Chap 03 A1
Chap 03 A1
Chap 03 A1
Chapter 3A
Introduction
Once you select an area of interest, you are only part of the way
there. Next comes the statement of this interest in the form of a
research question followed by a formal hypothesis. Then it is on to
reviewing the literature.
Introduction
Introduction
The research question and research hypothesis are more an
outgrowth of an interaction between the scientist's original idea and
an ongoing, thorough review of the literature (good scientists are
always reading). This means that once you formulate a hypothesis,
it is not carved in stone but can be altered to fit what the review of
the literature may reflect, as well as any change in ideas you may
have.
Introduction
The ongoing review of the literature and the changing ideas about
the relationship between the variables will influence the direction
your research will take.
The hypothesis might need revision, given the content of the
literature that you review.
The execution of the research study will be deter-
mined by the way in which the research question is stated and the
way in which the research hypothesis is tested.
It is doubtful that a review of the relevant literature would not shed
some light on this matter.
Selecting a Problem
Take time and select a research problem that makes sense to you
and that interests you, while at the same time makes a contribution
to your specific discipline.
The selection of the area in which to work on is extremely
important for two reasons.
First, research takes a great deal of time and energy, and you
want to be sure that the area you select interests you.
Second, the area you select is only the first step in the research
process. If this goes well, the remaining steps, which are
neither more nor less important, also have a good
chance of going well.
It is easy to do, but falling in love with your idea can be fatal.
This happens when the researcher become so infatuated with an
idea and the project and you invest so much energy in it that you
cannot bear to change anything about it.
Selecting a Problem
Do you like your first idea for a research study? Great, but don't run
out and place an advertisement for research subjects in the
newspaper quite yet.
Doing something of little value or importance. by selecting a
problem that has no conceptual basis or apparent importance in the
field can lead to a frustrating experience and one that provides no
closure.
"Where does this study fit in with all that has been done before?"
Be realistic and propose only what you know you can finish given
all the other demands on your time and energy.
If you do something that has already been done, you could be
wasting your time.
M. Jahangir Alam Chowdhury 3A-1-7
University of Dhaka
Chapter 3A Business Research Methodology
A well-written hypothesis:
Is stated in declarative form
Posits a relationship between variables
Reflects a theory or body of literature upon which it is based
Is brief and to the point
Is testable
In fo r m a tio n S o u r ce W h a t It D o e s E x a m p les
Thank You