Dictionary Definition
methodology
Noun
1 the branch of philosophy that analyzes the
principles and procedures of inquiry in a particular discipline
[syn: methodological
analysis]
2 the system of methods followed in a particular
discipline
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From Greek μεθοδολογία (methodologia), from Ancient Greek μέθοδος "method" + λόγος "logos".Noun
- A collection of methods, practices, procedures and rules used by those who work in some field.
- The study of such methods etc.
- The implementation of such methods etc.
Usage notes
"Methodology" is often used where "method", "means", "technique" or "procedure" should be used.Translations
a collection of methods, practices, procedures
and rules used by those who work in some field
- Czech: metodika
- Finnish: metodologia
- Greek: μεθοδολογία (methodología)
- Portuguese: metodologia
the study of such methods etc.
- Czech: metodologie
- Finnish: menetelmäoppi
- Portuguese: metodologia
the implementation of such methods etc.
- Portuguese: metodologia
Extensive Definition
Methodology (also called manner) is defined
as
- "the analysis of the principles of methods, rules, and postulates employed by a discipline",
- "the systematic study of methods that are, can be, or have been applied within a discipline" or
- "a particular procedure or set of procedures" .
It should be noted that methodology is frequently
used when method would be more accurate. (This is a classic example
of word
inflation.) For example, "Since students were not available to
complete the survey about academic success, we changed our
methodology and gathered data from instructors instead". In this
instance the methodology (gathering data via surveys, and the
assumption that this produces accurate results) did not change, but
the method (asking teachers instead of students) did.
Methodology includes the following concepts as
they relate to a particular discipline or field of inquiry:
- a collection of theories, concepts or ideas;
- comparative study of different approaches; and
- critique of the individual methods
Methodology refers to more than a simple set of
methods; rather it refers to the rationale and the philosophical
assumptions that underlie a particular study. This is why scholarly
literature often includes a section on the methodology of the
researchers. This section does more than outline the researchers’
methods (as in, “We conducted a survey of 50 people over a two-week
period and subjected the results to statistical analysis”, etc.);
it might explain what the researchers’ ontological or epistemological views
are.
Another key (though arguably imprecise) usage for
methodology does not refer to research or to the specific analysis
techniques. This often refers to anything and everything that can
be encapsulated for a discipline or a series of processes,
activities and tasks. Examples of this are found in software
development, project management and business process fields. This
use of the term is typified by the outline who, what, where, when,
and why. In the documentation of the processes that make up the
discipline, that is being supported by "this" methodology, that is
where we would find the "methods" or processes. The processes
themselves are only part of the methodology along with the
identification and usage of the standards, policies, rules,
etc.
Example
Hence, in properly conceived methodologies,
researchers frequently acknowledge the need for rigour, logic and
coherence which must withstand peer review as well as their
fundamental approach to reality. For example:
- Do researchers believe in the paradigm of Positivism, which holds that truth is out there waiting to be discovered? In this view, facts exist independently of any theories or human observation. This perspective dominates Western philosophical tradition, which provides the foundation of Western science. Reality is assumed to be objective, that is, it exists outside our perception. In this paradigm, neither the search for truth nor truth itself is problematic: Truth is definite and ascertainable. Scientists conduct empirical experiments in laboratories and report what they have discovered as experts.
- Or is truth constructed (see Constructivism and Constructivist epistemology) within the minds of individuals and between people in a culture? In this view, facts become "facts" and are a construct of theories and points of view. This paradigm holds that both the nature of truth and the inquiry into that truth are problematic because truth is built (or constructed) from the ongoing processes of negotiation, revaluation and refinement of and between individuals. However, this is unrelated to perspectives outside the scientific community which attempt to equate research results with social and popular beliefs and belief systems.
Set of methods
Most sciences have their own specific
scientific
methods, which are supported by methodologies (i.e., rationale
that support the method's validity).
The social sciences are methodologically diverse
using qualitative,
quantitative,
and mixed-methods
approaches. Qualitative methods include the case study,
phenomenology,
grounded
theory, and ethnography, among others.
Quantitative methods include hypothesis
testing, power
analysis, metanalysis, observational
studies, resampling,
randomized controlled trials, regression
analysis, multilevel
modeling, and
high-dimensional data analysis, among others.
See also
References
- Creswell, J. (1998). Qualitative inquiry and research design: Choosing among five traditions. Thousand Oaks, California: Sage Publications.
- Creswell, J. (2003). Research Design: Qualitative, Quantitative, and Mixed Methods Approaches. Thousand Oaks, California: Sage Publications.
- Guba, E. and Lincoln, Y. (1989). Fourth Generation Evaluation. Newbury Park, California: Sage Publications.
- Patton, M.Q. (2002). Qualitative research & evaluation methods (3rd edition). Thousand Oaks, California: Sage Publications.
- Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language, Second Edition, Unabridged, W.A. Neilson, T.A. Knott, P.W. Carhart (eds.), G. & C. Merriam Company, Springfield, MA, 1950.
Further reading
methodology in Arabic: علم المنهج
methodology in Bosnian: Metodologija
methodology in Czech: Metodologie
methodology in Danish: Metodologi
methodology in German: Methodologie
methodology in Spanish: Metodología
methodology in Persian: روششناسی
methodology in French: Méthodologie
methodology in Croatian: Metodologija
methodology in Lithuanian: Metodologija
methodology in Dutch: Methodologie
methodology in Japanese: 方法論
methodology in Polish: Metodologia
methodology in Portuguese: Metodologia
methodology in Russian: Методология
methodology in Serbian: Методологија
methodology in Serbo-Croatian:
Metodologija
methodology in Thai: วิธีวิทยา
methodology in Chinese: 方法论
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
MO,
action, actions, activity, acts, address, affectation, air, algorithm, anality, apple-pie order,
approach, arrangement, attack, bearing, behavior, behavior pattern,
behavioral norm, behavioral science, blueprint, blueprinting, calculation, carriage, charting, comportment, conception, conduct, contrivance, course, culture pattern, custom, demeanor, deportment, design, device, discipline, disposition, doing, doings, enterprise, envisagement, fashion, figuring, fine fettle, folkway, foresight, forethought, form, game, gestures, goings-on, good
condition, good shape, good trim, graphing, ground plan, guidelines, guise, idea, intention, layout, line, line of action, lines, lineup, long-range plan, maintien, manner, manner of working,
manners, mapping, master plan, means, method, methodicalness, methods, mien, mode, mode of operation, mode of
procedure, modus operandi, modus vivendi, motions, movements, moves, neatness, observable behavior,
operations research, order, orderliness, organization, pattern, plan, planning, planning function,
poise, port, pose, posture, practice, praxis, prearrangement, presence, procedure, proceeding, process, program, program of action,
rationalization,
routine, schedule, schema, schematism, schematization, scheme, scheme of arrangement,
setup, social science,
strategic plan, strategy, style, system, systematicness, systematization,
tack, tactical plan,
tactics, technique, the big picture,
the drill, the how, the picture, the way of, tidiness, tone, trimness, way, way of life, ways, wise, working
plan