Across
- 4. It shows the summary of the result of your study.
- 7. It is a type of survey question that has two possible answers, often either yes/no, true/false or agree/ disagree.
- 9. It is a lens or conceptual model that you adopt to guide your research.
- 11. It is the preferred mode of data collection in social science research, particularly in quantitative studies.
- 13. This is a part of research paper which shows the process and methods of collecting data.
- 15. It tells your reader why the study is valuable, what it contributes and why the reader should devote time to read it.
- 16. The purpose of this research is to test, confirm and validate theory.
- 17. It is a type of survey question that uses numerical scale in answering the questions.
- 18. It is a type of Quantitative Research that is generally concerned with investigating, measuring and describing one or more characteristics of one or more groups.
- 20. It is a type of citation that is referring to the author whose ideas appear your work.
Down
- 1. It is a type of sampling method that selects the respondents based on their availability.
- 2. It tells where the researchers conduct the study.
- 3. It is the part of the introduction where you clearly set what your study covers, its time period, location, subjects, context and its specific objectives.
- 5. It shows the common, typical, popular, or average value of a given set.
- 6. It is a plan that presents how the researcher intends to study an empirical question.
- 8. It is a mode of data collection wherein the interviewer uses questions to ask to the respondents that can be structured, semi-structured and unstructured questions asked by the interviewer.
- 10. In this part, it offers alternative to current or previous approaches and lay down the ground work for future studies.
- 12. It is the part of the methodology that includes the chosen population.
- 14. It is a type of survey question that has no options and choices to choose from.
- 19. References within the main body of the text, specifically in Review of Related Literature.
