Statements A, B, C and E together capture the commonly accepted roles of basic, applied and evaluative research. Basic research extends theoretical knowledge, applied research addresses concrete problems and evaluative research judges the value of interventions or programmes. Basic work often feeds into applied and evaluative studies, so E is also correct. Statement D is false because evaluative research can and often does use quantitative methods, sometimes alongside qualitative approaches. Therefore the combination that includes A, B, C and E but excludes D is the only fully correct option.
Option A:
Option A is incorrect because it omits statement E, which rightly notes that basic research can underpin applied and evaluative work. By leaving out this link between theory and practice, the option fails to include all true statements and hence is incomplete.
Option B:
Option B includes A, C and E but omits B, even though applied research focusing on practical problems is a core category in the basic–applied–evaluative triad. Excluding B means that one major correct statement is missing, so this combination cannot represent the full set of correct statements.
Option C:
Option C is correct because it includes all four true statements while excluding D, the false claim that evaluative research never uses quantitative methods. It recognises the complementary roles of theoretical development, problem solving and programme evaluation, and correctly portrays their interrelationships.
Option D:
Option D leaves out statement A, thereby ignoring the proper definition of basic research as theory oriented. Although B, C and E are true, failure to include A makes the description of the three main types of research incomplete and thus the option is not correct.
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