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Quantitative Research

Welcome

The library guide to Quantitative Research provides information on resources available from the Alvin Sherman Library, both in the library and online, related to Quantitative Research. The library guide covers subject headings, reference sources, books, periodicals, databases, Web sites, and style guides.

One of the best resources to use from the beginning to the end of any exploration of method and design is SAGE Research Methods Online available through the NSU Libraries.

"Academic Research Foundations: Quantitative" via the library's subscription to LinkedIn Learning (previously known as Lynda.com). Videos include content on characteristics of quantitative research, research basics, how to write a research question, developing a literature review, research topics, problem statements, quantitative methodology, results, ethics, and institutional review boards.

An Introduction to Quantitative Methods - Harvard

Garwood's Definition of Quantitative Research

Research involving the collection of data in numerical form for quantitative analysis. The numerical data can be durations, scores, counts of incidents, ratings, or scales. Quantitative data can be collected in either controlled or naturalistic environments, in laboratories or field studies, from special populations or from samples of the general population. The defining factor is that numbers result from the process, whether the initial data collection produced numerical values, or whether non-numerical values were subsequently converted to numbers as part of the analysis process, as in content analysis.

Garwood, J. (2006). Quantitative research. In V. Jupp (Ed.), The SAGE dictionary of social research methods. (pp. 251-252). London, England: SAGE Publications. doi:10.4135/9780857020116

What to learn more? Search within the online version of The SAGE Dictionary of Social Research Methods (requires NSU Libraries login).