EDPSY 505 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

EDPSY 505

Description:

Your friends and family are different from my friends and family. Selective attention ... The problem posed as a question. How can a principal improve faculty morale? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:60
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 35
Provided by: jaypa1
Learn more at: http://www.unm.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: EDPSY 505


1
EDPSY 505
  • August 27, 2007

2
Mayer (2000)
3
The Big Picture
  • There are many different research processes
  • Each has its own
  • Philosophy of inquiry
  • Methods of inquiry
  • Purposes for doing research
  • Processes and rules
  • Quantitative research has its own
  • Here is one process

4
(No Transcript)
5
Scientific Thinking Vs. Everyday Thinking
  • Everyday thinking
  • Biased questions
  • Do you really support the war?
  • Limited sampling
  • Your friends and family are different from my
    friends and family
  • Selective attention
  • Confirmation bias
  • Inaccurate generalization
  • Stereotypes

6
Scientific Thinking Vs. Everyday Thinking (Cont.)
  • Scientific thinking.
  • Empirical observations.
  • Empirical capable of being confirmed, verified,
    or disproved by observation or experiment.
  • Systematic.
  • Objective.
  • Less dependent on emotion or personal prejudices.
  • Replicable.

7
Purposes of Scientific Research
  • Exploratory
  • What is out there?
  • Descriptive
  • What does this group look like?
  • Explanatory
  • Why and how are these constructs related?
  • Evaluation
  • Does this program work?
  • Prediction
  • Who will become depressed?

8
The Research Problem
9
  • Research Problem
  • An area of general concern
  • Research Questions
  • The problem posed as a question
  • How can a principal improve faculty morale?
  • Does behavioral therapy improve childrens
    behavior?
  • Do flow charts improve scientific understanding?
  • Some questions are not researchable
  • Is god good?
  • What is the meaning of life?

10
Characteristics of Good Research Questions
  • Feasible
  • Clear
  • Constitutive definition
  • By Example
  • Operational definition
  • Significant
  • Worth investigating
  • Strong rationale
  • Ethical

11
Variables
12
On the Theory of Scales of Measurement (Stevens,
1946)
  • Measurement
  • Is the assignment of numerals to objects.
  • Nominal
  • Examples Gender, party affiliation, and place of
    birth
  • Ordinal
  • Examples SES, Student rank, and Place in race
  • Interval
  • Examples Test scores, personality and attitude
    scales.
  • Ratio
  • Examples Weight, length, reaction time, and
    number of responses

13
Understanding Variables and Hypotheses (Charters,
1992)
  • Objects
  • Things that one does research on.
  • People, districts, nations, etc.
  • Properties of objects
  • Give us a way to talk about how objects are alike
    and how they differ.
  • Scores
  • Values on the property of interest
  • Must be at least two.

14
Values
  • Exhaustive
  • Must be able to assign a value to all objects.
  • Mutually Exclusive
  • Each object can only be assigned one of a set of
    values.
  • A variable with only one value is not a variable.
  • It is a constant.

15
How variables are used
  • Two major piles
  • Descriptive and Verificational (cause-effect)
  • Descriptive
  • Describes a population in relation to one or more
    variables.
  • Sex bias in textbooks
  • Trends in dropout rates
  • Verificational
  • Does A cause B
  • Associations between A and B
  • Is the observed relationship greater than would
    be expected by chance?

16
Hypothesis
  • A proposed explanation for a phenomenon.
  • Two types
  • Casual order - 'A causes B'
  • Correlational A is related to B

17
Sorting Out Variables in a Study
  • Purpose of most empirical studies in behavioral
    research is to identify causal relationships.
  • Independent variables (IV)
  • Causes, determinants, predictors, factors.
  • Dependent variables (DV)
  • Consequences, outcomes, effects
  • Moderator variables
  • Variables that change the relationship between
    the IV and DV.
  • Aptitude by treatment interactions

18
Dissecting Hypotheses
  • Identify the two variables and sort them into IV
    and DV.
  • Describe each variable.
  • Object, property, mode of variation, elaborate on
    mode of variation.
  • Specify the relationship expected between the two
    variables.
  • Note the unit of analysis implied or actually
    used.

19
Additional comments
  • Simple Hypotheses have only two
    variables--bivariate relations.
  • H.1 Authoritarian principals are more effective
    than non-authoritarian principals
  • What are the names of the two variables?
  • How do they vary?
  • Complex Hypotheses have more than two variables
    and sometimes contain a moderating variable.
  • H.1 Authoritarian principals are more effective
    than non-authoritarian principals when goals are
    clear, but non-authoritarian principals are more
    effective when goals are ambiguous.
  • What are the names of the three variables?
  • How do they vary?

20
Practice
  • H.1 The greater the weight of a five-year old,
    the taller the child.
  • What is the object?
  • What are the variables?
  • What are the names of the variables?
  • How do they vary-categorical or continuous?
  • What is the moderating variable?
  • What is the independent variable?
  • What is the dependent variable?

21
Practice
  • H.2 Authoritarian principals command more
    loyalty than non-authoritarian ones when they
    have influence, but non-authoritarian principals
    command greater loyalty when principals lack
    influence.
  • What is the object?
  • What are the variables?
  • What are the names of the variables?
  • How do they vary-categorical or continuous?
  • What is the moderating variable?
  • What is the independent variable?
  • What is the dependent variable?

22
  • H.3. Secondary teachers are more custodial in
    pupil control ideology than elementary teachers.
  • What is the object?
  • What are the variables?
  • What are the names of the variables?
  • How do they vary-categorical or continuous?
  • What is the moderating variable?
  • What is the independent variable?
  • What is the dependent variable?

23
  • H. 4. Academic achievement will be greater among
    students taught by autocratic teachers than those
    taught by permissive teachers.
  • What is the object?
  • What are the variables?
  • What are the names of the variables?
  • How do they vary-categorical or continuous?
  • What is the moderating variable?
  • What is the independent variable?
  • What is the dependent variable?

24
  • H. 5. The larger the size of a community
    colleges instructional faculty the greater the
    degree of administrative centralization.
  • What is the object?
  • What are the variables?
  • What are the names of the variables?
  • How do they vary-categorical or continuous?
  • What is the moderating variable?
  • What is the independent variable?
  • What is the dependent variable?

25
  • H. 6. Democratic supervisors have teachers who
    demonstrate more creativity in teaching methods
    than autocratic supervisors.
  • What is the object?
  • What are the variables?
  • What are the names of the variables?
  • How do they vary-categorical or continuous?
  • What is the moderating variable?
  • What is the independent variable?
  • What is the dependent variable?

26
  • H. 7. When administrators have influence with
    their superiors, authoritarian administrators
    command more loyalty from subordinates than
    non-authoritarian ones, but when administrators
    have little influence, then non-authoritarian
    administrators command more loyalty than
    authoritarian ones .
  • What is the object?
  • What are the variables?
  • What are the names of the variables?
  • How do they vary-categorical or continuous?
  • What is the moderating variable?
  • What is the independent variable?
  • What is the dependent variable?

27
  • H. 8. The stronger the collective efficacy of a
    school, the higher the level of level of student
    achievement.
  • What is the object?
  • What are the variables?
  • What are the names of the variables?
  • How do they vary-categorical or continuous?
  • What is the moderating variable?
  • What is the independent variable?
  • What is the dependent variable?

28
Now try it with your proposal topic
  • What is the object?
  • What are the variables?
  • What are the names of the variables?
  • How do they vary-categorical or continuous?
  • What is the moderating variable?
  • What is the independent variable?
  • What is the dependent variable?
  • State how you expect them to be related to one
    another.

29
Literature reviews
  • Purpose
  • Place each work in the context of its
    contribution to the understanding of the subject
    under review
  • Describe the relationship of each work to the
    others under consideration
  • Identify new ways to interpret, and shed light on
    any gaps in, previous research
  • Resolve conflicts amongst seemingly contradictory
    previous studies
  • Identify areas of prior scholarship to prevent
    duplication of effort
  • Point the way forward for further research
  • Determine where your work will fit

30
Literature Reviews
  • Hopefully by the end of this class you will
    become a more critical consumer.
  • Questions you should ask when reading a report
  • What were the research questions?
  • Who or what was studied?
  • How were they sampled?
  • What are the variables?
  • How were they measured?
  • What design was used?
  • What statistics were used?
  • Do the conclusions follow from the statistics?

31
Writing Literature Reviews
  • Avoid summarizing a body of literature
  • Attempt to identify shortcomings
  • Provide analysis
  • Design problems
  • Problems with measures
  • Unique subsets of the population not included
  • Be very very careful
  • Plagiarism can sneak up on you

32
Finding Articles and Questionnaires
  • Search engines
  • Be careful much of what is on the internet is of
    low quality.
  • However, you can find peer reviewed articles
    using Yahoo.
  • Google Scholar
  • http//www.google.com/

33
Finding Articles and Questionnaires
  • Research Databases and Indexes http//www.unm.edu/
  • General
  • EBSCOhost
  • Expanded Academic ASAP
  • Specialized
  • JSTOR
  • Linked to the articles
  • SportDiscus
  • Pscyinfo
  • Pubmed
  • I frequently use
  • Web of Science

34
Next Class
  • Bring three hypotheses and a rationale for each.
  • Also, address the following when applicable
  • What is the object?
  • What are the variables?
  • What are the names of the variables?
  • How do they vary-categorical or continuous?
  • What is the moderating variable?
  • What is the independent variable?
  • What is the dependent variable?
  • State how you expect them to be related to one
    another.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com