The central purpose of this research seminar class was to instruct us in the ways to effectively design IS research studies, collect and analyze both quantitative and qualitative data, and interpret and communicate research findings. For me, the professor easily achieved this goal. I learned enough in this one class to feel confident about teaching research methods to others.
I came to this class with high expectations. I came armed with the knowledge, from accounts of other students who had taken the course, that the class is taught well. As it turned out, my expectations were not high enough. It is a class that, were it not a required doctoral class, I would recommend to all my friends.
To be sure, the subject matter covered in this class can easily be accessed on the Internet and in a number of research methods texts, including the assigned class reading. But the difference this class makes is in its use of first-rate teaching methods to help the students internalize the methods and techniques of the IS research process. Looking back, I can categorically state that a critical success factor was the professor’s excellent knowledge of both theoretical and practical aspects of the subject matter. This knowledge, which was manifest in the clarity of explanations, in the depth and breadth of concepts covered, and in the manner in which we were steered to gain insight into the practical aspects of IS research, allowed the professor to win our trust, respect and confidence.
This class combined sound instructions on the theory and methods of information systems research with class discussions and practical exercises. The practice sessions, which consisted of weekly reviews of scholarly IS papers, provided a training framework for testing how well we were internalizing what was being taught in class and presented in the text. But for me, the high point occurred when in the course of each class session the professor presented his own evaluation of the paper under review. Before this, the students would have submitted their individual reviews both in blog posts and during class discussion sessions. What I found impressive was that no matter how well we tried to exhaust the issues involved, there were always a few angles to the professor’s analysis that we did not consider, making me realize just how invaluable to a successful career in research it is to possess good analytical qualities in addition to a sound grasping of the concepts involved in conducting research in the IS domain. Surely, social research is both science and art. Yet, it is quite easy for inexperienced researchers like me to fall under the misapprehension that all that is required to become a good researcher is to acquire the theoretical knowledge of the research process and techniques. Obviously, knowledge of the theory is not a sufficient condition.
Not only did this class teach the concepts and issues that constitute the science of IS and social research, it also provided indelible insight as to the practical dimensions of making claims, constructing theoretical arguments, designing questionnaire, interviewing, conducting field observation, carrying out content analysis, conducting H-C research, and more. The class left me with no delusion as to the intellectual and organizational rigor essential to producing scholarly research work.
In this class, I learned about the different underlying views of nature that yield the positivist, interpretivist, and critical-realist schools of thought. I also learned about the different perspectives of qualitative and quantitative IS researchers and the concomitant wide variety of research methods and techniques. Most importantly, I learned about the capabilities of these methods and techniques as well as how to relate and match them to research problems. Additionally, I learned how to use this knowledge to evaluate and review scholarly research works.
In sum, the IS362 class taught me that, in the domain of IS research, the means ought to justify the end. To achieve reliable, valid, and useful original research results, we must strive to ground our research on appropriate theory, provide operational definition of constructs based on that theory, employ the appropriate research and data analysis methods, lucidly interpret results on the basis of that theory, and communicate the research study to the relevant audience.
For me, this class at once demystified the research process and brought to the fore the centrality of applying due process to the conduct of research.