Research Design Course

 

Meeting 1

Introduction

  • Who we are
  • What you will learn
    • set-up
    • epistemology
    • methods
  • Who are you?

Schedule for today

  • Two brief presentations
  • Discussion in groups of three
    • Two times 15 minutes
    • Match with different participants in each session
  • Short break
  • Roundtable discussion on RQs
  • Suggestions for the next one-pager

Some ways to think about research

  • The theoretical aim is the attainment of truth and its practical aim is agreement that truth has probably been achieved (Hirsh 1967)
  • The goal is inference
    • casual or descriptive
    • ​ accumulation of facts alone is not sufficient; we should aim to infer beyond the collected data
  • Complexity and uniqueness is not an obstacle
  • Uncertainty is always present in our work  

Research Question

  • What makes a RQ?
    • relevance
    • contribution to the literature (e.g., lack of a systematic study, controversy, assumption (unquestioned or replication), cross-field)
  • Our primary motivation matters
    • reflecting on a RQ of high importance in the light of potential inferences
    • Asking about the broader relevance of our well-embedded findings

Research Design Course Meeting 1

By Dawid Walentek

Research Design Course Meeting 1

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