or research question(s): gather ideas​
​related to the problem, Narrow down and develop a​​conceptual framework​

​3)​ D
​ evelop testable hypothesis/-es : possible to test if true or false trough data​
​(ex. Grades of students who missed class would have been higher if they had​
​a ttended classes” = not testable because you can’t observe both scenarios)​

​4)​ C
​ hoose measures for the variables in the hypotheses (ex. % of classes attended;​
​g rades %)​
​- >proxy measurements= indirect measure of a concept that cannot be measured​
​directly. Ex. Student engagement, so you use: attendance rate, number of questions​
​a sked, time spent on course website,…​

​5 )​ ​C ollect data: for each variable​

, ​6 )​ A
​ nalyze the data: to see whether they support or reject the hypothesizes, by using​
​Statistical techniques (correlation analysis, regression analysis,..)​

​7)​ I​nterpret the data​
​Null hypothesis H0 = There is no effect, no relationship, or no difference. (ex.​
​“Students who attend class and those who skip class have the same average​
​g rades.”)​
​Alternative hypothesis Ha or H1 = your own hypo, there IS an effect​
​- ​ ​If H​​0​ ​is rejected, => plausible explanation for the​
​a lternative => make recommendations about this​
​outcome, answering the question “What should​
​people do with this finding?” e.g. towards theory,​
​policy, management: ex. Lecturers should track​
​a ttendance​
​- ​ ​If H​​0​ ​not rejected, alternative claim not supported,​​more future research​
​needed.​

2​ .2 Deductive and inductive approach​
​deductive​ ​inductive​
-​ ​ T ​ o test a theory​ -​ ​ T ​ o develop a theory​
​- ​ ​Approach: Theory => Data =>​ ​- ​ ​Approach: Data => Findings/Patterns​
​F indings​ ​=> Theory​

​=>sequential use: best of both worlds​
​- ​ ​Inductive->deductive: you start by observing patterns in data or real-life phenomena &​
​g enerate tentative explanation or theory -> You take that new idea/theory and​
​f ormally test it with new data.​
​- ​ ​Deductive -> inductive (the hypothetico-deductive approach): You start with a theory​
​or hypothesis -> After testing, you find unexpected results or new patterns. You then​
​revise or expand the theory based on your observations​
​T entative= not yet certain, fixed, or fully developed, is subject to change.​

​2.3 Ontology and epistemology​

​-​ ​ ntology​​: Study of the nature of reality​
O
​- >Helps you look at reality (objects) you are studying​

​Objectivism​ ​s ubjectivism/ constructionism​
“​There is an objective truth”​ “​There is no objective reality.”​
​- >All researchers understand reality in the​ ​- >Researchers may construct different​
​s ame way​ ​perceptions of reality, based on personal​
​e xperience, moral point of view,…​
​Ex., stress, taste, fairness​

, ​=> Some concepts can be studied from both an objective and subjective perspective.​

​Example: culture -> give objective (languages spoken, dress styles, food,..) and subjective​
​e lements(values & beliefs, Identity “I feel proud to be a part of it”, emotional attachment to​
​traditions)​

​-​ ​Epistemology:​ ​Study of the nature of knowledge and​​how to reach it​
-​ > Influences the way you learn and develop knowledge about that reality​
​Positivism​ ​- -->​ ​critical realism <--- interpretivism/phenomenology​
​- ​ K​ nowledge is based​ ​- ​ O ​ bjective knowledge​ ​- ​ K​ nowledge is built​
​on observed facts​ ​e xists, but is subject​ ​through ideas and​
​- ​ ​C ause-and-effect​ ​to interpretation,​ ​interpretation​
​relationships​ ​because it is​ ​- ​ ​Particular contexts​
​- ​ ​R esearcher is​ ​impossible to fully​ ​- ​ ​Values, thinking​
​independent analyst​ ​reach it​ ​process, and​
​= distance​ ​- ​ ​Part of theory cannot​ ​viewpoint of​
​- ​ ​Example:​ ​be observed​ ​researcher also​
​hypothetico-deductive​ ​- ​ ​‘What is real’ may​ ​count​
​method​ ​differ from what is​ ​- ​ ​Example:​ ​Explaining​
​‘observable’​ ​political power across​
​- ​ ​Example: Burnout​ ​cultural contexts​
​may occur without​
​being observed​



​A tentative synthesis​




​! Tendancies, rather than clear cut distinctions​
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