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Presentation Title
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Hello!
I am Jane Doe
I am here because I love to design
presentations.
You can contact me at @username
1.
TRANSITION SLIDE
Build better presentations in less time
Your Slide Title
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Here you can write more
More about your project.

Content itself is what the end-user derives value from also can
refer.

“A person who never made a
mistake never tried anything
new.”
Correlation
Research
What is a correlational research?
shows relationships shows predictions of a
between two variables future event or
there by showing a cause outcome from a
and effect relationship variable
Types of Correlation Studies
1. Observational 2. Survey 3. Archival
Research e.g. Research e.g. Research e.g.
class attendance living together violence and
and grades and divorce rate economics
Advantages
of the
Correlational
Method
How does it work…
Advantages of Correlational Method

It allows the
researcher to analyze Correlation
the relationship coefficients can
among a large number provide for the degree
of variables and direction of
relationship
Planning a Relationship Study

Step 1 Step 2 Step 3


Guidelines
1. Define a problem
2. Review existing literature
3. Select participants who can have
measurable variables-reasonably
homogeneous
4. Collect data-test, questionnaires,
interviews, &etc.
5. Analysis of data
World Map

USA EUROPE
19,450000 19,450000

BRASIL
19,450000
56,790,500
Write here your big numbers
What do Correlations measure the
correlations association, or co-variation of
measure? two or more dependent variables

Hypothesis: Test: Look for


Example: Why are associations
Aggression is
some students between aggressive
learned from
aggressive? behavior and…
modeling
The Process

01 Title 01
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02 Title 02
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03 Title 03
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04 Title 04
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Features with icons

Content A Content B Content B


Itself is what the end-user derives Itself is what the end-user derives Itself is what the end-user derives
value from also can refer to the value from also can refer to the value from also can refer to the
information information information

Content C Content D Content D


Itself is what the end-user derives Itself is what the end-user derives Itself is what the end-user derives
value from also can refer to the value from also can refer to the value from also can refer to the
information information information
Use charts to present data

YOUR YOUR YOUR YOUR


TITLE TITLE TITLE TITLE
Mobile
App
Itself is what the end-user
derives value from also can refer
is what
Laptop
Project
Itself is what the end-user
derives value from also can
refer.
Desktop
Project
Itself is what the end-user
derives value from also can refer
is what.
Thanks!
Any questions?

You can find me at:

@username
myemail@domain.com
Credits
Special thanks to all people who made and shared these awesome resources
for free:

Presentation template designed by powerpointify.com


Photographs by unsplash.com
Graphics by freepik.com
Presentation Design
This presentation uses the following typographies and colors:

Free Fonts used:


https://www.fontsquirrel.com/fonts/quicksand

Colors used:
Sales

not satisfied
satisfied
very satisfied
Sales

father
mother
relatives
33.33 others
5

4.5

3.5

3
Series 1
2.5
Series 2
2 Series 3
1.5

0.5

0
Category 1 Category 2 Category 3
What Is IMRaD Format?
IMRaD is a handy-dandy way to remember the
names and orders of the major sections of most
academic manuscripts. Those sections are:
• Introduction
• Materials and Methods
• Results
• Discussion and Conclusions
Introduction
• why your research is necessary?
• how it contributes to the literature, the main hypothesis
or hypotheses you will tackle, and how the rest of the
paper will be structured?
• include a literature review sub-section to show what other
work has been done in your area and how you plan to
build on it.
• Think of your introduction as a road map: this is where
you outline the need for getting to your destination, as
well as a plan for how you’ll get there
Materials and Methods
This section outlines how you did your research. Was it
quantitative or qualitative? What research approach did you
use? What theoretical lens or framework? How did you
select your sample? How did you set up your experiments?
This is actually one of the first sections you should tackle
when writing up your research, as it’s one of the most
straightforward. In it, you simply report what you did to
structure and perform your work. If you kept good notes
during your research phase, this should be pretty easy.
Results
Once again, you’re simply reporting what you uncovered
during the course of your research. Don’t get into
interpreting the results here—that’s what the Discussion
section is for.
Instead, all you need to do here is report what you found.
Give the bare facts of your research, like the descriptive
statistics on your sample or the results of a multinomial
regression analysis. What did you find when you executed
the research plan you describe in materials and Methods?
Lay out all that information here.
Discussion and Conclusions
This is the fun part for most researchers. You get
to talk about what your results actually mean.
These two areas are slightly different and might
take shape as two different sections, or you
might choose to combine them. It all depends on
the journal to which you’re submitting and your
personal preference, as well as how your
research is structured.
FIGURE 1 Sales

75% YES
NO

FIGURE 1 shows the percentage of students who answered yes and no with the question “
Sales

29%
A
B
C
D

Figure 1 show the percentage of causes of malnourishment


100%

90%

80%

70%

60%
Series 3
50%
Series 2
40% Series 1
30%

20%

10%

0%
Category 1 Category 2 Category 3 Category 4

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