Qualities of Good Researcher

Qualities of Good Researcher

by Mohinder Kumar Slariya -
Number of replies: 0

      It is important for a researcher to have certain qualities to conduct research. Foremost, the researcher being a scientist should be firmly committed to the 'articles of faith' of the scientific methods of research. This implies that a researcher should be a social science person in the truest sense.

        Sir Michael Foster identified a few distinctive qualities of a scientist. According to him, a true research scientist should possess the following main three qualities:

        (1) Vibrate Temperament and Truthfulness: First of all, the nature of a researcher must be of the temperament that vibrates in unison with the theme which he is searching. Hence, the seeker of knowledge must be truthful with truthfulness of nature, which is much more important, much more exacting than what is sometimes known as truthfulness.

        The truthfulness relates to the desire for accuracy of observation and precision of statement. Ensuring facts is the principle rule of science, which is not an easy matter. Such difficulty may arise due to untrained eye, which fails to see anything beyond what it has the power of seeing and sometimes even less than that. This may also be due to the lack of discipline in the method of science. An unscientific individual often remains satisfied with expressions like approximately, almost, nearly, etc., which is never what nature, is. It cannot see two things which differ, however minutely, as the same.

        (2) An Alert Mind: A researcher must possess an alert mind. The Nature is constantly changing and revealing itself through various ways. A scientific researcher must be keen and watchful to notice such changes, no matter how small or insignificant they may appear. Such receptivity has to be cultivated slowly and patiently over time by the researcher through practice.

        No individual who is not alert and receptive, or is ignorant or has no keen eyes or mind to observe the unusual behind the routine, can make a good researcher. Research demands a systematic immersion into the subject matter for the researcher to be able to grasp even the slightest hint that may culminate into significant research problems. In this context, Cohen and Negal state that "The ability to perceive in some brute experience the occasion of a problem is not a common talent among men. . . It is a mark of scientific genius to be sensitive to difficulties where less gifted people pass by untroubled by doubt".

        (3) Immense Courage and a Sense of Conviction: Scientific enquiry is preeminently an intellectual effort. It requires the moral quality of courage, which reflects the courage of a steadfast endurance. The science of conducting research is not an easy task. There are occasions when a research scientist might feel defeated or completely lost. This is a stage when the researcher would need immense courage and a sense of conviction. The researcher must learn the art of enduring intellectual hardships.

        In the words of Darwin, "It's dogged that does it". In order to cultivate the aforementioned three qualities of a researcher, a fourth one may be added. This is the quality of making statements cautiously. According to Huxley, "The assertion that outstrips the evidence is not only a blunder but a crime". A researcher should cultivate the habit of reserving judgment when the required data are insufficient.


రేటింగుల సగటు: -