


To create a presentation that ranks highly in clarity and impact, use these design and content strategies.
| Feature | Theoretical Framework | Conceptual Framework | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Borrowed from existing literature (e.g., Maslow, Piaget, Rogers) | Constructed by the researcher | | Scope | Broad & abstract (General) | Specific & concrete (Contextual) | | Purpose | To support/justify your study. Explain the phenomenon . | To map out your study. Predict the relationship . | | Key Question | "According to established science, why does this happen?" | "In my specific survey/lab, how do A and B connect?" | | Visual look | A named theory (e.g., "Theory of Planned Behavior") | A diagram (boxes, arrows, circles) | | When to show it | Chapter 2 (Literature Review) | Chapter 3 (Methodology) | theoretical framework vs conceptual framework ppt top
Here is a comprehensive breakdown to help you master the "Top" tier of academic presentation. 1. The Theoretical Framework: The Blueprint To create a presentation that ranks highly in
A clean, side-by-side table contrasting how the broad theory translates into your specific operational variables. Key Bullet Points: | To map out your study
(After theoretical choice, before methodology)
In a conceptual framework slide, every arrow represents a specific hypothesis. Do not use decorative or double-headed arrows unless you are explicitly implying a two-way correlation.
The causes or inputs you are analyzing.