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What is Paradigm

Handbook of Research on Connecting Research Methods for Information Science Research
A paradigm is set of belief systems underlined by ontological, epistemological axiological and methodological assumptions.
Published in Chapter:
Integration in Mixed Methods Research Designs by Graduate Students at the University of Science and Technology
Notice Pasipamire (National University of Science and Technology, Zimbabwe)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-1471-9.ch023
Abstract
This chapter reports on a study that investigated how graduate students in the Faculty of Communication and Information Science at NUST were approaching integration in their mixed-methods research dissertations. There has been a concern that lack of expertise of what mixed-methods research is restricts the integrative capacity. Using a research synthesis method, the study investigated three graduate programmes, namely Master's degrees in Library and Information Science, Records and Archives Management, and Journalism and Media Studies from 2016 up to 2018. A total of 95 dissertations were reviewed, and 40 employed mixed-methods research design. It was discovered that integration was commonly done at methods and interpretation levels. Integration of qualitative and quantitative data sets resulted in confirmation (83), expanding understanding (27), and discordance (31). Graduate students dealt with discordant findings by either ignoring the discordance (20), seek corroboration with existing literature (7), or give priority to the quantitative strand (4).
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English Learners (EL) and Computer Science (CS) Learning: Equity Issues
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Assessment and Paradigms
A living complex convergent with the communities of thinking.
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CoS and Effect: An Integral View
This term, more recently modified by Thomas Kuhn, describes the predominant mindset of a group, culture or society. It includes methods, standards, and ways of thinking that govern the legitimacy of contributions by an individual to a larger group.
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Mi Lengua Madre
An interpretive framework used to explain social phenomena (Collins, 2009).
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Positivist Philosophy: Distinguished From Other Approaches
Refers to varied philosophies used in research, e.g. positivist and interpretivist.
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Teachers as Researchers: Participatory and Action Research
In educational research the term paradigm is used to describe a researcher’s worldview. This worldview is the perspective, or thinking, or school of thought, or set of shared beliefs, that informs the meaning or interpretation of the research data.
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Social Networking Technologies as a Strategic Tool for the Development of Sustainable Production and Consumption: Applications to Foster the Agility Needed to Adapt Business Models in Response to the Challenges Posed by Climate Change
The core beliefs, assumptions, values, accepted procedures, etc. specific to an enterprise (sector, society, etc.), which are shared in common with others in that enterprise (sector, society, etc.).
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Thinking Outside the Boxes: Communication, Mixed Method, and Convergence
In science and philosophy, a paradigm (/'pær?da?m/) is a distinct set of concepts or thought patterns, including theories, research methods, postulates, and standards for what constitutes legitimate contributions to a field.
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School on the Cloud: Paradigm Shifts and Educational Changes
Is a framework containing the truths, the ideas, the assumptions, the rules, the ways of thinking, and the methods that are accepted by members of a scientific community, at a particular point in time.
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Extended Reality as the Immersive Environment Conjunction of Augmented Reality, Virtual Reality, and Mixed Reality: A Phenomenological Response Facing Modern Culture
A framework that defines a common methodology, theoretical approaches, and practical outcomes, that has been widely accepted and adopted by different disciplines and fields of study.
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Preparing to Be Digital: The Paradigm Shift for Media Studies and Higher Education
An all-encompassing point of view, the assumptions of which underlie one’s perspective, practice, and overall understanding of an issue, a tradition, a practice, even an entire world view.
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Bricolage: Excursions Into Transdisciplinary Territory
A comprehensive and overarching model of understanding that provides members of a disciplinary field with a set of perspectives and rules that serves to identify the issues, problems, and potential solutions within that discipline. It has been noted that a particular paradigm is adopted, conserved, and eventually changed within disciplinary fields because it provides the most successful way of approaching and resolving what are believed to be the discipline’s most pressing problems and unresolved questions.
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Mixed Methods in Knowledge Management and Organisational Research
A set of shared values and beliefs which direct/shape perspectives on research direction and practice.
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A Pedagogical Paradigm Shift: Prospective Epistemologies of Extended Reality in Health Professions Education
A set of concepts or thought patterns, incorporating specific theories, designated research methods, hypotheses, and typical standards of what is a legitimate claim to contribution to a specific field of theory or practice.
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Context-Awareness in Pervasive Environments
An abstract basic structure, of some tenure, in which knowledge is related within a given realm.
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Management and Valorization of Cultural Heritage in the Framework of Environmental Ethics
The general definition of paradigm comprises “a disciplinary matrix,” a constellation of beliefs, values and techniques shared by a community.
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Risk Assessment: Knowledge Management Paradigms, Big Data, and Aviation Policy Making
The lens through which a problem is perceived, and hence approached.
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A New Paradigmatic Sufficiency: Pedagogical Principles of Extended Reality
A set of concepts or thought patterns, incorporating specific theories, designated research methods, hypotheses, and typical standards of what is a legitimate claim to contribution to a specific field of theory or practice.
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Theoretical Constructs and Relationships in Information Systems Research
A specific view on the nature of reality and how knowledge is acquired.
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Social Network Analysis for Virtual Communities
From the Greek word paradhma (paradigma), the term paradigm was introduced into science and philosophy by Thomas Kuhn in his landmark book, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962). Essentially, a paradigm is simply the predominant worldview in the realm of human thought. For instance, today we would say that we live within an evolutionary paradigm since evolution is the predominant worldview regarding origins. As a paradigm, evolution replaced creation as the explanation for the origin of the universe.
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Flipping the Script: Creating Mass Change Through Social Networking Sites
An exemplar prototype of a law, theory, or application that is widely known, believed, and accepted to be the best or most popular of its kind; for example, Facebook may be widely known to be the paradigmatic SNS.
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Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion as the Future Workplace Ethics: Theoretical Review
This denotes a model, pattern, standard, perspective or set of ideas that provides explanation or direction for solving workplace problems.
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Generation Alpha and Learning Ecosystems: Skill Competencies for the Next Generation
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Methodology and Method in Case Study Research: Framing Research Design in Practice
A paradigm is a pattern or a standardized set of perspectives or standpoints.
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Learning and Teaching Methodology: “1:1 Educational Computing”
Is a framework containing the truths, the ideas, the assumptions, the rules, the ways of thinking, and the methods that are accepted by members of a scientific community, at a particular point in time.
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Ethnographic Research
Refers to varied philosophies used in research, e.g. positivist, and social constructionist.
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Praxes of Transformational Creativity: Artificial Intelligence as a Pedagogical Change Agent
A set of concepts or thought patterns, incorporating specific theories, designated research methods, hypotheses, and typical standards of what is a legitimate claim to contribution to a specific field of theory or practice.
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CoPs & Organizational Identity: Five Case Studies of NTBFs
It is a general perspective or way of thinking that reflects fundamental believes and assumptions about the nature of organization.
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Road Map for GATE in Creating Innovative Differentiated Approaches to Skill Development
A system of thought or practice that dominates thinking, feeling, and doing in a field, so much so that it becomes the norm, deviation from which can be quickly and easily detected.
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Integral Meta-Impact: Integral Theory and Applying It With Meta-Theory Methodology for Validation, Dynamic Insight, and Effectiveness
A perspective reflecting a general way of thinking about a fundamental set of assumptions, theories and/or methods.
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Models of Competences for the Real and Digital World
Is a framework containing the truths, the ideas, the assumptions, the rules, the ways of thinking, and the methods that are accepted by members of a scientific community, at a particular point in time.
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Culture of Paradigms in Education and in Educational Psychology
A living complex, convergent with the communities of thinking or a conversational form of excellence in science.
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Leadership in Social Entrepreneurship: Is It Ability or Skill?
A framework containing the basic assumptions, ways of thinking, and methodology that are commonly accepted by members of scientific community.
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