What is scientific working?
What are the characteristics of working in science?
Academic work seeks to acquire new knowledge and to expand or review existing knowledge. It involves a distinction among three different types:
- Theoretical work
- Qualitative research
- Quantitative research
Theoretical work often involves literature studies that analyse existing specialist literature and develop or review it based on its propositions. Qualitative and quantitative methods are summarized under .
Which steps are involved in scientific work?
Questioning and hypothesising form the starting point for academic work, such as an assignment, bachelor thesis, master thesis or doctoral thesis. A then analyses which research already exists in relation to this topic. This literature research involves the researchers in a critical examination of the existing papers. They can subsequently also serve as sources.
Then comes selection of the and data collection, by conducting an experiment or survey for example. Once data collection is completed, the researchers arrange their results in a comprehensible and structured form and evaluate them. This interpretation and analysis involves comparing the results with the initial hypothesis and the research issue.
A final step sees the researchers comparing their own results with the already existing state of research. They provide a summary of the most important findings from their own academic work and their significance, an outlook with proposals for future research and the impacts of the research results. This involves being constantly aware of any possible influencing factors that could have impaired the results of their academic work.