Essay Topic Hub

Data Collection
Essays

1,352+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,352 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Data collection is the systematic process of gathering information to answer research questions, test hypotheses, or evaluate outcomes. It appears across a wide range of disciplines, including social science, public health, business, and education, making it a foundational topic in methods-oriented courses at both undergraduate and graduate levels. What makes it academically interesting is that the choice of collection method directly shapes the quality and meaning of findings, meaning researchers must justify their approach as carefully as they design their analysis. Students are frequently asked to examine not just what data is gathered but how the process is structured, standardized, and reported.

The papers archived under this topic reflect several distinct approaches. Many focus on methodology itself, comparing qualitative and quantitative methods and weighing the strengths of surveys, coding schemes, and classification systems. Others apply data collection principles to specific contexts, such as public health crisis response, business analysis, or acculturation research among college populations. Some papers address evaluation research and the way research questions determine which collection instruments are appropriate, while others critically examine common problems researchers and institutions encounter when gathering information in real-world settings.

A strong essay on data collection should open with a clearly scoped thesis that connects a specific method to a defined research purpose rather than surveying all possible methods in general terms. Evidence typically carries the most weight when it demonstrates how methodological choices affect the validity and reliability of findings. The most common pitfall is treating data collection as a neutral, mechanical step; examiners expect students to engage critically with the assumptions built into any collection instrument or procedure.

1,352 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
City of Alexandria -- Time Series Data
Tufte (2001) and other ambassadors of the visual display of data have shown us how easily it is to understand complex data when it is graphically represented in ways that our minds are designed to understand. Tufte argues that "experience with the analysis of data…is essential for achieving precision and grace in the presence of statistics, .but even textbook of graphical design are silent about how to think about numbers" (Tufte, 2001, p. 104). Tufke remarks, that "Illustrators too often see their work as an exclusively artistic enterprise—the words "creative," "concept," and "style" combine regularly in all possible permutations—a Big Think jargon for the small task of constructing a time-series a few data points long" (Tufte, 2001, p. 204). Visual display of data has other uses than simply an elegant way to view, appreciate, and analyze data. The process of completing a graphic display of data forces the issue of data integrity and completion of data sets. When data is missing in a graphic display, it is glaringly apparent. And the process of figuring out how to arrange data for best display generates an awareness of the assumptions that undergird the data collection—and ultimately, the data analysis. When creating a visual display of data, the analyst has cause to "muse on the ineffable origins of…insights" (Gladwell, 2007, p. 40) . The analyst admits, if only privately, that "There are ten different things it can mean…--all of those are possibilities. You can't just look at one behavior [or data point] in isolation" (Gladwell, 2007, p. 43). When the data just doesn't come together, we might do well to recall Averch's caveat, that "If we believe that the information to be gained by evaluation should be proportional to the decision makers' needs, time, budget, and attention, then conventional quantitative evaluations may be infeasible or inappropriate" (n.d., p. 292).
Essay Undergraduate
Philosophical perspectives on subjective thought and opinion
The Social Process Theory argues that people commit crime based on social influences (McQuade, 2009). Social influences can be strong where shoplifting is concerned with peer pressure in delinquency or with family…
Research Paper Doctorate
Impact of Title I On HIV AIDS Programs in Dade County
¶ … programs and actions taken by health agencies to support cities and communities in their fight against the spread of HIV and AIDS virus. It will also discuss the demographic information of cities with high rate of…
Essay Doctorate
Benefits and management challenges of health information technology in physician practices
Synthesizing health care and technology can be a very advantageous endeavor when the proper planning and understanding are applied to this technique. Physician practices is one area of health care where this is quite…
Paper Undergraduate
Personal SWOT Analysis and Team Communication Strategies
Successful and Effective Personal and Team Development
Case Study Undergraduate
Program Evaluation Methods in Health Education: A Guide
¶ … integrate evaluation techniques in your daily work routine to improve your job performance? (Answer taken from PDF uploaded - Program_Evaluation_-_Overview_and_Definitions_PowerPoint)
Paper Undergraduate
Research indicators and quality of life in Alexandria
Quality of Life Indicators -- City of Alexandria
Research Paper Doctorate
Applied drama in educational and therapeutic contexts
¶ … Remotely-Based Sales Managers More Motivated and Effective Than Branch-Based Sales Managers?
Paper Undergraduate
Case study analysis methods and applications
Stroke is identified as one of the leading causes of death and to decrease mortality rate a review of the causes is required. The importance of measuring and reviewing health care quality is no longer questioned.
Research Paper Doctorate
Wound care principles and practices
Chronic wounds represent a devastating health care problem with significant clinical, physical and social implications. Evidence suggests that consistent, meticulous and skilled care provides the primary means by which…