Key Research Terms Every Novice Researcher Should Know

By DalatTESOL
👉 This guide introduces essential academic terms in research and publishing—from journals and databases to study designs and analysis—so MA students and novice researchers can confidently navigate the academic landscape.


1. 📚 Where Research Lives: Journals, Databases & Rankings

🗞️ Academic Journal

An academic journal is a professional publication that features scholarly articles, often peer-reviewed, on a specific discipline or topic.

Example: TESOL Quarterly, System, Language Teaching Research

These journals are where research findings are shared with the world. They often follow a peer review process to ensure quality and rigor.


🔍 Academic Databases

Databases collect and index academic articles, books, and theses. They help you search for research efficiently.

Popular ones in linguistics and education:

  • Scopus – Extensive, citation-focused
  • Web of Science – High-impact research tracking
  • ERIC – Education-specific
  • Google Scholar – Easy access but less filtered

🧠 Tip: Use Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT) to refine your search.


🏆 What Is a Q1 Journal?

Journals are ranked by quartiles (Q1–Q4) based on metrics like impact factor and citations.

  • Q1 = Top 25% in a subject area
  • Highly selective and prestigious

Publishing in Q1 journals is often a goal for academics seeking credibility and wider reach.


🧾 APA 7th Referencing Style

Widely used in applied linguistics and education.

In-text citation:

(Nguyen & Pham, 2023)
According to Tran (2021), …

Reference list:

Tran, A. T. (2021). Reflective practice in language education. Routledge.

🛠️ Tools: Zotero, Mendeley, EndNote for managing your citations efficiently.


2. 🧠 Concepts That Guide Your Study

📘 Theoretical & Conceptual Frameworks

  • Theoretical framework: Based on existing theories (e.g., sociocultural theory, identity theory)
  • Conceptual framework: Your specific constructs and how they relate to each other

They guide your research questions and analysis.


🔧 Constructs, Operationalization, and Instruments

  • Construct: Abstract concept (e.g., motivation, self-efficacy)
  • Operationalization: Turning abstract constructs into measurable items
  • Instrument: The tool used for measurement—e.g., surveys, tests, interview guides

🧪 Validity ensures your tool measures what it should.
🔁 Reliability ensures consistency across uses.


3. 🧪 Research Types and Study Designs

📊 Quantitative vs. Qualitative

  • Quantitative: Focus on numbers, statistics (e.g., surveys, test scores)
  • Qualitative: Focus on meaning, experience (e.g., interviews, observations)

🔄 Mixed methods combine both approaches in one study.


🧱 Common Research Designs

  • Case Study – In-depth look at one class or learner
  • Action Research – Teacher inquiry to improve practice
  • Experimental / Quasi-Experimental – Testing cause-effect relationships
  • Cross-sectional / Longitudinal – One-time vs. over time

🛠️ Tools:

  • SPSS, JASP (for quantitative stats)
  • NVivo, Atlas.ti (for qualitative coding)

4. 📥 Data Collection and Analysis

✍️ Data Collection

Gathering information through:

  • Quantitative: surveys, tests
  • Qualitative: interviews, classroom observations, open-ended responses

📈 Data Analysis

  • Quantitative: Mean, standard deviation, t-test, regression
  • Qualitative: Coding, theme development, discourse analysis

🧠 Triangulation = using multiple methods or data sources to strengthen credibility.


5. 📝 Writing and Publishing Your Work

📄 Manuscript

Your research paper before it’s published. Includes:

  1. Introduction
  2. Literature Review
  3. Methodology
  4. Results / Findings
  5. Discussion
  6. Conclusion
  7. References

🚗 CARS Model (Swales’ Move Structure for Introductions)

  • Move 1: Introduce topic and importance
  • Move 2: Identify research gap
  • Move 3: Present your study’s aim or contribution

Example: While learner autonomy has been widely studied, little is known about how Vietnamese students use AI tools to foster it. This study investigates…


🔍 Research Gaps

Why your study matters:

  • Topical gap: The issue hasn’t been researched
  • Contextual gap: Neglected population (e.g., rural EFL teachers)
  • Methodological gap: Prior studies had weak design
  • Theoretical gap: No clear or current theory applied

6. 🔒 Research Ethics and Integrity

  • Informed Consent – Participants must understand and agree to take part
  • Confidentiality – Protect participant identity and data
  • Avoiding Plagiarism – Always cite sources
  • Salami Slicing – Don’t divide one study into multiple weak papers

🛠️ Use Turnitin or Grammarly Premium to check for originality.


🧩 Final Thoughts

These terms are not just jargon—they are the building blocks of credible research. Understanding them empowers you to:

  • Read academic literature effectively
  • Plan and write your own study
  • Prepare for publication or thesis defense
  • Engage in scholarly conversations with confidence

DalatTESOL encourages you to bookmark this guide, revisit it often, and share it with peers. Every strong researcher begins with strong foundations.

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