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Research Reports, Objective

Objective research reports are most frequently quantitative in nature. Compared to subjective research reports, which are qualitative, objective research reports can be scientific and numerical. Both types of reports determine if a hypothesis is valid or invalid, but take different approaches to determine the answer. Objective research reports employ the use of statistics and quantitative data that yield results, and can be used in the social and physical sciences. Quantitative surveys are commonly used and provide objective conclusions to the data. Objective research reports can demonstrate many points of view and are meant to be unbiased. When data are reported and described in research reports, the facts are presented clearly and in a neutral manner. Opinions are more common in qualitative and subjective research when interpretation of data is important. Objective research reports have concrete evidence to support statements through the use of facts, statistics, and research. In addition, objective research reports are written in the third person to demonstrate unbiased reporting. This entry begins by further differentiating between objective and subject research reports. Examples of objective research reports are then provided, followed by tips for writing objective research reports.

Objective Versus Subjective Research Reports

Communication research uses both objective and subjective research reports when relaying the results of studies. Objective research reports are used with quantitative data and provide unbiased, neutral results to the research. The third person is used to provide such reports so that opinions are not implied. More scientific in nature, objective reports demonstrate results that leave the reader to form his or her own conclusions and opinions. Objective research reports present evidence, facts, and statistics from the research without judgment or speculation, but rather through explaining only the facts.

In contrast to objective research reports, subjective reports are used with qualitative studies that report opinions, feelings, and judgments about the results. Since it is harder to quantify the data with interviews, for example, subjective research reports can explain why the participants have certain responses or answers. This explanation can be challenged or interpreted differently by the reader or other researchers since it is purely speculation based on interpretation and not hard evidence. For example, if women are interviewed about their experience receiving treatment for breast cancer, each woman interviewed may have a different story to tell. Each experience is unique from the others, although themes may develop between narrations. These are interpreted by the researcher, and explained in a subjective report. Another researcher with the same results may interpret the data (interviews) differently, making a diverse conclusion. Objective research reports, on the other hand, can list how many women consult with their doctors for breast cancer treatment, duration of treatment, and the percent of women in remission. The facts are presented to the reader and are not interpreted or explained. The reader is left to interpret the reason why the results are what they are in an objective research report.

Examples of Objective Research Reports

Most textbooks used at all age levels are written in an objective manner. Specifically those books that report results of data collection and facts utilize a neutral, unbiased approach to deliver the information and do not take sides. Students can therefore interpret the meaning of the results through how the study was put together, who the participant pool was in the study, or the location where the study took place. Textbooks allow the reader to form his or her own opinion of the facts without being skewed in one way or another.

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