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Research Design
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Research design sits at the core of educational inquiry, shaping how questions are framed, how data is gathered, and how conclusions are drawn. Students encounter this topic in methodology courses, graduate seminars, and applied research practicums across education and the social sciences. Its academic interest lies in the foundational choices researchers must make before a single data point is collected — choices about paradigms, variables, populations, and the relationship between hypothesis and evidence. The tension between positivist and constructivist paradigms, for instance, runs through much of the field, raising genuine questions about objectivity, interpretation, and what counts as valid knowledge.

The papers archived on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some focus on conceptual frameworks, examining how paradigm selection — positivist or constructivist — shapes the entire logic of a study. Others are more applied, proposing hypotheses and identifying dependent variables for specific investigations such as adolescent sexual behavior, assessment feedback, or videoconference-based technician training. Still others concentrate on discrete components of the research process, including literature reviews, data analysis strategies, and performance measurement indicators, treating each element as something worth examining on its own terms.

A strong essay on research design clearly justifies every methodological choice in relation to the central research question, showing how the selected design logically connects participants, variables, and data collection to a testable hypothesis. Evidence drawn from peer-reviewed methodology literature carries particular weight. The most common pitfall is treating design decisions as bureaucratic formalities rather than substantive arguments — every choice about population, measurement, or analysis should be explicitly reasoned, not simply listed.

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Research Paper Doctorate
To What Extent Can Nurses Deliver Evidence-Based Care
Define main ideas within the title supported from the literature
Paper Undergraduate
Quantitative and qualitative research methods
This paper provides a description of research designs used in psychology, including qualitative methodologies such as case studies, ethnographies, phenomenological studies, grounded theory studies, as well as content and narrative analyses. A description of various quantitative methods such as observational studies, correlational research, developmental designs, survey research, experimental design; quasi-experimental, and ex post facto designs is also provided. Finally, a comparison of qualitative and quantitative methods is followed by a discussion of some mixed methods that are used in social research and an examination of the respective strengths and weaknesses of survey research and issues regarding sample size and validity and reliability. A summary of the research and important findings are presented in the conclusion
Essay Doctorate
High School Students Are Receiving Poor Education
Many studies show that high school students are receiving poor education as regards financial literacy (e.g. NAEP, 1979). Mandell (1997), for instance, reports that high school students have an average score of 57% in terms of money management, savings and investment, spending and other areas of income. HS graduates, in other words, have weak financial literacy. Adults also, generally, are almost totally illiterate regarding retirement and investment decision-making. A study of 552 adult females found that 56% were ignorant about the fundamentals of investing (Chen & Volpe, 1998). What this study seeks to investigate is whether college students would have a better grasp of financial literacy than high school graduates have and whether this improved financial literacy is a result of their college experiences.
Research Paper Doctorate
Systems Thinking Is a Way
Systems Thinking is a way of analyzing how a company works in considerable depth. It looks at individuals, subgroups within the company such as departments, and the ways individuals and departments interact with each…
Paper Undergraduate
Sandler, M. (2010). First Year
First Year Student Adjustment, Success, and Retention: Structural Models of Student Persistence Using Electronic Portfolios. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association…
Paper Undergraduate
Healthcare Master Case Study Baum, C.M., Et
Baum, C.M., et al. (2008). Reliability, Validity, and Clinical Utility of the Executive Function Performance Test: A Measure of Executive Function in a Sample of People With Stroke The American Journal of Occupational…
Paper Undergraduate
Integrity, Validity and Ethics Within
The advent of online-courses and to a greater extent online-universities have driven traditional brick and mortar universities to integrate online-courses into their teaching pedagogy.
Paper Undergraduate
E-learning versus traditional learning effectiveness and outcomes
The idea that e-learning could be seriously compared to traditional learning when it comes to efficacy in learning is somewhat controversial in theory; however, in these modern days, students are looking at online…
Paper Undergraduate
Compiling and analyzing raw research study data into findings
This study explored the efficacy of the client-directed outcome-informed therapeutic approach to counseling children and youth. Subjects were children and youth between the ages of eight and 16 who were assigned to a therapy as usual (TUA) group or to a CDIO group. Seven counselors trained in the CDIO approach and engaged in therapeutic with clients for two six-month periods. A suite of formal assessment tools was used to measure clients' satisfaction with therapeutic sessions and perceptions of goal attainment. Satisfaction levels and therapeutic outcomes were significantly better on all measures for clients in the CDIO group.
Paper Doctorate
Pragmatic Linguistic Awareness Motivation Research Study Outline
This paper discusses Takahashi's study on Pragmalinguistic Awareness and its relationship to Motivation and Proficiency. It concludes that Takahashi's study failed to verify the requestee comprehension necessary to confirm pragmalinguistic awareness. It proposes a new study which, in addition to examining the effects of listening skills, will also replace the Task A and Task B portions of Takahashi's study with a multiple-choice requestee response to the requester's dialogue.