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    How To Research Thinking For Writing Any Scientific Paper

    Posted By: ELK1nG
    How To Research Thinking For Writing Any Scientific Paper

    How To Research Thinking For Writing Any Scientific Paper
    Published 10/2023
    MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
    Language: English | Size: 934.51 MB | Duration: 4h 26m

    Learn the basics of research methods to maximize the success of your thesis, dissertation, or other academic work.

    What you'll learn

    You understand what research means and how to recognize research.

    You will know the basic elements of research projects and be able to formulate them appropriately for your own project.

    You can judge which formulations of scientific facts correspond to critical thinking.

    You are able to plan empirical research components, distinguishing between qualitative and quantitative methods and outlining an appropriate research design.

    You are familiar with the quality criteria of research and academic writing.

    Requirements

    Already be familiar with Office programs and their functions.

    Description

    You will work through the basics of research in five chapters.The first chapter "How to Research academically" helps you understand what research is and how to recognize it. You will learn about research approaches and consider questions related to the theory of science: What role do the methods I use play in my findings? How true are the results? Why do you need to learn to falsify, and how do you communicate as a scientist?The second chapter "How to Create the Base Elements" is about understanding the basic elements of any research project, and thus of any research report, and you will learn to formulate them for yourself.In the third chapter "How to Think Critically", I introduce you to the tradition of critical thinking that is always part of science. You will also find back the basic elements and learn to understand how to think critically about them, as well as about everything we ourselves research and present as results.In the fourth chapter "How to Research Empirically", you will encounter important basics of empirical methods used in the social sciences. You will learn about qualitative and quantitative empirical research, and how to combine the two. Of course, there are also lessons on how to generate and to test hypotheses.And in the fifth chapter "How to Comply with Quality Criteria", you will get insights and tips for your personal scientific quality assurance on a total of twelve quality criteria that you should definitely consider when doing research and also when writing your scientific paper, i.e., your research report.These chapters are fundamental for anyone preparing their first academic papers at university, and equally so for anyone preparing to write a dissertation for a doctoral degree.

    Overview

    Section 1: 0. Introduction

    Lecture 1 Overview

    Section 2: 1. How to Research Academically

    Lecture 2 1.0 Introduction and Qualification Objectives

    Lecture 3 Bibliography for this Chapter

    Lecture 4 1.1 Your worksheet for this chapter

    Lecture 5 1.2 Defining

    Lecture 6 1.3 Knowledge as a Goal

    Lecture 7 1.4 The Research Approach

    Lecture 8 1.5 Methods-driven Results

    Lecture 9 1.6 The Truth of the Results

    Lecture 10 1.7 Falsification as a Working Principle

    Lecture 11 1.8 Science and Communication

    Lecture 12 1.9 Constructions of Reality

    Lecture 13 1.10 Appropriate Approaches

    Section 3: 2. How to Create the Base Elements

    Lecture 14 2.0 Introduction

    Lecture 15 Bibliography for this Chapter

    Lecture 16 2.1 Your Worksheet

    Lecture 17 2.2 Connecting the Pillars

    Lecture 18 2.3 Your Topic

    Lecture 19 2.4 Your Problem Definition

    Lecture 20 2.5 Your Research Objective

    Lecture 21 2.6 Your Research Question

    Lecture 22 2.7 Instruments

    Lecture 23 2.8 Your Concluding Chapter

    Section 4: 3. How to Think Critically

    Lecture 24 3.0 About this Chapter

    Lecture 25 Bibliography for this Chapter

    Lecture 26 3.1 Introduction and Worksheet

    Lecture 27 3.2.1 Finding a Topic

    Lecture 28 3.2.2 Research

    Lecture 29 3.2.3 The Issue

    Lecture 30 3.2.4 Object of Study

    Lecture 31 3.2.5 Object of Investigation or Object of Research?

    Lecture 32 3.2.6 Research Objective

    Lecture 33 3.2.7 Research Question

    Lecture 34 3.2.8 Literature selection

    Lecture 35 3.2.9 Choice of Methods

    Lecture 36 3.2.10 The Analyses

    Lecture 37 3.2.11 Statements and Data

    Lecture 38 3.2.12 Our Results

    Lecture 39 3.2.13 Theory Building, Hypotheses and Solution Approaches

    Lecture 40 3.3 In Conclusion

    Section 5: 4. How to Research Empirically

    Lecture 41 4.0 Introduction

    Lecture 42 Bibliography for this Chapter

    Lecture 43 4.1 Your Worksheet

    Lecture 44 4.2a Basic Principles for Empirical Work

    Lecture 45 4.2b Induction and Deduction

    Lecture 46 4.2c Gaining Knowledge in Science

    Lecture 47 4.2d Empirical Data

    Lecture 48 4.2e Empirical Methods

    Lecture 49 4.3a Quantitative Empirical Research

    Lecture 50 4.3b Quantitative Methods

    Lecture 51 4.3c Quantitative Approach

    Lecture 52 4.3d Phases of the Quantitative Research Process

    Lecture 53 4.4a Qualitative Empirical Research

    Lecture 54 4.4b Qualitative Methodologies

    Lecture 55 4.4c Qualitative Approach

    Lecture 56 4.4d Summary

    Lecture 57 4.5a Combining Procedures

    Lecture 58 4.5b Comparing both Research Processes separately

    Lecture 59 4.5c Which Research Process Model to work with?

    Lecture 60 4.5d Mixed Methods

    Lecture 61 4.6a Definitions

    Lecture 62 4.6b Induction, Abduction, and Deducation

    Lecture 63 4.6c Critical Rationalism

    Lecture 64 4.6d Verification and Falsification

    Lecture 65 4.6e Search for Truth

    Lecture 66 4.6f Basis Set Problem and Correspondence Problem

    Lecture 67 4.6g Provability of a Theory

    Lecture 68 4.6h Exhaustion

    Lecture 69 4.6i The Qualitative Paradigm

    Lecture 70 4.7a Working with Hypotheses

    Lecture 71 4.7b Implementation Stages

    Lecture 72 4.7c Types of Hypotheses

    Lecture 73 4.7d Working with Null Hypotheses

    Lecture 74 4.7e Direction and Strength

    Lecture 75 4.8 In Conclusion

    Section 6: 5. How to Comply with Quality Criteria

    Lecture 76 5.0 Introduction and Worksheet

    Lecture 77 5.1 Purposefulness

    Lecture 78 5.2 Specificity

    Lecture 79 5.3 Relevance

    Lecture 80 5.4 Logic

    Lecture 81 5.5 Comprehensibility

    Lecture 82 5.6 Honesty

    Lecture 83 5.7 Verifiability

    Lecture 84 5.8 Transparency

    Lecture 85 5.9 Validity

    Lecture 86 5.10 Reliability

    Lecture 87 5.11 Significance

    Lecture 88 5.12 Representativeness

    Section 7: To conclude this course

    Lecture 89 Goodbye and outlook

    This course is designed for first-year students, but also for anyone who wants to move toward a more inquiry-based, science-based approach to thinking and acting.,It can also help prepare for the demands of graduate study.