FET 401 Week 5 Lecture Note
FET 401 Week 5 Lecture Note
The overall decision involves which design should be used to study a topic. The selection of a
research design is also based on the nature of the research problem or issue being addressed, the
researchers’ personal experiences, and the audiences for the study.
Research Design in general terms can be referred to as the scheme of work to be done or
performed by a researcher during the various stages of a research project. With the help of the
research design, one can very easily handle and operate research work as research design acts as
a working plan, which is made by a researcher even before he starts working on his research
project. By this, the researcher gets great help and guidance in achieving his aims and goals. A
good research design possesses the following characteristics: Objectivity, Reliability; Validity;
Generalizability; and Adequate Information.
A well-planned research design helps ensure that your methods match your research objectives
and that you use the right kind of analysis for your data. Choosing an appropriate research
design is crucially important to the success of your project. The decisions you make at this
stage of the research process do much to determine the quality of the conclusions you can draw
from your research results.
Experimental Research
Unlike correlational research, experimental research incorporates a high degree of
control over the variables of your study. This control, if used properly, permits you to
establish causal relationships among your variables. Experimental research is a powerful tool
for understanding cause-and-effect relationships. It allows us to manipulate variables and
observe the effects, which is crucial for understanding how different factors influence the
outcome of a study. But the importance of experimental research goes beyond that. It’s a critical
method for many scientific and academic studies. It allows us to test theories, develop new
products, and make groundbreaking discoveries.
Experimental research, often considered to be the “gold standard” in research designs, is one of
the most rigorous of all research designs. In this design, one or more independent variables are
manipulated by the researcher (as treatments), subjects are randomly assigned to different
treatment levels (random assignment), and the results of the treatments on outcomes (dependent
variables) are observed. The unique strength of experimental research is its internal validity
(causality) due to its ability to link cause and effect through treatment manipulation while
controlling for the spurious effect of extraneous variables. Experimental research is best suited
for explanatory research (rather than for descriptive or exploratory research), where the goal of
the study is to examine cause-effect relationships. It also works well for research that involves a
relatively limited and well-defined set of independent variables that can either be manipulated
or controlled. Experimental research can be conducted in laboratory or field settings.
Laboratory Experiments
A laboratory experiment may be defined as an experiment under controlled conditions in which
the experimenter can control and vary the independent variable. In such experiments, the
experimenter has full control on the experiment and manipulates the independent variable under
controlled conditions to see its impact on the dependent variable. A laboratory experiment is the
most powerful method for investigating cause-and-effect relationship between variables. It is
generally preferred over other methods because of its ability to understand the causal factors.
Field Experiments
Field experiments also use scientific methods to investigate the effect of the independent variable
on the variable of interest but in the naturally occurring environment. Field experiment may be
defined as an experiment in which the experimenter varies independent variables in natural
setting to investigate its effect on the behavior of the participants/objects. Like laboratory
experiments in field experiments, also treatments are randomly allocated to the subjects and
outcomes are compared among treatment groups. Thus, a field experiment is like a laboratory
experiment; the difference is only the situation or the place where they are being conducted.
Field Studies
In field studies, variables of interest are investigated in their natural environments without trying
to manipulate or control anything. In this method, the researcher observes the behaviour of the
variables of interest in its natural setting. The observations are made without any preparation or
participation of the researcher. The behaviour of subjects/objects is observed in different outside
locations/situations. The aim of such investigation is to study relationships and interactions
among different variables. In field studies, events are studied when they have already occurred
in the field or in natural situations, and attempts are made to investigate the correlation
between the different aspects of events.