Intercultural Communication

Jenny Dang
QuantitativeResearchMethods.pptx

Quantitative Research Methods

Babbie, Earl R. The Practice of Social Research. 12th ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Cengage, 2010; Muijs, Daniel. Doing Quantitative Research in Education with SPSS. 2nd edition. London: SAGE Publications, 2010.

Quantitative methods emphasize objective measurements and the statistical, mathematical, or numerical analysis of data collected through polls, questionnaires, and surveys, or by manipulating pre-existing statistical data using computational techniques.

Quantitative Research

Quantitative research deals in numbers, logic, and an objective stance. Quantitative research focuses on numeric and unchanging data and detailed, convergent reasoning rather than divergent reasoning [i.e., the generation of a variety of ideas about a research problem in a spontaneous, free-flowing manner].

Primary Characteristics

The data is usually gathered using structured research instruments.

The results are based on larger sample sizes that are representative of the population.

The research study can usually be replicated or repeated, given its high reliability.

Data are in the form of numbers and statistics, often arranged in tables, charts, figures, or other non-textual forms.

Project can be used to generalize concepts more widely, predict future results, or investigate causal relationships.

Researcher uses tools, such as questionnaires or computer software, to collect numerical data.

Limitations

Quantitative data is more efficient and able to test hypotheses, but may miss contextual detail;

Uses a static and rigid approach and so employs an inflexible process of discovery;

The development of standard questions by researchers can lead to "structural bias" and false representation, where the data actually reflects the view of the researcher instead of the participating subject;

Results provide less detail on behavior, attitudes, and motivation;

Results are limited as they provide numerical descriptions rather than detailed narrative and generally provide less elaborate accounts of human perception;

The research is often carried out in an unnatural, artificial environment so that a level of control can be applied to the exercise.