Real world research is a common responsibility of professionals and practitioners in a wide range of both public and private settings. These include teachers, social workers and health service professionals, managers and specialists in business, architects, designers, criminologists and accountants among many others.
Real World Research provides a clear route-map of the various steps needed to carry out a piece of applied research to a high professional standard. It is accessible to those without a social science background while providing rigorous and fully up-to-date coverage of contemporary issues and debates. It brings together materials and approaches from different social science disciplines, seeing value in both quantitative and qualitative approaches, as well as their combination in mixed-method designs. Updated throughout, the third edition Colin Robson's bestselling textbook is essential reading for many higher education courses, at both undergraduate, taught postgraduate and doctoral level, as well as practitioners and others carrying out a research project as part of their job. A very extensive website, which is closely keyed in to the text, provides additional resources including copious examples of research and further discussion of research issues, links to other useful resources and selected journal articles, annotated lists of further reading and an extensive set of PowerPoint slides.
Re-reading this fifteen years after my last postgraduate study, as I begin researching for the mini-dissertation on my PGCPHE. A clear, practical guide.
You might think this looks like a textbook. You would be wrong. Robson's book is a fantastic practical guide for working researchers--it's organized in a very accessible format, and contains straightforward, easily implemented guides to various types of research designs. This book works as a field guide, which makes its theoretical content all the more valuable.
Read and referenced as part of my MSc dissertation. A quintessential guide but some chapters felt a bit dated - probably because I read the fourth edition