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Theoretical Models and Frameworks

Where to find lists of common theoretical frameworks

Theory vs Hypothesis

A theory has been extensively tested and is generally accepted among scholars; a hypothesis is a speculative guess that has yet to be tested.

  • A theory is a well-established principle that has been developed to explain some aspect of the natural world. Theories arise from repeated observation and testing and incorporates facts, laws, predictions, and tested assumptions that are widely accepted [e.g., rational choice theory; grounded theory; critical race theory].
  • A hypothesis is a specific, testable prediction about what you expect to happen in your study. For example, an experiment designed to look at the relationship between study habits and test anxiety might have a hypothesis that states, "We predict that students with better study habits will suffer less test anxiety." Unless your study is exploratory in nature, your hypothesis should always explain what you expect to happen during the course of your research.
Sources
Cherry, Kendra. Introduction to Research Methods: Theory and Hypothesis. About.com Psychology; Gezae, Michael et al. Welcome Presentation on Hypothesis. Slideshare presentation.

Articles and Books for Additional Reading

Sage Research Methods

SAGE Research Methods is accessible via the library's home page or https://library.rush.edu/srm

What is SAGE Research Methods? According to their website: "SAGE Research Methods supports research at all levels by providing material to guide users through every step of the research process. SAGE Research Methods has the answer.... from a quick dictionary definition, a case study example from a researcher in the field, a downloadable teaching dataset, a full-text title"...etc.

Please note that SAGE is a major publisher of health science information and their database is comprised of their own published articles.

Sources
https://methods.sagepub.com/About