What’s in a methodology?

The difference between method, methodology, and theory…  and how to get the balance right

It’s the time of year when students are gearing up to write their thesis, and whether it’s at the undergraduate or graduate level, for many this means coming to grips with a tricky question: how do I best explain what it is I’m doing in my paper, and how do I make sure my explanations are up to the standards of academic research? In other words: how do I put together and write up my methodology?

Answering this question is by no means straight-forward. I’ve just recently had a discussion with a PhD student about the difference between a method and a methodology, and about how these two things relate to questions of theory. These are not problems that cause frustration only at the undergraduate level, but that accompany many scholars their entire careers. In fact, at a meeting I attended a few weeks ago on how to apply for research funding from the European Research Council, one of the concerns that the Council regularly had with applications was that scholars did not provided a good methodology section. So if you are a student, and you are confused, remember that you share that confusion with many of the professionals.

What makes questions of method and methodology so thorny is that the answers depend on the respective discipline and on the particular research project. Someone in the arts and humanities may interpret the word methodology quite differently than someone in the social sciences or the life sciences, and different supervisors usually have diverging expectations about the “methodology chapters” in their students’ research papers. In this post, I will try to highlight different perspectives on this topic, as well as options for coming to grips with methods and methodologies.

I’ll first give you an overview of what a “research method” is, and how a method differs from a “methodology”. I’ll then take a look at how methodology relates to theory, and will discuss where methodological concerns might best fit in a research paper or thesis. I’ll provide examples throughout, but I’ve also included two hypothetical research projects at the end of this post that each deal with methodological issues in a different way: one project is at home in the humanities, and one takes a social science approach. You’ll find suggestions for further reading in the reference section.

Method vs. methodology

Methodology and methodA source of some confusion is that the words “method” and “methodology” are often treated synonymously, even though they do not mean the same thing in academia. In scholarly work, “methods” are practical hands-on steps for doing research. This usually includes defining the scope of the research project, coming up with a research question or hypothesis, selecting and collecting data, processing that data with certain tools to enable analysis, and then going through the data systematically to answer the central question. For example: a method for doing quantitative research on Japan’s economy might be to use the statistical software SPSS to check for correlations between different variables in a data set; a method for doing qualitative research on China might be to use differently coloured highlighters to mark metaphors and similes in speeches by Mao Zedong and then discussing which ones draw from different Chinese intellectual traditions. In other words, methods are the tools you use to do your research.

So what is a methodology? In essence, methodology is the discussion of methods. This includes the theoretical ideas and concerns that inform the use of different methods. A methodology section in a research paper needs to achieve three things, though not necessarily in this order: Firstly, it should consider what the nature of academic work is more generally, and what this might mean for anyone who explores the topic at hand. Secondly, it needs to provide a literature review, discussing what methods researchers have traditionally used to study the kind of topic that the project focuses on. Thirdly, it should explain what methods this particular project uses and why.

The first issue is a question of epistemology, the philosophy of knowledge. Crucial epistemological questions include: how can we know something? Is there such a thing as objective “truth”, or are we subjectively creating “truths” ourselves? What have different intellectual schools said on these issues, and what do our own answers to these questions say about the value of our research project? What do they say about the value of academic work in general? These are debates that have occupied thinkers for millennia, and no-one would expect you to answer them in a term paper or thesis. Nevertheless, the practical methods you use to study your subject come with certain assumptions, so it would be a good idea to demonstrate that you are aware of what these are.

For instance, imagine you are planning to do research on how discussions on Facebook influences people’s political views, and that you are planning to do a large-scale survey to get your data. As part of your methodological considerations, you should spell out how we might know about someone’s “political views”, and what you mean by “influence”. These are by no means trivial questions, and even though they are theoretical, they have very real implications for how you conduct your own research. Next, you might want to review what experts in the field have said about the value and drawbacks of using surveys, about the relation between information and human behaviour, and about the problems of establishing causalities between different variables. A note on positivism as a research tradition would also probably be wise. Finally, you should explain where you got your data and what exactly it is you plan to do with it.

Similarly, if you are studying policy documents to find out what the agenda of a specific government is, you would be well advised to think about epistemological questions like the value that such documents might have as an indication of political preferences, about the nature of political decision-making, or about the various philosophical traditions that have debated whether the language in such sources reflects certain beliefs or conjures them into being (or maybe both?). How you then go on to select and study the actual documents will likely follow from your answers to these questions.

How methodology connects to theory

As these examples already show, methodological discussions are both theoretical and practical in nature. This is also what makes writing a methodology section for an article or a thesis so hard. It can be difficult to draw a line between a typical theory chapter and the epistemological discussion of the methods you used. Let’s say you are studying international relations. You’ll likely want to include a theory chapter that discusses what different schools of thought have to say about theoretical concepts like states, power, anarchy, international society, norms, preferences, and so on.  Do you now need to include a second theoretical chapter that discusses how we can know about the system of states? The answer is not straight forward, and will strongly depend on what you are trying to achieve.

Overall, it can help to see this overlap between theory and methodology not as a problem but as an opportunity. In the example above, a good methodology discussion could pick up on earlier theory-driven considerations of what a state is and could then seamlessly connect these to the question of what different schools of thought count as “data” on state behaviour. From there, it is only a small step to outlining what data your research project uses, and what work-steps you took. In this case, the methodology is the puzzle piece that sits between broader theoretical debates and actual hands-on research work.

Nevertheless, it is quite common to get the balance wrong between the theoretical and the practical aspects of a methodology. Imagine a term paper that sets out to study a particular case of how people use digital media in everyday life. The case study will consist of observing and interviewing teenagers in a particular high school in Seoul to see how they use mobile phones during school hours. Here’s two ways this paper could go wrong. The paper could discuss at great length the nature of human knowledge without ever mentioning why this particular high school was chosen, how the researcher conducted the interviews, how the participants were observed, or how the interviews and research notes were later analysed to arrive at a conclusion. This would be a paper that got its emphasis wrong, remaining almost entirely in the philosophical realm of epistemology. Alternatively, imagine the same paper launching into the minutia of every single work-step, but never justifying why it might be useful to conduct a case study in the first place, why observations allow us to say something about people’s behaviour, how much credence we should give to the statements of interview subjects, or whether results from the project are representative of human beings in general or only of kids living in this neighbourhood of South Korea’s capital at this particular point in time.

How you get this balance between theory and practice right will have to be a question you answer on a case-to-case basis. There are certainly projects that do not require a lot of practical work-steps but instead focus more on epistemology. For instance, if you plan to write a paper about a famous philosopher, you might only need one footnote to explain what texts you used and how you went about interpreting them. The question of what an interpretation is or why these philosophical texts matter will be much more central to your study, so that your methodology section will likely focus primarily on these issues. As another example, imagine you are running statistical tests on the relation between different demographic and economic variables in Taiwan, using a dataset published by the United Nations and studied widely by economists. It may not be necessary to go into long discussions about how something like the Gross Domestic Product gets calculated, and what these numbers tell us about incomes in an economy – a few footnotes to other scholars who have discussed these matters will be enough to show that you are aware of such debates. The more interesting questions for your case might be how you set up your statistical calculations and how you went about visualizing the results for your readers. The methodology section of such a study might therefore be rather light on epistemology but heavy on the nitty-gritty practical issues of using this particular data set.

Where in a thesis does the methodology section go?

As you’ve seen, methodological concerns differ widely, depending on the project and the discipline. The same is true for conventions on how to write up a methodology section. In some disciplines, notably the life sciences and certain social sciences, it is customary to write within a standard framework: introduction, literature review (often including theoretical concerns), research design (methodology), research results, discussion, and conclusion. What needs to go where can be very specific, and concepts like theory, methodology, method, and strategy are kept strictly apart (for an example, see Rudestam & Newton 2007). In other areas, particularly in the arts and humanities or in branches of the social sciences that are less positivistic, the setup can be much looser. Questions of methodology might make up a paragraph in the introduction, or the last section of the theory chapter, or the first section of the case study, or even a number of footnotes throughout the study.

The scope of the methodological section will also depend on the level you are working at: most undergraduate degrees don’t normally require hands-on research with primary sources, and it is quite possible that a term paper or even a BA thesis is essentially a literature review. In such a case, it would be wise to include at least a note on what a literature review is, what it can achieve, and what considerations went into picking this set of secondary sources rather than another (for inspiration, see Hart 1998). However, this probably won’t require more than a short paragraph. At the level of a doctoral thesis, the situation is quite different. Such projects usually have fully-fledged methodology chapters, often with sub-sections to discuss epistemological questions, the selection of research materials, and the exact steps taken to conduct the study. You will have to decide where you belong on this scale.

Two examples of how to deal with methodology

To show you how methodological concerns play out in practice, let me walk you through two hypothetical research projects at the graduate level that each deal with an aspect of politics in East Asia. These are the two projects: Alice studies Chinese at a humanities faculty, and she is writing her MA thesis about the role that pre-modern Confucian sources play in the political programme of China’s former president Hu Jintao. Becky studies East Asian Studies at a social science faculty, and she is writing her MA thesis on the way that Japan’s public broadcaster NHK covered the 2011 melt-down at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in its flagship news broadcast News Watch 9. Here are the choices that Alice and Becky are making as they are working on their projects.

Case A – Confucian thought in contemporary Chinese politics: Alice’s project starts with a thorough literature review on Chinese politics, the Hu-Wen administration, and the so-called “Confucian Revival” in contemporary China. This literature will later go into a first chapter, in which Alice plans to outline the main issues and debates, along with a few theoretical ideas about how appeals to tradition are said to legitimate political decisions. After reading the literature, Alice decides that her study will focus on how Hu Jintao has used the word “harmonious society” – a term that loosely draws from the Confucian concept of harmony. Since this word was introduced at the National People’s Congress of 2005, she will look at speeches and news announcements that followed that congress, and she will cover six months. She will also look at Confucian classics to see how the word “harmony” is used there, and will then compare these sources.

As Alice works on her project, she decides that the methodological discussions should go at the start of the thesis, in the introduction. She will write a paragraph about her choice of sources, including a footnote on how she will reference these sources throughout the text. Since much of Alice’s work consists of demonstrating her command of the Chinese language, and of convincing her readers of her arguments using translated quotes from the original sources, she decides to also write a paragraph on what it means to translate political texts from such different time periods into contemporary English, and what considerations went into her own translation work. This means that she’ll explain why she is providing both the Chinese original and her own English translation in the main text of her thesis as she examines different sources, and how her translations will be “annotated”, which means she will comment on her translation choices and will provide important cultural or historical information in footnotes along the way.

She will then include an additional methodological section at the start of her analysis chapter, right after the theoretical discussion of how and why political agents appeal to tradition to justify their policies. This short section will discuss the nature of historical source materials, with a particular focus on the Confucian classics and what is currently known about their origin, their authenticity, and their use in later periods of Chinese history (…the highly epistemic question of how we assess something’s “authenticity” will be part of this section). Following her analysis, Alice will draw all these elements together in her conclusion to discuss how Confucian traditions are creatively reworked in contemporary Chinese politics, and to elaborate what this says about the ruling party’s attempts to justify its work.

Case B – NHK news coverage of the 311 disaster: Since Becky wants her study of Japanese media to include quite a few technical elements, like the way that camera angles and studio design contribute to news reporting, she decides to discuss her methodology in a special chapter. Just like Alice, Becky starts her work with a literature review, and she decides that discussions about Japan’s media, Japan’s nuclear industry (the “nuclear village”), and about the Fukushima disaster will all be part of her introduction to the topic. Her research focus will be on how a national broadcaster contributes to knowledge about nuclear energy. To this end, she plans to include a theory chapter that examines how academics usually make sense of mass media and its role in political processes. This is also where she will discuss the works of Japanese media theorists who have written on politics and culture in Japan.

Following this discussion, she will write a methodology chapter, which she calls “Researching Japan’s national news broadcasts”. This chapter is going to have three sub-sections. The first part will follow up on the issues she raised in her theory chapter (like: what is visual communication? What are TV news?) and will discuss epistemology: Does an image on TV represent the actual situation on the ground, or are such images selected and edited in ways that introduce visual rhetoric and specific tropes, biasing the news reports in the process? What does this mean for a person who now analyses these news materials? To explore this issue, Becky will discuss approaches to visual communication analysis, such as semiotics. In the second section of her methodology chapter, she will explain why she picked NHK as a source of material, and which news broadcasts she picked (for instance: all news broadcasts that dealt with nuclear energy in the three months before and the three months after the disaster). The third part of the chapter will discuss the exact work-steps that Becky followed to prepare the material for analysis and interpret her data. She decides that this will include creating sequence protocols of the news broadcasts, and then providing shot protocols for particularly important segments.

Since her actual analysis will consist of a mixed quantitative and qualitative approach, she will explain what this means in this third section of her methodology chapter: she will look at the amount of time that news broadcasts on different days report on nuclear issues, at shot frequencies in the segments that cover Fukushima, and at the meanings that certain camera angles and visual tropes introduce to the overall news narrative. In this section, she will also explain that she is compiling all of her data in an appendix, and that she will include graphics and statistics in tables throughout the actual analysis chapter. Since Becky’s analysis does not focus on the use of language, she will need to explain why she is bracketing this issue (and where readers might find out more about linguistic analyses of the news). Contrary to Alice, Becky decides to not discuss at great length how she is translating the news, and only includes a footnote that states something like “if not noted otherwise, all translations in this thesis are my own”.

Becky’s analysis will now include a chapter with different visualization strategies that NHK used to report on nuclear energy in Japan. She will compare the reporting before and after the disaster, and discuss the implications in her conclusion – where she will tie her own work back to the theoretical concerns she raised in her theory chapter. She will also have a paragraph in her conclusion that outlines what her approach left out and why. To show that she understands the limitations of her research, she will also suggest what kinds of follow-up studies could now shed light on any remaining questions. Her last paragraph will be a forceful argument about how national news play a powerful role in not simply reporting but actually constructing political crises.

Conclusion

As you can see, there is no single answer to how you should build theory, methodology, and method into your research project. The best advice I can give, is: check what your supervisor or your publisher has in mind. They know your field, and they will be the ones judging your work, so you should always see what their specific requirements are. As with all good writing, keep your audience in mind.

I’ve provided sources for further reading below, in case you want to learn more about this fundamental part of academic work. You may want to also take a look at my own discussions of methodology, for instance my blog post on how to do a discourse analysis (which is about methods) or how to set up such an analysis (which includes epistemological questions).

If you are currently working on your methodology, or you are instructing others on how to do so, feel free to leave a comment below. Conventions differ widely, and I’ve for instance just learned that certain life sciences make a distinction between “methodology” (the discussion of methods), “method” (a general technique in research), and “strategy” (the practical work-steps of how to apply a method to a specific case). As always, I’d love to hear how you are dealing with such distinctions, and where you place the emphasis in your own work.

References

Goodin, Robert E., & Lingemann, Hans-Dieter (Eds.) (1996), ‘Part IX: Political Methodology’. In: A New Handbook of Political Science. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press (pp.717-799).

Hart, Chris (1998), Doing a Literature Review – Releasing the Social Science Research Imagination. Los Angeles et al.: Sage.

Hine, Christine (Ed.) (2005), Virtual Methods – Issues in Social Research on the Internet. Oxford & New York: Berg.

Marsh, David, & Stoker, Gerry (2010), Theory and Methods in Political Science (3rd ed.). Basingstoke & New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

Rogers, Richard (2013), Digital Methods. Cambridge, MA & London: MIT Press.

Rudestam, Kjell Erik, & Newton, Rae R. (2007): ‘The Method Chapter: Describing Your Research Plan’. In: Surviving Your Dissertation – A Comprehensive Guide to Content and Process (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA et al.: Sage (pp.87-115).

Trachtenberg, Marc (2006), The Craft of International History – A Guide to Method. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

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About the Author: Florian Schneider

Florian is the editor of PoliticsEastAsia.com. He is Professor of Modern China at Leiden University, editor of the journal Asiascape: Digital Asia, and academic director of the Leiden Asia Centre.

50 Comments

  1. […] that you only need to follow a certain number of steps to get your results can be misleading. A methodology is always only as good as your question. If your question does not lend itself to this sort of […]

  2. […] I expand the toolbox for discourse analysis that I have introduced in a previous post by adding methods and work-steps that will hopefully not only inspire you to explore how politics play out through different media […]

  3. Mich 24/02/2014 at 18:28

    This is a great introduction and overview. I am in a doctoral program and the terms continue to be conflated, misinterpreted and synonymized. Useful distinctions are made here to enable thoughtful construction of one’s research design and process. Many thanks.

    • Florian Schneider 24/02/2014 at 19:15

      Thanks Mich,
      If you don’t mind my asking: what field are you working in? I’d love to know where you and your fellow researchers normally draw the line between these different concepts.
      At any rate, I’m glad if you found this useful.

  4. abderraouf 11/03/2014 at 10:06

    Hello Mr Florian Schneider
    Thank you for this usful explanation. I am doing a critical discourse analysis of presedetial speech of ex Egyptian president Morssi. I explained my research methodology in a short paragraph. I said that I rely on interenet as the basis source of data collection. for text analysis I rely on software for text analysis in addition to the tools provided in Fairclough approach for text analysis and description.

    Is this appropriate ? please tell me about the best software you know for text analysis I am wondering what to choose since I never held such an analysis. I look forward to you answer.
    Best regards!

    • Florian Schneider 11/03/2014 at 18:05

      What a great topic! What you describe could indeed work, but I would check with your examiner to be sure. Depending on the kind of paper you are writing (e.g. the length and level of study), I would for instance include a bit more information on your selection process and on the way you analyzed the texts. It might also be good to add somewhere (in a footnote, maybe?) how Fairclough’s approach compares to other approaches (e.g. Paul Chilton’s), and why you ended up choosing Fairclough’s CDA. But again, this depends on your focus, and on how much “discourse theory” you feel you need to include.

      As for analytical software, I have mentioned in another post (http://bit.ly/1iwhH1R) that NVivo works very well (if your university allows you free access – otherwise it can be a bit pricey). You can also re-appropriate other tools, like Tagxedo, OneNote, or even Word to do your analysis. If you need to explore a large corpus of text, you might also find this tool useful: http://www.lexically.net/wordsmith/

      I hope this helps! Good luck with this fascinating research project.

      Best – Florian

  5. Abderraouf 24/05/2014 at 14:00

    Hello Mr Florian
    I have finished my analysis of the ex-Egyptian president Morsi in UN Assembly. I have followed your remarks concerning the research methods. Now I would like you to read my speech analysis totest it against mine. I used Fairclough’s approach as the framework of the speech analysis. It is not long one as I focused mainly on the experiential valus of the lexical items. Please if you can read it and give me your precious remarks I will be greatful to you.
    Thank you inadvance
    Best of regards!
    Abderraouf

  6. Catherine 05/09/2014 at 09:10

    Thank you so much!
    I now have insight to what methodology is really about… I was snooping around the internet; and I must say, your analysis resonates well with me. Thanks for the great job well done.

    I’m currently an undergraduate writing a project on ‘Influence of broken home on the academic performance of secondary school students’.
    Please I would like you to suggest for me a suitable research design that doesn’t need complex mathematical computation…

    Thanks as I await enerstly await your quick response.

    • Jojo 17/05/2015 at 16:06

      Hello Catherine,
      How are you doing? Give me a better picture of waht you are writing on.

  7. Kerri Garrard 10/11/2014 at 07:50

    Hi. Thankyou for your info. This has helped me make some distinctions between the terms. I am a doctoral candidate working in History and education and the concept of interculturality.I am working with textual analysis and focus groups as my methods and think I am clear that my methodology is the discussion of these methods. I am still a little unsure about the epistemological questions I should be concerned with.

    • Florian Schneider 10/11/2014 at 08:43

      Hi Kerri. Glad to hear this has been helpful. As for the epistemological questions, in your case they could include a discussion of what an interview allows you to know (i.e. can your interviewees ever provide you with ‘facts’ on a topic, or is everything they tell you part of their worldview? Does a distinction like this matter?). The same might apply to texts as well: to what extent are they able to provide you a window into your subject? More broadly speaking, an interesting epistemological question would concern the nature of history as a subject. Are historians able to reconstruct actual historical processes, or is their contribution that they provide a particular interpretation of historical sources in light of contemporary concerns? A nice book on these questions is Michael Trachtenberg’s book, which is in the list of references above. In either case, I’d check with your supervisor to what extent these questions need to be part of your doctoral thesis. It’s nice, of course, to show that as a PhD student you have a sense of how important these issues are, but if such questions aren’t central to your work, then a short paragraph or a footnote might already suffice to clarify what your position is.

  8. syedahsannaveed 18/11/2014 at 15:01

    thanks for guidance that was quite helpful

  9. Patrick 07/03/2015 at 03:40

    Just wanted to chime in here to thank you for this thread. I was literally looking for something that clearly defines between the terms ‘method’ and ‘methodology’ for my paper on “Would more use of motivational techniques within the workplace inspire better individual performance from employees?” before I begin writing that section. This more than accomplished that, a fascinating read. Much appreciated.

    • Florian Schneider 07/03/2015 at 11:46

      Thanks for the kind words Patrick. And good luck with the paper!

  10. aafia khizar 02/05/2015 at 13:40

    it was informative . i wanted the sample analysis of dramatic text through critical discourse analysis using van dijk’s sociocognitive approach

    • Florian Schneider 07/05/2015 at 21:04

      Hi Aafia,
      Do you mean you’re looking for an analysis of dramatic texts that deploys specifically van Dijk’s CDA approach? That’s a pretty specific question. I’m sure there must be something of that sort, but I’m afraid I don’t know of any particular article. Have you looked at some of the back issues of journals that feature CDA analyses? Your best bets are likely going to be “Discourse & Society” (http://das.sagepub.com/) and “Discourse & Communication” (http://dcm.sagepub.com/), both of which are edited by Teun van Dijk. Maybe you’ll find what you’re looking for there. Most university libraries should provide access to both publications.
      Sorry to not be of more help.

  11. Desmond Ekeh 26/05/2015 at 14:41

    Dear Florian,
    Thanks for your efforts. Your site is very helpful. I am a PhD candidate researching in the area of Political Communication. My topic is on Election Campaign Communication and Policy Issues in Nigerian Politics. I am hoping to use Content Analysis of speeches and press ads published during presidential campaigns of dominant candidates from 1999 – 2015 to find out the extent they focused on policy issues, acclaim, attack and defense following Willian Benoit functional theory of political campaign discourse. Do you think that is enough. Should I add another theory. Is content analysis enough?

  12. Maria 18/10/2015 at 05:41

    This is so helpful. I am an undergraduate student and am writing my senior thesis on political and social trust within Latin America and Mexico and whether or not this mistrust allows for narcotrafficking networks to thrive ultimately causing the state to fail in regards to human rights violations. I’ve been having a tough time of how to approach the methodology section. Does anyone have any tips? I would really appreciate it!!

    • Florian Schneider 19/10/2015 at 19:16

      Hi Maria,
      It’ll probably be a good idea to check with your thesis supervisor to see what he or she expects of a methodology section, but I would normally want to know 1) what materials you selected to answer your research question, 2) how and why you selected those materials, and 3) what you then did with those materials (e.g. work steps that you applied in order to process and analyze them). In all of this, it would be wise to explain what other researchers have done in similar situations, and to discuss what strengths and weaknesses their approaches might have. In other words, your methodology section should include a short literature review of relevant methods. That way you can then justify your own approach, in an informed and knowledgeable way.
      Hope this helps.
      Best
      Florian

  13. Moreblessings 02/11/2015 at 02:19

    l have a clear idea of the methodology l want to research on which is the effectiveness of rhymes in language development preschool children , but what l am not getting are the authors who supports the term methodology

  14. Moreblessings 02/11/2015 at 02:28

    Are there any authorities to support the word methodology that are current which are not from the dictionary, because l am failing to get one except for the explanation of the word

    • Florian Schneider 04/11/2015 at 11:40

      I’m not sure how to help – I would recommend taking a look at some of the compendiums on research methods and research design. In some of our programmes, we use Marsh & Stoker’s ‘Theory and Methods in Political Science’, but as the name says, that’s very much about the field of polisci. You could check out John Creswell’s ‘Research Design’. I might contain what you’re looking for, especially since he comes at the subject from an educational psychology angle.

  15. Ipe 17/02/2016 at 13:20

    I have a question i hope somebody can help me answer this:

    If a method is, in one sense, a “theory in practice”, does that mean that theories have to be formulated or considered first before applying a method in language teaching?

    I hope you can help me

    • Florian Schneider 20/02/2016 at 14:53

      I can’t comment on language teaching, but generally there are two ways into any subject: a theory-driven (deductive) approach and a method-driven (inductive) approach. The deductive approach starts with the theories and then picks methods that are appropriate to checking those theories. The inductive approach starts from empirical observations and then builds theoretical models from those. In the latter case, you’d start with the methods, followed by the analysis, and you’d conclude with theoretical implications. That approach is very popular for instance in anthropology, where participant observation, interviews, and other qualitative methods are meant to shed light on the complexities of individual cases. Not sure how this relates to your work in language teaching, but maybe it’s a useful reminder that the degree to which theory and method connect, and the moments during a project when they connect, can differ substantially depending on the topic.

  16. Nuseiba 25/02/2016 at 23:07

    I am writing my BA research on the representation of refugees in the media. I am an English major in a non-English speaking country, so we didn’t focus on our curriculum on discourse analysis or any other method. We’ve only had a very basic introduction to semiotics. In my research, I’m analyzing pieces of news, articles, and editorials. What is the best way to do that? Can I develop my own analysis based on what I read on your previous articles about discourse analysis (since the supervisor doesn’t require any specific method?). I understood very well the discourse analysis from your article and many other articles I have read, but when I read researches that are based on discourse analysis I see a lot of jargon and terminology that apparently belong to discourse analysis that I know nothing of. I am sure I can efficiently apply the methods of discourse analysis you’ve explained, but I can’t use the terminology that I see being used in the researches based on discourse analysis since I knew nothing about it. Please help! Thank you a lot beforehand for taking the time to answering my questions!

    • Florian Schneider 26/02/2016 at 17:55

      I can understand your frustration with the jargon. A lot of what gets produced in communication study is ironically communicated very poorly. I would not let that stop me from trying to do a discourse analysis. You do not need the jargon to do so, most certainly not at the BA level. If you have sources that you can use to explain what ‘discourse’ is, what a ‘discourse analysis’ does, and what you then plan to do, you should be fine. Make sure, however, to discuss this with your supervisor. They need to read and grade the thesis in the end, so if they feel differently about your choice to develop your own empirical analysis for a BA thesis, you should listen to them. Personally, I would find that very impressive. I encourage BA students to try their hand at an empirical study, but technically such work is not required until the MA level. At any rate, if you need more input for your approach, I can recommend the edited books that Ruth Wodak has published. There are loads of interesting articles in there (also on different media types, to answer the question you left in the other section), and those could be helpful. A final piece of advice: make sure not to do too much. Try to limit your question and your materials, otherwise doing an actual discourse analysis can become a lot of work very quickly. If you manage the scope of your project, though, it can also be very rewarding. Hope this helps!

  17. Melissa 27/02/2016 at 04:18

    Thank you for this article -it helped clear up some confusion that I had. I am writing my undergraduate dissertation for my social work degree on student disclosure of mental illness….which very little has been written on – especially in Australia…I am writing it as an autoethnography as I want to use my own disclosure experience as the foundation for what I want to talk about…not sure yet about how one incorporates theory into an autoethnography…I was told to have a seprate chapter which outlines what I am using…do you have any suggestions of where I might look to find out how I go about using theory in an autoethnography….thanks.

    • Florian Schneider 02/03/2016 at 23:16

      Hi Melissa, I’m not an authority on autoethnography, I’m afraid, but there’s a book from OUP that looks like it might be up your alley: Tony Adams’ ‘Autoethnography – Understanding Qualitative Research‘. I would start there, then check journals on the topic, and then work my way through the referenced literature. Hope this helps.

  18. Bram 01/04/2016 at 16:08

    Dear Florian,
    Thanks a lot for this incredibly helpful website! Very informative and gründlich ;). I came across it browsing for some clues about a methodology chapter in my phd dissertation.
    Btw I really enjoyed your BA course in Leiden in 2010. I ended up doing fieldwork in China and now a phd in amsterdam. All the best for now!
    Bram

    • Florian Schneider 02/04/2016 at 00:52

      Hi Bram,
      Thanks for the kind words. Great to hear you’re pursuing a PhD, and at the UvA, no less. You’re working on religion, right? Very exciting. Make sure to let me know how that turns out. And if you happen to come across interesting practices that connect to digital media use (…I hear that’s increasingly an important dimension of religious practice, particularly in East Asia), do think about taking some additional field notes. I have it on good authority that our journal ‘Asiascape: Digital Asia‘ would be very interested in that sort of thing… just saying. ;)
      All the best for your research!
      F

  19. Ahmad 24/05/2016 at 11:47

    It is wonderful but still I am not clear. I am a undergraduate student of English language, I want you to give a simple way.

    • Florian Schneider 28/05/2016 at 21:19

      I’d love to help, but this is a bit vague. Did you have something specific in mind that was unclear?

  20. Abdul 14/06/2016 at 15:47

    Thanks, I found your explanation on methods and methodology very useful. I am writing my dissertation on Nigeria’s foreign policy please, advise me on how to go about the methodology thanks.

    • Florian Schneider 29/06/2016 at 17:27

      Hi Abdul,
      Glad you found the website useful so far. You’ve posed a very broad question, so I’m not sure how much help I can provide. It really depends on what your research question is. Depending on how you’ve narrowed your question down, you can then decide what materials are most suitable to answer it. For example, if you are trying to find out what the policy position on a specific foreign relation issue is, then it might be good to study official policy documents by the ministry of foreign affairs; if you are interested in exploring how the decision-making process of foreign-policy making works in Nigeria, then you could interview policy-makers, or compile information from secondary literature, or see what the websites of important Nigerian institutions have to say on the subject; if you are hoping to examine how foreign policy gets framed (and used) by politicians, then you could look at speeches of important policy-makers; and so on. In each case, the methods you use should then be appropriate for your materials. Again, it very much depends on what you are trying to achieve and what question is driving your study.
      Best – FS

  21. Larissa 25/06/2016 at 19:06

    Hi,
    I’m writing my B.A paper on literature, analyzing female characters from Dubliners and I was wondering how should my methodology look? I already have the research methods so should I just refer to previous works on this topic and their approach? Any pointers would be greatly appreciated.

    • Florian Schneider 29/06/2016 at 17:42

      Hi Larissa,
      A BA thesis tends to not leave a lot of room for methodology, so you’ll have to pick your battles carefully, as it were (and of course: in consultation with your supervisor). I usually ask students to briefly discuss the literature on their chosen method, to highlight any important controversies, and to then spell out which materials they themselves chose (and why) and what worksteps they applied to those materials. So, for instance, if the method is discourse analysis, I would probably use about 1,000 words to mention people from critical discourse analysis, historical discourse analysis, etc., discuss how they approach discourse and language (e.g. by looking at linguistic features, or by looking at narratives, etc.), and mention any major issues in the debates that apply to my own study (e.g. whether or not the context of the work matters, whether or not the author matters, etc.). I would then reserve ca. 300-500 words to explain why I chose the main source I am analyzing and what I did with it (e.g. code the chapters according to their role in the narrative, code all instances of specific characters making an appearance, isolating crucial sections that deal with a specific theme or subject like gender, etc.). What exactly this section discusses will of course have to depend on the research question you’re posing. As I said, you only have very limited space, and you want to reserve most of it for your own original research. Nevertheless, I hope this gives you a bit of an impression of what this could look like. Best – FS

  22. Saif 07/08/2016 at 20:33

    Dear Sir,

    At first I would like to thank you for a good writing on the respective issue. I read the full page and got much more distinct knowledge.

    Therefore, I am a Bangladeshi national and currently studying MA, International Relations at the South Asian University, New Delhi, India. I am preparing to start writing my MA dissertation which to be submitted at the end of this year. I have decided to work on the issue of “Terrorism and the National Security Paradox in Bangladesh” my general view of the topic is: Terrorism is a daunting problem in the today’s world. The risks and vulnerabilities created by terrorism have become a serious threat to the national security of Bangladesh. Terrorism has become a threat to life, economy, political culture, society and religious pluralism in the country. Among the several non-traditional security threats, terrorism has become the highest issue of tension for Bangladesh in the recent decade. The national security discourse of the country has been more concern about the issue of terrorism than the other issues in the recent time.
    It is been argued that terrorism has become the core threat for the national security of Bangladesh. To secure the country from the threat the state mechanism has been highly securitize and combating the issue of terrorism trough the multiple channel. The government and the security forces of the country have been taking multiple initiatives to securitize the issue.
    But the argument is that, there is a paradox in the national security web regarding the issue of terrorism. The process of securitization, combating the issue and the national security has been in a dilemma. On the one hand the state mechanism has been securitizing the issue of terrorism and combating it in a multiple way, and on the other hand under the same state mechanism the issue of terrorism has been nursing and paving the way of longer lasting threat for the state of Bangladesh. There has been a dichotomy of national security policy and implication particularly regarding the issue of terrorism.
    The primary objectives of the research are to analysis the answer of the questions that how the issue of terrorism and the national security is related and how the paradox in the national security has been taking place in Bangladesh.
    The inspiration to choose the research questions is that, there are extensive scholarly work separately done on the issue of terrorism and national security of Bangladesh. But there is the lacking of research on the issue of terrorism, its relational aspect as well as the placement of paradox regarding the issue.
    The research would try to find out the cause, spread and its nature of terrorism and its relational aspect to the national security of Bangladesh. It would find out how the paradox of national security regarding the issue of terrorism has been taking place. By arguing the facts and theoretical discussion the research would be recommended the required stapes of the national security realm to combat the identified paradox.

    I would like to request you to suggest me that how I can frame the issue for an academic writing. What would be the tentative way of theoretical, method and methodical inside for the respective research topic.

    I would be very grateful if you suggest me to write my dissertation in a good academic way. .

    • Florian Schneider 08/08/2016 at 14:16

      Dear Saif,
      National security and anti-terror policy in Bangladesh is certainly an exciting MA topic. I’ll try to keep my response to your question brief, but do make sure you talk the subject through with your supervisor. It’s always important to let the person who will be grading you know where your work is headed.
      Personally, I would focus on the second part of your research question, which I find the most interesting: how are terrorism and national security locked into a paradox in the case of Bangladesh? I would turn any overarching questions about terrorism into a general literature review (I’m sure you’ll find loads in the relevant IR journals), and I would provide a first-hand analysis of documents where you believe the actors are either a) constructing a paradox or b) aware of a paradox and trying to overcome it.
      For this you could indeed use some form of discourse analysis, which traditionally works well with the kind of ‘securitization’ theories that the Copenhagen School has developed. You could, for instance, explore the rhetoric of the relevant government agencies or policy documents to see if the normative statements that get made there reflect the kind of paradox you have in mind. The trick here will be to explore what exactly is portrayed as an existential threat, and how such threat depictions then frame policy responses that may end up being paradoxical.
      If you do a bit of preliminary research to see what could work as primary materials, and if you start reading more on terror in IR and the issue of securitization, then you should be able to put together a sound and manageable study. I’m not sure which readings to recommend, other than seminal books like Michael Cambell’s “Writing Security” and maybe work that deals specifically with Asian contexts (like the writings of Karl Gustafsson on securitization in Sino-Japanese relations). You’ll have to do a bit more bibliographic work to figure out what works for your study.
      I certainly wish you all the best of luck with this exciting topic!

      • Saif 08/08/2016 at 20:06

        Thank you sir. I will follow your suggestion. If required I will write you again. All the best.

  23. Nadia 20/11/2016 at 02:55

    Excellent article! Thank you so much!

  24. Khaleel Nasser 23/01/2017 at 20:40

    Thank You for this topic

    • Florian Schneider 25/01/2017 at 09:00

      My pleasure!

  25. Anjie Loveless-Smith 26/08/2017 at 14:33

    Your information has been quite helpful. I am in the initial stage of gathering and writing a thesis for my MA in Criminal Justice. This is still kind of new to me and I am having difficulty narrowing my research question. I am interested in knowing to what extent do drug courts affect post program recidivism rates of adult nonviolent offenders? Not sure if that is still too broad. I am going to focus on the program’s treatment, such as the intensive supervision, graduated sanctions etc as the independent variables with recidivism as the dependent variable, Through my research, I have now found that recidivism can represent several things, such as criminal behavior, substance abuse, unemployment. Do I need to specify which? Ultimately, I want to know if drug courts are more effective than incarceration. Numerous research has been conducted regarding this subject matter. So I need to find what is missing.
    Thanks for any insight of how to approach.

    • Florian Schneider 21/09/2017 at 00:40

      Dear Anjie,
      I’m responding somewhat late, my apologies. I have to admit your topic is rather outside of my comfort zone, so I’m not sure I can be of much help. What you describe sounds entirely reasonable to me. You have your independent and dependent variables defined, and you’re clearly informing your question with information from the relevant debates. All of this sounds promising. The main issue you might still need to address is how you will study the mechanism between the program’s treatment and its effects. What will count as your data? Will you relate statistic elements to one another, or are you basing your study on qualitative information? Depending on what data you have available, you may need to indeed refine your definition of ‘treatment’ and of ‘recidivism’, to make these concepts operational. That said, you could use your literature review to outline the many options that your source materials identify and discuss, and then follow this up with a justification of your choice of data and the most useful methodology that will allow you to explore this issue (or at least: a particular ‘slice’ of the issue).
      I’m not sure whether these comments help. Again, this is not the kind of study I am particularly knowledgeable about. Let me know what you decide. And good luck with the project!
      Best – Florian

  26. elnara 22/09/2017 at 01:42

    Dear Dr. Schneider,

    I am going to write my Master’s thesis on Human Rights of Labor Migrants. Ideally, I would go and do field research however due to funding and time limits I am not able to that. Therefore I am planning to analyze legal documents regulating this issue. (however, it is not finalized)
    In this regard what would be your overall suggestion for a thesis without data from field research but at the same time of high quality.
    Thank you.

    • Florian Schneider 05/11/2017 at 12:45

      Dear Elnara,
      Sorry for only seeing your comment now. The semester here has been crazy. If you are still interested in discussing this, can you send me an email to my institutional email account at f.a.schneider@hum.leidenuniv.nl? I’ll then respond from there, if that’s alright.
      Best wishes,
      Florian

  27. Isurtu 22/02/2018 at 17:24

    Dear Sir!

    It was a great introduction. I’m really worried about my situation. Because I want to write a thesis, but my knowledge regarding methodology and thesis format is nil. So I ‘m always searching for information regarding master thesis, but still, I didn’t find full description regarding master thesis. However, your description makes me and my friend knowledgeable..

    • Florian Schneider 07/03/2018 at 18:09

      I’m very happy to hear that. I’ll keep my fingers crossed that your thesis work goes well. Let me know how it all turns out.

  28. branda 06/03/2018 at 18:30

    Dear sir,
    I hope my message finds you well,
    I’m currently working on my bachelor dissertation and i’m quite confused!
    i have some questions, could you please help me:
    1- should I look for a knowledge gap for my undergrad dissertation?
    2- how to develop a problem statement & research questions? and is the type of the research questions related to the methodology used?
    3- how is a theoretical framework related to the methodology?
    4- do you have any note taking techniques? because I’m collecting direct quotes from different documents and I find it hard to paraphrase!
    I look forward to hearing from you soon.
    Best Regards.

    • Florian Schneider 07/03/2018 at 18:43

      Dear Branda,
      These are indeed good questions. Let me see if I can answer them, in turn:

      1) This very much depends on your topic. Ideally, you’d check the academic literature that deals with the general thematic area you plan to work on, to see what other people have written on the subject. For instance, let’s say you wanted to study an aspect of China’s foreign policy. It might be wise to then take a look at the international relations literature on China, and also any literature that deals with the specific cases you find interesting (for instance: territorial disputes). You may even find that your topic has theoretical implications that you hope to explore, in which case you should probably check out core readings on that deal with the respective theories (for instance, if you are interested in foreign policy and how it is affected by economic relations, then liberal theories might be worth consulting). As you read the relevant literature, you should take notes on what does not add up, or make sense, or what you think might be missing from the story. You can also take a closer look at what other scholars have been doing, in practice, to answer their question, and then decide whether their research approach was appropriate. If you think that it was not, then you have an issue you can criticise about that piece of scholarship. From those notes, you should then see gaps in the scholarship emerge, and it would be ideal if you could then situate your own thesis in those gaps. You’d essentially be asking: how can I address one of the problems that this set of literature still has, at this moment?

      2) Again, this can differ widely, based on your project and your concerns. As with my comments under 1), ideally your research question should be informed by a careful reading of what has already been done, on your subject. You’ll then have to make sure you ask a question that you can actually answer, and in that sense: yes, the question is likely going to be related to the methodology you use. Or rather: the kind of question you ask will imply certain sources and methods. If you are interested in a state’s policy, for instance, you are already suggesting that policy documents might be a good place to look, so why not spell that out, as part of the question? If you are interested in online debates, then that might require a closer look at social media content, and you should look for your methods in that realm. At any rate, I recommend the following short article on how to best phrase a research question: http://www.socscidiss.bham.ac.uk/research-question.html.

      3) The theoretical frameworks you engage with will have implications for what may count as appropriate data, and what you can expect to do with that data. For instance, if your theoretical framework assumes that reality is ‘out there’, that it is fixed and can be studied with scientific instruments, then the methodologies that follow from that are likely to be positivist: you’d find a useful instrument, go out into the world, and start measuring what is really going on. On the other hand, if you are using theories that argue that reality is socially constructed, then you may need to look at human interactions and what people say about the world, to figure out how they make their own realities. That would be a very different set of methods.

      4) I’m not sure I understood the question right. Do you mean how to best take notes while you read? I always have a computer or notebook open, and I create an entry or page for each source I read. I then copy direct quotes there, as I go, including the page number, and I also reserve a section for my own personal reflections and for further reading tips that I come across. Personally, I use Microsoft OneNote to process all of this, since it is free, syncs across a number of devices, and allows you to easily ‘clip’ online content. It’s also fully searchable, so that’s my go-to app. You could, of course, also use more professional (Read: paid) apps, such as the very powerful NVivo software, or you could opt for something else that suits your need, for instance on iOS. Of course, if you are not using digital devices, and especially if you are reading printed articles or books, you may want to write into those documents directly (if you own them!), with a pen. I use question marks and exclamation marks in the margins, to highlight for myself what I thought was odd or relevant, respectively, and I double or triple these marks where something is particularly relevant (so !! for extra important, !!! for crucial). I then often write a keyword underneath that mark, so I can later easily skim the text and see what related to what. If I have time, I may go back to a digital device and process these notes, for instance by typing down important text passages that I want to later quote, but this can be time-consuming, and it may be overkill. In some instances, you may want to wait before ‘digitizing’ such texts, until you are actually writing the thesis and need specific quotes. If you have marked up the original appropriately, you shouldn’t have too much trouble tracking down what you need.

      I hope these tips are useful. Good luck with the project!

      Best wishes,
      Florian

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