Research article
elements are: Title, Abstract, Introduction/background, Methods, Results, Discussion,
& Implications/Conclusions
METHODS =
- Design
- Sample
- Setting
- Data collection/Instrument
Sometimes there are
sub-headings of design, sample, setting, & instrument.
Sometimes not.
- Key point #1: Design= overall plan for answering the question or proving the hypothesis. The 2 basic types of design are 1) experimental & 2) non-experimental. In experimental, the researcher does something to the subjects and measures the effects of that something. In non-experimental, the research merely observes and describes what is happening without doing anything to change it. (Note: Quasi-experimental designs are a subset of experimental ones—the researcher just doesn’t control as many variables.)
- Key point #2: Setting=where the study is conducted: home, hospital, office, classroom, on an ocean cruise, or other.
- Key point #3: Sample includes who/what subjects were in & excluded from the study; how many subjects were in the study; & whether subjects were selected using random methods or non-random methods. In random selection every eligible subject has the same chance of being selected. That’s called probability sampling. An example is drawing names from a hat. In non-random selection only the most nearby subjects are asked to be in the study. That’s called non-probability or convenience sampling. An example, using a clipboard to survey people who walk into a mall one day. [Note: Subjects can be people, animals, charts, hospitals, or nations.]
(Whew!....Enough for now.
In the next blog we’ll look at data collection methods.)
Critical Thinking Exercise: Find the Design, Setting, & Sample in
this excerpt of Methods from Mohammedkarimi et al, (2014):
“A double-blind,
randomized clinical trial (RCT) was performed
among 90 adult
patients with acute headache in Shahid Rahnemoon Emergency Center of Yazd city
of Iran (45 patients in lidocaine group and 45 patients in placebo group).
Patients with history of epilepsy, allergy to lidocaine, signs of skull base fracture,
Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) < 15, patients younger than 14 years and patients
who had received any medication in previous 2 h were excluded.”
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