This practical book sets out how to approach each stage of your research project, from choosing a research design and methodology to collecting and analysing data and communicating your results – and showcases best practice along the way. Packed with pragmatic guidance for tackling research in the real world, this fourth
Zina O′Leary′s detailed and down-to-earth approach gives you the research skills and momentum you need to successfully complete your research project.
Has a lot of good advice and it helped me feel more prepared to do research for the first time. I only wish it had been marketed as having a slight focus on the social sciences rather than STEM and other areas of research. As a physics student, a good amount of this book was not applicable to me and I wish I'd at least been warned of that ahead of time. It was still very helpful in a broad sense, though.
If you want an easy insight into the mind of the modern, secular, university level research, then this is a good place to start. That's a pretty specific use though...
For researchers... the average secular westerner will gobble it up, the thoughtful Christian will glean some things that are of benefit.
Note: have only dipped in here and there, not read right through.
I forgot I read this for my Intro to Research in Education class this semester for my Master's program. It's a pretty solid read considering it's a textbook and textbooks are usually boring. 4/5 - I learned a lot and it helped me with my assignments.
Clear writing, and great examples. It got me started and motivated to finish my proposal. I read it out of order, per the recommendation from my advisor. A pretty fast read for such a large book.
This is by far the best research reference book I have read. It is clear, easy to understand, and provides a lot of useful examples and further readings.
What has Mark Twain with research projects in the 21th century? Nothing. It has everything to do with appeasing the author's need to be an erudite. Otherwise it is not about practical research, the thing that brought people Nuclear Power or the Voyage to the Moon. It is about the petty means of scamming a pay from the University by the academic bureaucrats. What I have appreciated most is the bluntness and total lack of refinement of the author: "Offer a pathway for gaining academic qualifications or getting a raise".