QUESTIONS ANSV 1. What is the title of the research study? Sum 2. What is the problem or question solved? 3. Who are the respondents? 4. 5. How many are the respondents? How are the respondents selected? How did the researcher/s gather the data? 6. 7. How did the researcher/s analyze the data? 8. What are the sources used by the researcher/s as s/he/they gather related data? 9. What books, articles, encyclopedias, journals were used by the researcher/s? 10. What are the researcher's findings?
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Answer:
1. The title summarizes the main idea or ideas of your study. A good title contains the fewest possible words that adequately describe the contents and/or purpose of your research paper. The title is without doubt the part of a paper that is read the most, and it is usually read first.
2. Problem solving interview questions are used to identify, test and measure candidate's approach to difficult and unusual situations. ... When problems do occur, employees with strong problem solving skills will easily develop suitable solutions.
3. To know how many people you should send your survey to, you want to take your sample size (how many responses you need back) divided by the response rate. For example, if you have a sample of 1,000 and an estimated response rate of 10%, you would divide 1000 by . 10. Your survey group should be around 10,000.
5. The respondents are selected randomly, with no rules.
6. Depending on the researcher's research plan and design, there are several ways data can be collected. The most commonly used methods are: published literature sources, surveys (email and mail), interviews (telephone, face-to-face or focus group), observations, documents and records, and experiments.
7. Data Analysis. Data Analysis is the process of systematically applying statistical and/or logical techniques to describe and illustrate.
8. Original documents such as diaries, speeches, manuscripts, letters, interviews, records, eyewitness accounts, autobiographies. Empirical scholarly works such as research articles, clinical reports, case studies, dissertations.
9. Encyclopedias are considered a scholarly source. The content is written by an academic for an academic audience. While entries are reviewed by an editorial board, they are not “peer-reviewed.
10. Generalizability is applied by researchers in an academic setting. It can be defined as the extension of research findings.