Thursday, 15 October 2015

Are e-newspapers beneficial to the publishing

Primary Research 

I will be asking question on a questionnaire the i will personally create. The following questions will be

  • Do you know what e-newspaper is
  • Do you prefer online newspaper or going to the shop
  •  How much money do you spend on newspapers 
I would also be interviewing a journalist to find their personal opinion on the matter at hand. this question will be answered by people from the ages 16 and onwards.

Secondary Research 
Internet sources such as on blogs and websites like twitter and Facebook. i will going to the library to also help with my interview.

http://elisevernon.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/are-e-newspapers-beneficial-to.html

This is a source with information describing the revolution and evolution of e-newspaper and how they could be beneficial to the publishing industry . the research may not be 100% reliable as it is secondary data and has been conducted by someone else.

  1. Do you prefer reading a newspaper or a e-newspaper?
  2. How much money do you spend on newspapers?
  3. Do you care about the environment?
  4. What are the reasons people don't read newspapers?
  5. Is the e-newspaper more convenient?
  6. What are the disadvantages of an e-newspaper?

Quantitative research
Quantitative research is about asking people for their opinions in a structured way so that you can produce hard facts and statistics to guide you. To get reliable statistical results, it’s important to survey people in fairly large numbers and to make sure they are a representative sample of your target market.
 

Qualitative research
Qualitative Research (QRJ) is a bimonthly peer reviewed journal that publishes original research and review articles on the methodological diversity and multi-disciplinary focus of qualitative research.

Advantages of Qualitative Research

• Issues and subjects covered can be evaluated in depth and in detail.
• Interviews are not limited to particular questions and can be redirected or guided by researchers in real time (instantaneous).
• The direction and framework of research can be revised quickly as soon as fresh information and findings emerge.
• The data in qualitative research depends on human experience and this is more compelling and powerful than data gathered through quantitative research.

Disadvantages of Qualitative

 The quality of research is heavily dependent on the skills of the researcher and can be easily influenced by personal idiosyncrasies and biases of researchers.
• Rigidity is more difficult to assess, demonstrate and maintain.
• The quantity of data makes interpretation and analysis time-consuming.
• Qualitative research is sometimes not accepted and understood especially within scientific communities.
 

Objectives questions
 
Objective tests require a user to choose or provide a response to a question whose correct answer is predetermined. Such a question might require a student to : select a solution from a set of choices
  • Objective questions can help a decisions
  • Unbiased Answers
Subjective question
Subjective questions are questions that are asked in a way to extract a certain response. For example a subjective question would be, "Do you think Kevin hart is funny?" As opposed to and objective question like "What do you think of Kevin Harts performance?"
 


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