You are on page 1of 2

CHAPTER 1

 RATIONALE  The justification for conducting the


analysis is the rationale of your
studies. The reasoning should address
why the study was conducted in the
first place. It's a vital part of your
paper because it justifies the study's
importance and novelty. As a result, it
is also known as the study's
justification. It also includes the
background of the study
(international, national and local)
 CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK  A conceptual construct is an analytical
method that can be used in a variety
of ways and contexts. It is used to
organize concepts and create logical
distinctions. Strong conceptual
constructs capture something
concrete in an easy-to-remember and
apply manner.
 THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK  A theoretical framework is a set of
interconnected ideas, similar to a
theory but not as well developed.
Your study is driven by a theoretical
structure, which determines what
you'll calculate and what statistical
relationships you'll look for.
 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM  It is the description of the problem
that needs to be addressed in the
study
 SCOPE AND DELIMITATION  It defines the topic and boundaries
of the research problem to be
investigated. It specifies how in-
depth it will go in order to answer
the research query, as well as the
conditions within which it will run in
terms of population and timeline.
 DEFINITION OF TERMS  It is a thorough description of the
technical terms and measurements
used during data collection is referred
to as a definition of terms. This is
required to ensure that the data is
consistent.
CHAPTER II
 RELATED LITERATURE
 RELATED STUDY
 SYNTHESIS

CHAPTER III
 Research Design
 Research Environment/locale of the
study
 Research respondent
 Research instrument
 data analysis
CHAPTER IV
 results and discussion
CHAPTER V
 summary of findings
 conclusion
 recommendation
 references
 apendices

You might also like