Professional Documents
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Research...
The systematic application of a family of methods employed to provide trustworthy information about problems
an ongoing process based on many accumulated understandings and explanations that, when taken together, lead to generalizations about problems and the development of theories
Quantitative methods...
descriptive research (survey research) correlational research causal-comparative research (ex post facto research) experimental research
descriptive research (survey research) collects data in order to answer questions about the current status of the subject or topic of study uses formal instruments to study preferences, attitudes, practices, concerns, or interests of a sample
longitudinal survey involves collecting data at two or more instances in order to measure changes over time
self-report survey requires individuals to respond to a series of statements or questions about themselves
trend survey a study where a sample is taken from the general population in order to collect data over time involves different groups and different samples over time
cohort survey a study where a specific population is examined by sampling different groups within the population over time involves the same group but different samples from that group over time
panel survey a study where the same group and the same sample are examined over time
follow-up survey a study undertaken after a panel survey and seeks to examine subsequent development or change
1. state the problem topic must be of sufficient significance to motivate potential respondents and justify the research effort in the first place define topic in terms of specific objectives indicating the kind of information needed
2. select participants use an appropriate sampling technique participants must be able to provide the desired information sought and willing to provide it to the researcher
3. construct the instrument should be attractive, brief, and easy to fill out there are a variety of data collection methods that can be used, including: questionnaires, interviews, observations, and telephone calls
Designing an instrument
include a brief statement describing the study and its purpose at the top of the instrument provide standardized directions organize items leaving sufficient white space on instrument
place similar items together ask general, non-threatening items first, moving into more specific, self-revealing items
some dos and donts construct items according to a set of predetermined guidelines include only items relating directly to the purpose of the study avoid jargon or any term or concept that might mean different things to different people
each item should deal with a single concept and be worded as clearly as possible items should indicate a point of reference beyond the self in order to judge the self avoid ambiguous terms like several or usually
avoid touchy matters in items which respondents might not respond to honestly or at all avoid leading questions which suggest that one response may be more appropriate than another each item must be able to stand on its own
dont jam items together dont put the most important questions at the end of the instrument
4. prepare the cover letter a brief, neat, explanation of the significance of the study and what is being asked of the respondent and why addressed to the specific, potential respondent
an endorsement adds credibility guarantee anonymity or confidentiality include a specific deadline date by which the completed instrument (questionnaire) is to be returned
5. pretest the instrument conduct a pilot study to gather information about deficiencies and suggestions for improving the instrument provides greater content validity
6. follow-up activities because first mailing results tend to be low (30% - 50% response rate), researchers need strategies to increase the response rate
initial follow-up strategies to increase response rate up to 20% send out reminder postcard mail a second packet with a new, positively worded cover letter and another self-addressed, stamped, return envelope
secondary follow-up strategies to increase response rate up to 10% telephone nonrespondents to encourage them to respond
dealing with nonrespondents study whether nonrespondents differ from respondents in some systematic way by selecting a sample from the nonrespondents telephone sample, aggregate data, include in report
dealing with nonresponses study the items to determine the problem with the item include description of the nonresponses and the determination of the reason in the report
7. analyze/report results discriminant item analysis includes giving the response rate for each item as well as the total sample size and the overall percentage of returns, since not all respondents will answer questions
group items into clusters that address the same issue and develop total scores across an item cluster in order to avoid information overload
1. state the problem topic must be of sufficient significance to motivate individuals to participate and justify the research effort in the first place define topic in terms of specific objectives indicating the kind of information needed
2. select participants use an appropriate sampling technique participants must be able to provide the desired information sought and willing to provide it to the researcher
3. construct the interview instrument (instrument guide) indicates the question to be asked, the order, and how much additional prompting or probing is permitted the goal is to obtain standardized, comparable data from each interviewee
4. communicate professionally and record responses accurately effective interviewing requires training and experience to avoid interviewer bias and interviewer error
record responses manually on the interview guide (requires interviewee permission) use a tape recorder or VCR to verify accuracy of responses
5. pretest interview procedure use a small group from the same population or a similar population to the one being studied to validate the interview instrument and the interviewers communication and recording skills
6. analyze/report results item analysis includes giving the response rate for each item, as well as the total sample size and the overall percentage of returns, since not every respondent will answer all questions
also include in-depth data to openended interview items to portray responses in more accurate and honest terms
1. state the problem topic must be of sufficient significance to motivate potential respondents and justify the research effort in the first place define topic in terms of specific objectives indicating the kind of information needed
2. select participants use an appropriate sampling technique participants must be able to provide the desired information sought and willing to provide it to the researcher
3. define the observational variables operationalize the variables to be observed in terms of specific behaviors that can be quantified ensure that the observations can be quantified in a way so that all observers will count the behavioral activities in exactly the same way
4. record observations record behavior at the time it occurs alternate observation periods and recording periods
5. assess observer reliability use at least two observers who make independent observations compute interobserver reliability
6. reduce observer bias train observers until a satisfactory level of agreement is achieved (at least 80%) monitor observers
response set the tendency of an observer to rate the majority of observees as above average, average, or below average regardless of the observees actual behavior
halo effect the tendency of an observers initial positive or negative impressions of the observee to affect subsequent observations
self-fulfilling prophecy the tendency of an observers knowledge of the observees or the purposes of the study to affect the observation(s)
Meta-Analysis...
a statistical approach to summarizing the results of many studies that have investigated basically the same problem provides a numerical coefficient expressing the average result of the studies
requiring the researcher to find, describe, classify, and code the research studies to be included meta-analytic review, and for measuring and analyzing the study findings
each studys results are translated into an effect size (ES) which is a numerical expression of the strength or magnitude of a reported relationship, be it causal or not
Xe Xc ES = SDc
Where Xe = the mean score of the experimental group
Xc = the mean score of the control group SDc = the standard deviation of the control group
0.00
+.80
both groups strong positive performed similarly experimental control group group performed performed better better than than experimental control group group
Mini-Quiz
True or false in a descriptive research study, the researcher predetermines what variables will be surveyed before selecting or observing the research participants
True
one of the most difficult activities on the part of questionnaire researchers is to write or select questions that are clear and unambiguous
True
longitudinal surveys are useful for studying the dynamics of a topic or issue over time
True
one of the problems with longitudinal studies is that the samples tend to shrink as time goes by
True
one of the problems with crosssectional studies is selecting samples that truly represent the population at a particular level or ability
True
an external review of an instrument provides the researcher greater assurance of it its content validity
True
if the responses from respondents and nonrespondents are essentially the same, the researcher may assume that the response group is representative of the whole sample and that the survey results are generalizable
True
if the responses from respondents and nonrespondents are different, the generalizability across both the respondent and nonrespondent groups is not present and must be discussed in the report
True
analyzing clusters of instrument items related to the same issue improves the reliability of the scores
True
although there are no hard and fast rules, it is generally agreed than an effect size in the twenties indicates a treatment that produces a relatively small effect, whereas an effect size in the eighties indicates a powerful treatment
True
a study in which individuals are not directly asked for information but data is obtained as the researcher watches participants engage in a situation
observation study
items on a survey that are answered by circling a letter, checking a list, or numbering preferences
close-ended items
the researcher guarantees that no one, including the researcher, knows who completed each questionnaire
anonymity
the researcher guarantees that no one, except the researcher, knows who completed each questionnaire and promises not to divulge that information
confidentiality
Fill in the blank determining the current status of a phenomenon not through an instrument but as the researcher watches the participants engage in the activity being studied
observational study
Fill in the blank an observation in which the researcher watches behavior as it normally unfolds
naturalistic observation
Fill in the blank an observation in which the researcher creates a situation to be observed and tells participants what activities to engage in
simulation observation
Fill in the blank a coefficient found by dividing the total number of agreed observations by the total number of agreed and disagreed observations
inter-observer reliability
Fill in the blank a means by which observers record observations at the time it occurs by simplifying the recording process
coding
Fill in the blank a statistical approach that summarizes the results of many studies having investigate the same problem
meta-analysis