Research Reviewer

Cards (35)

  • Scientific Research- objective, logical, and repeatable attempt to understand the principles and forces operating the natural universe
  • Scientific Research- create or add to the existing pool of knowledge
  • Scientific Research- Innovate, modify, and make your breakthrough. Investigation, study, exploration, or probe on anything by applying systematic and scientific methods
  • Scientific research- questions and problems aimed to improve the quality of lide
  • Basic Research- expand knowledge about a particular phenomenon
  • Basic Research- Answers why, what, and how. Results and conclusions are used to further our understanding, even used to rectify our understanding
  • Applied Research- solve a specific societal and environmental problem.
  • Applied Research- knowledge generated has a specific commercial value, used to develop a product, procedure or service
  • Applied Research- to discover a solution to a practical problen
  • Researchable topics- supported by evidence that is observable, factual, and logical
  • Research Title- important part of research paper, a brief description of what your study is all about
  • Research Title- must to written initially. Doing so provides directions for your study
  • Background of the Study- includes existing literatures, current issues and present problems and circumstances
  • Background of the Study- gaps of knowledge and discussion of the problem
  • Statement of the Problem- concentrates on the issue or problem and has declarative sentences
  • Statement of the Problem- sets the focus of the study, centers what you intend to investigate
  • Statement of the Problem- answerable via experimentation
  • Significance of the Study- points out the advantages that will come from the results
  • Significance of the Study- emphasizes the concerned population. Specifies the potential benefits or contribution of your study
  • Scope and Limitations of your study- launches the limit of the processes and discusses the variable and method used
  • Literature review- comprehensive classification and evaluation of what other researchers have written about your topic
  • LIterature review- gives justification as to how your research will fit into the existing body of knowledge
  • Citation- process of acknowledging sources
  • References- demonstrates the through literaure search and readings
  • Bibliography- complete listing of sources
  • Quantitative Research Design- plan or outline of activities for obtaining answers
  • Quantitative Research Design- make aspects of research clearer
  • Experiments research design- bases its research method on a scientific activity called experiment
  • experimental research design- test of manipulated or controlled variables to determine its validity and truthfulness
  • true experimental design- random selection of participants, bias-free, and examines cause and effect relationship
  • Quasi experimental design- yield findings, non- adherence, prone to bias, and tests the causality of variables
  • Non- experimental research design- giving quati and qualitative data, and used in field of social science
  • Non- experimental research design- shuns controlling variables, and involves variables the way they naturally exist
  • Methodology- describes the approaches used to systematically conduct the research and provides rationale
  • Methodology- critically assess the research's overall validity