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1. The ‘hourglass’ shape of a report for a quantitative study: starts narrowly, focuses intently on the evidence and ana

Posted: Wed May 04, 2022 12:06 pm
by answerhappygod
1. The ‘hourglass’ shape of a report for a
quantitative study:
starts narrowly, focuses intently on the evidence and analysis,
then concludes narrowly
starts broadly, focuses intently on the evidence and analysis,
then concludes broadly
starts broadly, focuses approximately on the evidence and
analysis, then concludes broadly
starts narrowly, focuses approximately on the evidence and
analysis, then concludes generally
2. In particular for evaluation studies, theory
triangulation refers to:
data sources
different evaluators
perspectives to the same data sets
3.
Keller (2012) posits as we consider God’s plan (His
design) for work was actually part of paradise and
yet…
because of His plan, we humans didn’t have to participate in
work
since God also made us, He no longer works
work had its limits
work was a relatively dispensable part of life.
4.
The desired skills and values of preparing to conduct
data collection
within a case study is not particularly challenging as the data
collection is rather routinized, so generally, most researchers
delegate the data collection to a research
assistant.
True or false
5. Which of the following is not a Value
Stream Mapping or Process Flow Tool
SIPOC
swimlane
boxplots
value-add (VA) vs. non-value-add (NVA) analysis