Ba Steps Research
Ba Steps Research
Ba Steps Research
BSA-4
Major Steps in Research
study. In the obesity study, the concept of individuals health can be defined in
hundreds of ways, such as physical, mental, emotional, or spiritual health. For
this study, the individuals health is defined as physical health. The concept of
physical health may also be defined and measured in many ways. In this case,
the programmer decides to more narrowly define individual health to refer to the
areas of weight, percentage of body fat, and cholesterol. By defining the terms or
concepts more narrowly, the scope of the study is more manageable for the
programmer, making it easier to collect the necessary data for the study. This
also makes the concepts more understandable to the reader.
Step 5: Define the Population
Research projects can focus on a specific group of people, facilities, park
development, employee evaluations, programs, financial status, marketing
efforts, or the integration of technology into the operations. For example, if a
researcher wants to examine a specific group of people in the community, the
study could examine a specific age group, males or females, people living in a
specific geographic area, or a specific ethnic group. Literally thousands of
options are available to the researcher to specifically identify the group to study.
The research problem and the purpose of the study assist the researcher in
identifying the group to involve in the study. In research terms, the group to
involve in the study is always called the population. Defining the population
assists the researcher in several ways. First, it narrows the scope of the study
from a very large population to one that is manageable. Second, the population
identifies the group that the researchers efforts will be focused on within the
study. This helps ensure that the researcher stays on the right path during the
study. Finally, by defining the population, the researcher identifies the group that
the results will apply to at the conclusion of the study.
Step 6: Develop the Instrumentation Plan
The plan for the study is referred to as the instrumentation plan. The
instrumentation plan serves as the road map for the entire study, specifying who
will participate in the study; how, when, and where data will be collected; and the
content of the program. This plan is composed of numerous decisions and
considerations that are addressed in chapter 8 of this text. In the obesity study,
the researcher has decided to have the children participate in a walking program
for six months. The group of participants is called the sample, which is a smaller
group selected from the population specified for the study. The study cannot
possibly include every 10- to 12-year-old child in the community, so a smaller
group is used to represent the population. The researcher develops the plan for
the walking program, indicating what data will be collected, when and how the
data will be collected, who will collect the data, and how the data will be
analyzed. The instrumentation plan specifies all the steps that must be
completed for the study. This ensures that the programmer has carefully thought
through all these decisions and that she provides a step-by-step plan to be
followed in the study.