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EVALUATING RESEARCH QUESTIONS, HYPOTHESES, AND QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH DESIGNS
With a clear purpose in place, quantitative researchers have a roadmap for crafting their research questions and hypotheses that will further focus the approach they will take to investigate their topic (i.e., their study’s research design).
The selection of a research design is guided by the study’s purpose and research questions and hypotheses, and the design then links the research questions and hypotheses to the data that will be collected. You should keep in mind, however, that the research process is interactive, not necessarily proceeding in a linear fashion from one component to the next. Rather, the writing of research questions could, for example, necessitate adjustments to the study’s purpose statement. Nevertheless, when presented together, the various components of a research study should align. As you learned last week, alignment means that a research study possesses clear and logical connections among all of its various components.
In addition to considering alignment, when researchers select a research design, they must also consider the ethical implications of their choice, including, for example, what their design selection means for participant recruitment, procedures, and privacy.
For this Discussion, you will evaluate quantitative research questions and hypotheses in assigned journal articles in your discipline and consider the alignment of theory, problem, purpose, research questions and hypotheses, and design. You will also identify the type of quantitative research design the authors used and explain how it was implemented. Quasi-experimental, casual comparative, correlational, pretest–posttest, or true experimental are examples of types of research designs used in quantitative research.
With these thoughts in mind, refer to the Journal Articles document for your assigned articles for this Discussion. If your last name starts with A through I, use Article A. If your last name starts with J through R, use Article B. If your last name starts with S through Z, use Article C.
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Post a critique of the research study in which you:
- Evaluate the research questions and hypotheses.
The Research Questions and Hypotheses Checklist serves as a guide for your evaluation. Please do not respond to the checklist in a Yes/No format in writing your Discussion post.
- Identify the type of quantitative research design used and explain how the researchers implemented the design.
- Analyze alignment among the theory, problem, purpose, research questions and hypotheses, and design.
Be sure to support your Main Issue Post and Response Post with reference to the week’s Learning Resources and other scholarly evidence in APA Style.
RESOURCES
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- Babbie, E. (2017). Basics of social research (7th ed.). Boston, MA: Cengage Learning.
- Chapter 5, “Conceptualization, Operationalization, and Measurementâ€
- Burkholder, G. J., Cox, K. A., Crawford, L. M., & Hitchcock, J. H. Â (Eds.). (2020). Research designs and methods: An applied guide for the scholar-practitioner. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
- Chapter 4, “Quantitative Research Designsâ€
- Document: Journal Articles (Word Document)Download Journal Articles (Word Document)
For the Discussion, download this document, refer to the assigned journal articles for your program, and find these articles in the Walden Library.
- Document: Research Questions and Hypotheses Checklist (PDF)Download Research Questions and Hypotheses Checklist (PDF)
For this Discussion, use the prompts in this checklist to look for indications of the research questions and hypotheses criteria in your assigned quantitative research article.
This checklist serves as a guide for your evaluation. Please do not respond to the checklist in a Yes/No format in writing your Discussion post.
Research Theory, Design, and Methods
Walden University
Journal Articles
Locate your program below for the assigned journal articles to use for the Discussion assignments in Weeks 3, 4, 5, and 7.
Please follow the instructions in the week’s unit and find these articles in the Walden
Library
.
If your program is not listed, your Instructor will post an announcement with your assigned journal articles.
You will focus on one article in each of these weeks for your Main Question Post; however, you are expected to read and familiarize yourself with all the articles listed to effectively participate in the discussion. Consult the week’s Discussion area for instructions on completing the assignment.
For quick access, press CTRL + left-click on your program’s link below.
Criminal Justice
Education
Health Sciences
Human Services and Social Work
Management and Information Systems and Technology
Nursing
Psychology and Counseling
Public Policy and Administration
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Week 3
If your last name starts with
A through
L, use Article A.
Article A:
Forster, M., Grigsby, T. J., Unger, J. B., & Sussman, S. (2015). Associations between gun violence exposure, gang associations, and youth aggression: Implications for prevention and intervention programs.
 Journal of Criminology.
https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/963750
If your last name starts with
M through
Z, use Article B.
Article B:
Ibarra, P. R., Gur, O. M., & Erez, E. (2014). Surveillance as casework: Supervising domestic violence defendants with GPS technology.
 Crime, Law and Social Change, 62(4), 417-444. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10611-014-9536-4
Week 4
If your last name starts with
A through
L, use Article B.
Article B:
Ibarra, P. R., Gur, O. M., & Erez, E. (2014). Surveillance as casework: Supervising domestic violence defendants with GPS technology.
 Crime, Law and Social Change, 62(4), 417-444. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10611-014-9536-4
Research Theory, Design, and Methods Walden University
© 2016 Laureate Education, Inc. Page 1 of 2
Research Questions and Hypotheses Checklist
Use the following criteria to evaluate an author’s research questions and/or
hypotheses.
Look for indications of the following:
• Is the research question(s) a logical extension of the purpose of the
study?
• Does the research question(s) reflect the best question to address the
problem?
• Does the research question(s) align with the design of the study?
• Does the research question(s) align with the method identified for
collecting data?
If the study is qualitative, does the research question(s) do as follows?
• Relate the central question to the qualitative approach
• Begin with What or How (not Why)
• Focus on a single phenomenon
• Use exploratory verbs
• Use nondirectional language
• Use an open-ended format
• Specify the participants and research site
If the study is quantitative:
• Do the descriptive questions seek to describe responses to major
variables?
• Do the inferential questions seek to compare groups or relate variables?
• Do the inferential questions follow from a theory?
• Are the variables positioned consistently from independent/predictor to
dependent/outcome in the inferential questions?
• Is a null and/or alternative hypothesis provided as a predictive statement?
Research Theory, Design, and Methods Walden University
© 2016 Laureate Education, Inc. Page 2 of 2
• Is the hypothesis consistent with its respective research question?
• Does the question(s) and/or hypothesis specify the participants and
research site?
If the study is mixed methods, do the research questions and/or hypotheses do
the following?
• Include the characteristics of a good qualitative research question (as
listed above)
• Include the characteristics of a good quantitative research and/or
hypothesis (as listed above)
• Indicate how the researcher will mix or integrate the two approaches of the
study
• Specify the participants and research site
• Convey the overall intent of the study that calls for a mixed methods
approach
- Research Questions and Hypotheses Checklist