Skip to content(Social Research Methods, 4th Edition, Alan Bryman, Chapter 4)
1. Introduction
- Designed for students undertaking small-scale research projects (e.g., undergraduate or postgraduate dissertations).
- Focused on practical steps to plan, conduct, and write up research projects effectively.
2. Key Steps in Planning a Research Project
- Understand Institutional Requirements:
- Follow university/department guidelines on structure, referencing, deadlines, etc.
- Clarify rules on plagiarism, financial assistance, and supervision.
- Use Your Supervisor:
- Seek feedback and act on criticisms.
- Avoid avoiding supervisors during challenging phases—address difficulties proactively.
- Time and Resource Management:
- Create a detailed timetable with milestones for literature review, data collection, and writing.
- Plan for delays, such as securing access to organizations or ethical approval.
- Ensure resource availability (e.g., software, travel funding, recording equipment).
3. Formulating Research Questions
- Sources of Research Questions:
- Intellectual puzzles, gaps in the literature, social problems, personal experiences, or new societal developments.
- Steps:
- Start with a broad area of interest.
- Narrow it to a focused aspect.
- Develop interconnected, researchable questions.
- Criteria for Good Research Questions:
- Clear, specific, and feasible within available resources.
- Connected to established theories or literature.
- Address a significant topic, adding original value.
4. Writing a Research Proposal
- Purpose:
- Serves as a blueprint for research, demonstrating feasibility and significance.
- Key Components:
- Research topic and objectives.
- Literature review highlighting theoretical framework.
- Proposed methodology and justification for chosen methods.
- Anticipated challenges (e.g., access issues) and ethical considerations.
- Timetable for the research process.
5. Conducting Research and Analyzing Results
- Preparation:
- Obtain permissions and access early.
- Conduct pilot studies to refine methods.
- Practical Advice:
- Keep detailed records (e.g., field notes, survey responses).
- Familiarize yourself with required software early.
- Begin coding and analysis during data collection, not after.
- Safety Considerations:
- Avoid risky situations. Use public spaces and maintain communication with others when working alone.
6. Checklist for Research Planning
- Clear understanding of dissertation requirements.
- Feasible timetable with milestones.
- Financial and logistical resources accounted for.
- Research questions finalized and reviewed.
- Ethical considerations addressed and approval sought if necessary.
7. Key Points
- Follow institutional guidelines strictly.
- Use supervisors as key resources.
- Devote sufficient time to each research phase.
- Research questions are essential to maintaining focus.
- Write a research proposal to clarify your objectives and methods.
- Address access and ethical issues early.
- Maintain good records throughout the research process.