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Lagdameo, Miguel Limerick T.

11-STEM, Pre-Baccalaureate Maritime (LEO)


PR1-Week No. 2
February 28, 2022

Activity 1
A.
1. Ethnography
2. Phenomenology
3. Case Study
4. Content & Discourse Analysis
5. Historical Analysis
6. Ethnography
7. Phenomenology
8. Case Study
9. Content & Discourse Analysis
10. Historical Analysis

B.
1. Pure
2. Descriptive
3. Correlation
4. Explanatory
5. Applied
6. Action
7. Action
8. Explanatory
9. Correlation
10. Descriptive
11. Applied
12. Pure
Activity 2
a. When it comes to performing social and behavioral studies, qualitative research has a
significant edge over quantitative research since human interaction is so complicated that
quantitative research cannot understand it. Through organized interviews, case studies,
and other methods, qualitative research allows the researcher to delve deeply into and
collect rich descriptive data about social phenomena. Furthermore, qualitative research is
less expensive than quantitative research since it does not require the recruitment of a
large number of participants/respondents and does not require an expensive prototype
that must be tested, which adds to the expense.

b. Qualitative research deals with problems that cannot be solved by numbers/statistics,


complex problems, those that require in-depth understanding, those that can be handled
by understanding people's emotions and experiences, and those that can only be answered
by "why" and "how”.

c. Qualitative data are what will make QLR significant. The name qualitative research
already denotes what its data is, "Quality." This is data that cannot be easily reduced to
numbers. Data that answers questions about the what, how, and why of a phenomenon,
rather than questions about statistics like how many and how much. Data that necessitates
a thorough understanding
Qualitative data is more difficult to obtain than quantitative data because it is not simply
an individual's opinion; rather, it is data derived from a thorough examination of
respondents' thoughts, feelings, opinions, and/or experiences (individual, groups , or
communities). It is also more difficult to analyze because the data collected can be
interpreted in a variety of ways.
Qualitative data is gathered using qualitative methods such as interviews, focus groups,
surveys, case studies, observation, and document analysis.

d. My group does not yet have a research topic. However, if we choose a topic, it could be
"The changes in social interaction of stem students in Bataan National High School," in
which case studies will be used, or it could be "The effects of Playing Video Games on
an Individual's Reflexes," in which quantitative research, case studies, and historical
analysis will be performed.

e. Emotions are data that statistics cannot explain due to their complexities. Emotions of
participants/researchers in a specific circumstance are one of the components that must be
acquired in qualitative research since they can provide significant knowledge and worthy
insight into the issue.

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