India Languages, asked by ashketchump71841, 5 months ago

What are five preoccupations of quantitative research?

Answers

Answered by vibhavari13
4

Explanation:

Quantitative researchers generally have four main preoccupations: they want their research to be measurable, to focus on causation, to be generalisable, and to be replicable.

These preoccupations reflect epistemological grounded beliefs about what constitutes acceptable knowledge, and can be contrasted with the preoccupations of researchers who prefer a qualitative approach.

Answered by sangeetha01sl
0

Answer:

Quantitative researchers generally have four main concerns: They want their research to be measurable, aligned for causality, generalizable and reproducible.

Explanation:

  1. Measurement - Quantitative researchers are primarily interested in collecting numerical data, which means they are essentially concerned with counting social phenomena, which often requires the operationalization of concepts.
  2. Causality - Qualitative researchers are more concerned with explaining why things are the way they are than with simply describing them. It follows that it is crucial for quantitative researchers to effectively isolate variables in order to establish causal relationships.
  3. Generalizability - Quantitative researchers typically want their results to be representative of larger populations and not just the sample included in the study. Therefore, there are concerns about ensuring that appropriate sampling techniques are used.
  4. Replication - When a study is repeatable, it can be verified that the original researchers own biases or personal characteristics did not influence the results or replication is necessary to test the objectivity of the original research.

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