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Problem Statement: by Assoc. Prof. DR - Hassan Ali College of Business Universiti Utara Malaysia

The document discusses the importance of properly formulating research problems. It outlines the typical stages of the research process, including the theoretical stage of identifying a research problem, developing hypotheses, and operationalizing variables. It emphasizes that a well-formulated problem statement should clearly define the relationship between variables and distinguish independent and dependent variables. The problem scope should be focused rather than too broad, and the research problem should be meaningful and doable. Methods should follow from clearly defined problems rather than driving the choice of problems.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
445 views24 pages

Problem Statement: by Assoc. Prof. DR - Hassan Ali College of Business Universiti Utara Malaysia

The document discusses the importance of properly formulating research problems. It outlines the typical stages of the research process, including the theoretical stage of identifying a research problem, developing hypotheses, and operationalizing variables. It emphasizes that a well-formulated problem statement should clearly define the relationship between variables and distinguish independent and dependent variables. The problem scope should be focused rather than too broad, and the research problem should be meaningful and doable. Methods should follow from clearly defined problems rather than driving the choice of problems.

Uploaded by

fansuri80
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 24

PROBLEM STATEMENT

By
Assoc. Prof. Dr.Hassan Ali
College of Business
Universiti Utara Malaysia

Hassan Ali PhD


Research Process
PO

Problem
Statement TF Hypothesis

LR
Research
D&C Findings Design

Hassan Ali PhD


Research Process (cont)
 The “Theoretical” Stage
 Pre-data collection involving constant
bibliographical work.
 Identify research problem
 Develop conceptual scheme
 Postulate hypothesis
 Operationalize variables

Hassan Ali PhD


Research Process (cont)
 The “Empirical” Stage
 Data collection stage
 Research design
 Sampling
 Data source and collection

Hassan Ali PhD


Research Process (cont)
 The “Analysis of Results” Stage
 Post-data collection stage
 Data analysis
 Description of data
 Hypothesis testing
 Research report

Hassan Ali PhD


Problems
“In the beginning was not the ‘word’ but a
problem.”
Kempthorne

• This is how scientific inquiry is initiated.

Hassan Ali PhD


Problems
“The formulation of a problem is often more
essential than its solution, which may be merely a
matter of mathematical or experimental skill. To
raise new questions, new possibilities, to regard
old problems from new angle, requires creative
imagination and marks real advance in science”
Einstein & Infeld

Hassan Ali PhD


Problems
• Use novel concepts in familiar settings
• Ask novel questions that place old
phenomena in a new light, creating a new
context.
“What we observe is not nature in itself but
nature exposed to our method of
questioning”.
Heisenberg

Hassan Ali PhD


Problem Characterization and
Format

A problem is a statement usually


interrogative, about a relation between two
or more variables.

Hassan Ali PhD


Problem Characterization and
Format
• Two things to note:
 To qualify as a problem the statement must make
reference to some kind of relation between at least
two variables.
 “Relation” is not limited to situations in which no
distinction is made between independent and
dependent variables (eg. when the correlation
between two variables is calculated) but includes
also statements that refer to or imply effects of
independent variables on dependent variables.
Hassan Ali PhD
Format 1
 What is the relation between mental ability
and academic achievement?
 What is the relation between teaching style
and student academic achievement?

Hassan Ali PhD


Format 1 (cont.)
 Statements are “noncommittal”
 There is no explicit or implicit indication of
a distinction between independent and
dependent variable.

Hassan Ali PhD


Format 2
 How do students of differing levels of
mental ability differ in academic
achievements?
 How do students exposed to different
teaching styles differ in academic
achievements?

Hassan Ali PhD


Format 2 (cont.)
 Distinction between independent and dependent variables
are implied.
 Mental ability and teaching style are meant to be
independent variables in the two problem statements.
 Teaching style is a manipulated variable that require an
experimental or quasi-experimental design.
 Statement 1 and 2 requires a nonexperimental design.
 Statements are ambiguous because it does not state
explicitly that differences in the dependent var. is due in
part, to the effects of the implied I/d var.

Hassan Ali PhD


Format 3
 What is the effect of mental ability on
academic achievement?
 What is the effect of teaching style on
students academic achievement?

Hassan Ali PhD


Format 3 (cont.)
 Very clear which is the independent and
which is the dependent variables in each
problems.

Hassan Ali PhD


Problem Statement
 The way a problem statement is formulated
or characterized will largely determine the
analytic approach.
 Eg. Statement 1
 Format 1: Pearson correlation coefficient
 Format 2: ANOVA (categorize continuous
var).
 Format 3: Simple regression analysis

Hassan Ali PhD


Problem and Substance
 In research need to avoid “trivial” problems.
 The question that begs asking is: What makes a
problem important and worth pursuing?
 A problem encapsulates the puzzle one feels
impelled to solve.Therefore the problem should
be:
 Important not trite
 Meaningful not meaningless
 Doable not not doable

Hassan Ali PhD


Problems and Substance
Although there are similarities between the
detective and a scientist, they differ in a
fundamental way.
“For the detective the crime is given, the
problem formulated … The scientist must,
at least in part, commit his own crime, as
well as carry out the investigation”.
Einstein and Infeld

Hassan Ali PhD


Problems and Substance
 When a researcher has formulated a
problem, he/she should engage in self-
questioning.
 “Why do I pose a given problem and ask
the questions I do regarding it?’
 The greatest risk to the researcher is not
thinking at all about what one is doing.

Hassan Ali PhD


Issues Relevant to Problem
Formulation
 Scope of Problem
 Past Research and Literature Review
 Problems and Methods

Hassan Ali PhD


Scope of Problem
• The most obvious aspect of problem formulation.
• Problems that are all encompassing or too broad, elude
meaningful solution.
• Eg. broad questions:
 What are the causes of crime?
 What makes organizations effective?
 How should performance be measured?
• It is necessary to reduce broad questions to workable and
soluble problems focusing on relations among specific
variables.

Hassan Ali PhD


Problems and Methods
“Woe to that science whose methods are developed in
advance of its problems, so that the experimenter can see
only those phases of a problem for which a method is
already at hand”
Murphy
• There is a danger of technique determining the choice of
the research problem to be investigated.
• Understanding of method (measurement, analysis) is
crucial at the problem-formulation stage. But it becomes a
problem when the researcher’s exposure to methods is
limited. This is when the research becomes method-driven.

Hassan Ali PhD


Problems and Methods (cont.)
“The man of one method or one instrument
… tends to become method-oriented rather
than problem-oriented”.
Platt

Hassan Ali PhD

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