Choosing a Research Method

Last updated on 2025-02-20 | Edit this page

Overview

Questions

  • What distinguishes any method from another, i.e. are ther different method types? -How will learners know which methods are the right ones for their research?
  • What ethical considerations do learners need to take into account when choosing a method?
  • How does the research plan effect method selection?

Objectives

  • Define a target audience for the user study
  • Identify risks of participation in a study and ways of addressing those
  • Develop an appropriate recruitment strategy based on the chosen target audience
  • Create an outreach plan and craft relevant materials (including screener, emails, etc)

Lesson content goes here

Challenge header

  1. Define your project
  • Describe your tool/software
  • State one usability goal (e.g. reduce user errors during form completion)
  • List your project’s constraints
  1. Brainstorm
  • List all possible methods you know / recall
  • Use cheat sheet as a reference
  1. Filter & Select
  • Narrow your list to 5 methods that your team thinks best fits your project’s constraints and goals
  • Evaluate each method choosen against checklist/rubric??? (idk rn)
  1. Reflect
  • Finalize your list
  • Write a sentence per method explaining why it fits in your project ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: solution

Solution text

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Challenge 1: Can you do it?

What is the output of this command?

R

paste("This", "new", "lesson", "looks", "good")

OUTPUT

[1] "This new lesson looks good"

Challenge 2: how do you nest solutions within challenge blocks?

You can add a line with at least three colons and a solution tag.

Figures


You can use standard markdown for static figures with the following syntax:

![optional caption that appears below the figure](figure url){alt='alt text for accessibility purposes'}

Blue Carpentries hex person logo with no text.
You belong in The Carpentries!

Callout

Callout sections can highlight information.

They are sometimes used to emphasise particularly important points but are also used in some lessons to present “asides”: content that is not central to the narrative of the lesson, e.g. by providing the answer to a commonly-asked question.

Math


One of our episodes contains \(\LaTeX\) equations when describing how to create dynamic reports with {knitr}, so we now use mathjax to describe this:

$\alpha = \dfrac{1}{(1 - \beta)^2}$ becomes: \(\alpha = \dfrac{1}{(1 - \beta)^2}\)

Cool, right?

Key Points

  • Presenting research method types, i.e. qualitative vs. quantative and attitudinal vs. behavioral.
  • Introducing frameworks for method selection and considering constraints.