Summative test reviewer

Cards (29)

  • BENEFIT: The Quality Of Being Important, having notable worth or influence.
  • BENEFICIARY: A person or organization that benefit from something
  • Scope and Delimitation: a specific part that summarizes the method, design, techniques, locale, instruments, population, process in analyzing the data, and the like.
  • SCOPE: the extent of the area or subject matter that something deals with or to which it is relevant.
  • Delimitation: it refers to choices made by researcher that serves as boundary (Simon 2011). This includes research objectives, questions, variables, theoretical objectives you adopted, target samples, and justifications that limits the scope of the study
  • Informative: it is to where you declare the things you have to carry out and follow through the course of research.
  • Population: –According to Majid (2018), this stands for the entire pool from which the sample is drawn
  • SETTING: –It refers to the particular location where the study is conducted
  • Specific Duration: This stands for the exclusive time frame when the research is conducted
  • Research Method : –This refers to the systematic plan for conducting research which includes strategies, process, techniques, and procedures for collecting and analyzing data (MacDonald and Headlamp 2008).
  • Ethnography: –If your research is about a description or investigation about customs of individual and culture, this design can be used (Elis and Bochner 1996).
  • Phenomenology: –If your research is about the commonality of lived experience within a group of individuals or description of a particular phenomenon, this research design can be used (Singh 2018).
  • Case Study: –If your research is about an investigation of a phenomenon within the context of real-life situation, you can use this design (Kothari 2004) .
  • Grounded Theory:
    If your research aims toward a development of a theory in an inductive manner, you can use this design (VanderStoepand Johnston 2009).
  • Data Gathering Procedure:
    This refers to the step-by-step procedures that you employ before and during the data gathering.
  • Instrument: These are measurement devices that you use in your research. It can be in a form of test, survey, questionnaire, and the like
  • Qualitative research: you as the researcher is the instrument, and your interview guide serve as a tool in gathering the data (Bahrami, Soleimani, Yaghoobzadeh, & Ranjbar, 2016).
  • SAMPLING METHOD: is the selection of suitable participants to enable the focus of the study to be appropriately researched.
  • Convenience Sampling: it occurs when people are invited to participate in the study because they are conveniently (opportunistically) available with regard to access, location, time, and willingness.
  • Purposive Sampling: Participants are recruited according to pre-selected criteria relevant to the research aims/questions of a given study.
  • Snowball Sampling: Also known as ‘chain referral’ or ‘networking’ sampling.
  • Theoretical Sampling :
    This form of sampling is mostly used in grounded theory studies but is increasingly being used to gather data for the purpose of theory generation.
  • Step 1: State the importance in conducting the study.
    This paragraph introduces the significance as a general information to the beneficiaries.
  • Step 2 : Identify the research beneficiaries-these are the people or group people who gain advantage or benefit from the study.
  • Step 3 : Discuss the specific benefits that they would get from it.
  • The first paragraph :
    contains methods, research design, research locale, time duration, population, sampling and class size
  • The second paragraph:
    includes the instrument used, validation and protocols followed in the conduct of the study.
  • The last paragraph :
    is the declaration of data gathering and analysis. It is important that you need to provide proper justifications of the elements you will be using. It is done through the wisdom of the experts –citation.
  • Scope of research:
    it commonly refers to the depth your research area or parameters