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Quantitative Techniques-II



                      Notes         Research involves an eclectic blending of an enormous range of skills and activities. To be a
                                    good social researcher, you have to be able to work well with a wide variety of people, understand
                                    the specific methods used to conduct research, understand the subject that you are studying, be
                                    able to convince someone to give you the funds to study it, stay on track and on schedule, speak
                                    and write persuasively, and on and on.


                                    3.1 Construct

                                    1.   Theoretical and Empirical: A research might be theoretical or empirical depending on the
                                         way it is written and the objective it needs to follow.

                                         If much of a research is concerned with developing, exploring or testing the theories or ideas
                                         that social researchers have about how the world operates, then it is known as theoretical
                                         research. But sometimes, the research can also be empirical, meaning that it is based on
                                         observations and measurements of reality – on what we perceive of the world around us.
                                         You can even think of most research as a blending of these two terms – a comparison of our
                                         theories about how the world operates with our observations of its operation .
                                    2.   Nomothetic and Idiographic: The word nomothetic comes perhaps from the writings of
                                         the psychologist Gordon Allport. It refers to laws or rules that pertain to the general case
                                         (nomos in Greek) and is contrasted with the term “idiographic” which refers to laws or
                                         rules that relate to individuals (idios means ‘self’ or ‘characteristic of an individual in
                                         Greek).




                                       Notes  In any event, the point is that most social research is concerned with the nomothetic–
                                       the general case – rather than the individual. We often study individuals, but usually we
                                       are interested in generalizing to more than just the individual.

                                    3.   Probabilistic and Realistic: In our post-positivist view of science, we no longer regard
                                         certainty as attainable. Thus probabilistic as a term represents much contemporary social
                                         research which is most often than not, based on probabilities. The inferences that we make
                                         in social research have probabilities associated with them – they are seldom meant to be
                                         considered covering laws that pertain to all cases. Part of the reason we have seen statistics
                                         become so dominant in social research is that it allows us to estimate probabilities for the
                                         situations we study.

                                    3.2 Definitions/Concept

                                    Every research involves certain mandatory concepts that have to be understood and well applied
                                    by every researcher.

                                    3.2.1  Types of Questions


                                    There are three basic types of questions that research projects can address:
                                    1.   Descriptive: When a study is designed primarily to describe what is going on or what
                                         exists. Public opinion polls that seek only to describe the proportion of people who hold
                                         various opinions are primarily descriptive in nature.


                                           Example: If we want to know what percent of the population would vote for a Democratic
                                    or a Republican in the next presidential election, we are simply interested in describing something.




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