Topic 5 - The Research Approach
Topic 5 - The Research Approach
Topic 5 - The Research Approach
I. Objectives
II. Content
1. The Philosophical Background.
2. The Quantitative Approach.
3. The Qualitative Approach.
Research approaches are plans and procedures for research that span the steps from broad
assumptions to detailed methods of data collection, analysis, and interpretation. This plan
involves special decisions. The overall decision involves which approach should be used to study
a given topic. Informing this decision should have philosophical assumptions that the researcher
brings to the study. These assumptions are a basic set of beliefs that guide action. In other
contexts, such assumptions have been called paradigms: epistemology and ontologies, or broadly
conceived research methodologies. These basic philosophical assumptions arise based on
discipline orientations, students’ advisors, students’ inclination, and past research experiences.
The types of beliefs held by individual researchers based on these factors will often lead to
embracing a particular type of approach in this research.
Although there is a great deal of an ongoing debate about these philosophical assumptions or
beliefs that researchers bring to inquiry, four examples are available and common on the
literature in research methodology. These are stated as follows: Post-positivism, Constructivism,
Transformative, and Pragmatism. The major elements of each position are presented in the table
below:
Post-positivism Constructivism
• Determination • Understanding
Transformative Pragmatism
• Collaborative Pluralistic
In applied linguistics, a number of researchers pointed out that the period, which went
between 1970-1985 saw a significant increase of quantitative research. These researchers
also highlighted that also a short time after this period, particularly in the 1990’s, a growing
sophistication of quantitative studies confirmed the coming of the age quantitative research in
applied linguistics.
4. Statistics and the language statistics: This is the most salient of quantitative
research.
Contrarily, the opponents of this approach view that quantitative research as overly simplistic,
decontextualized, reductionist in terms of its generalisation and fails to capture the meanings that
actors attain to their lives and circumstances.
1. Emergent research design: The emergent research design means a qualitative research
study is kept open and fluid so that it can respond in a flexible way to new
2. The nature of qualitative data: Qualitative research works with a wide range of data,
including interviews, documents, and even images.
3. The characteristics of the research setting: Because of the qualitative approach nature
that seeks to describe social phenomena as they occur naturally, qualitative research
takes place in natural setting, without any attempts to manipulate the situation under
study.
4. Insider meaning: Qualitative research is concerned with subjective opinions,
experiences, and feelings of individuals. In this respect, the goal of qualitative
research is to explore the participants’ views of the situation being studied.
5. Small sample size: Qualitative research typically relies on the necessity to use smaller
samples of participants.
6. Interpretive analysis: Qualitative research is fundamentally interpretive, which means
that the research outcome is ultimately the product of the researcher’s subjective
interpretation of data.
Supporters of this research approach claim that the main advantage of such a methodology is
that it has been seen as an effective way of exploring new uncharted areas. Besides, qualitative
methods are seen to be very useful for making sense of highly complex situations. That is, the
groundedness of qualitative research helps to distinguish real phenomena from intellectual
fabrications.
As opposed to these merits, the qualitative approach is often criticised on the role played by the
researcher in analysing the data. This may have negative impacts on the final results. For the
proponents, this approach is not comprehensive since it lacks methodological rigour and appears
to be unprincipled and fuzzy. To these, they add the problem of consuming time in that
researchers agree on that the processing of qualitative data takes too much time in the analysis
process.