Title: Guiding Principles of Scientific Research
1Guiding Principles of Scientific Research
- G. Reid Lyon, PhD
- President and CEO
- Synergistic Education Solutions
- Dallas, TX
2Scientific Research
- A process of rigorous reasoning based on
interactions among theories methods, and
findings - Builds on understanding derived from the
objective testing of models or theories - Accumulation of scientific knowledge is
laborious, plodding, circuitous, and indirect - Scientific knowledge is developed and honed
through critique contested findings, replication,
and convergence - Scientific knowledge is developed through
sustained efforts - Scientific inquiry must be guided by fundamental
principles.
3Fundamental Principles (NRC, 2002)
- Ask significant questions that can be answered
empirically. - The formulation of a problem is often more
essential than its solution, which may be merely
a matter of mathematical or experimental skill.
To raise new questions, new possibilities, to
regard old questions from a new angle, requires
creative imagination and marks real advance in
science (Einstein Infeld, 1938) - The research questions must be asked in a way
that allows for empirical investigation.
4Fundamental Principles (contd)
- II. Link research to relevant theory.
- Scientific research can be guided by a conceptual
framework model, or theory that generates
questions to be asked or answers to the questions
posed - Theory drives the research question, the use of
methods, and the interpretation of results.
5Fundamental Principles (contd)
- III. Select and apply research designs and
methods that permit direct investigation of the
question. - The trustworthiness of any research study is
predicated initially on several major elements - The suitability of the proposed research design
or methodology to address the specific questions
posed by the study - The scientific rigor by which the methodology is
applied
6Fundamental Principles (contd)
- The trustworthiness of any research study is
predicated initially on several major elements
(contd) - The link between question and methodology must
- be clear and justified
- Detailed description of the method, measures,
data collection procedures, data analyses, and
subjects must be available to permit
replication.
7Fundamental Principles (contd)
- IV. Provide a coherent and explicit chain of
reasoning that can be replicated. - What assumptions underlying the inferences were
made? Were they clearly stated and justified? - How was evidence judged to be relevant?
- How were alternative, competing hypotheses, and
explanations identified, considered, and
accounted for (accepted or discarded)?
8Fundamental Principles (contd)
- IV. Provide a coherent and explicit chain of
reasoning that can be replicated (contd). - How were the links between data and the
conceptual or theoretical framework made? - The chain of reasoning depends upon the design
which depends on the type of question - Description what is happening?
- Cause is there a systematic effect?
- Process/mechanism- why or how does the effect
occur?
9Fundamental Principles (contd)
- V. Replicate and generalize across studies.
- Internal Validity The observations made are
consistent an generalize from one observer to
another, from one task to a parallel task from
one measurement occasion to anther occasion. - Statistical methods e.g. correlation
- Non-statistical methods e.g. triangulation,
comparative analysis. - External Validity The extent to which the
treatment conditions and participant population
reflect the world to which generalization is
desired.
10Fundamental Principles (contd)
- VI. Report research publicly to encourage
- professional scrutiny, critique and
replication. - Criticism is essential to scientific progress
- The extent to which new findings can be reviewed
contested, and accepted or rejected by scientific
peers depends upon accurate, comprehensive, and
accessible records of - Data
- Methods
- Inferential reasoning
11Common Conceptions/Misconceptions About
Scientific Quality and Rigor
- Experimental research is more scientific than
descriptive or qualitative research - NOT TRUE The type of design/method does not
render the study scientific.
12Common Conceptions/Misconceptions About
Scientific Quality and Rigor (contd)
- A study is deemed to be scientific when
- There are a clear set of testable questions
underlying the design - The methods are appropriate to answer the
questions and falsify competing hypotheses and
answers - The study is explicitly linked to theory and
previous research - The data are analyzed systematically and with the
appropriate tools - The data are made available for review and
criticism.
13Common Conceptions/Misconceptions
- Research in education is fundamentally different
than in the hard sciences. - NOT TRUE Scientific research in education,
psychology, biochemistry, astrophysics, cultural
anthropology, mathematics, etc., all - Seek conceptual/theoretical understanding
- Pose empirical and testable and refutable
hypotheses - Design studies that test and rule out competing
counter hypotheses - Use observational methods that are linked to
theory and can be publicly assessed for accuracy - Recognize the importance of independent
replication and generalization.
14Features Common To Educational Research
- It is a challenge to design and implement
randomized treatments and repeated measures under
highly controlled conditions - Double-blind controls are not feasible when
using particular designs - The level of certainty of research conclusions is
lower than in the physical sciences - Error limits associated with scientific
inferences are larger in social, behavioral, and
educational research than in the physical
sciences - The influential role of context makes
interpretation of data messy - Converging evidence is critical.
15Some Reasons Why Educational Practices and
Policies Are Not Guided and Informed by Science
- Education Research is young 100 year history
- Battered by different epistomological
perspectives - Skepticism Concerning the value of a science of
education - NIE should conduct an evaluation on effectiveness
of instructional programs emphasizing an
ethnographic or descriptive case study approach
because the audience for follow through
evaluations is an audience of teachers that
doesnt need statistical findings of experiments
to decide how best to teach children. They decide
such matters on the basis of complicated public
and private understandings, beliefs, motives, and
wishes. (Gene Glass, 1981)
16Some Reasons Why Educational Practices and
Policies Are Not Guided and Informed by Science
- Lack of Federal financial support for educational
research - Lack of public support for education research
- Inadequate translation of trustworthy research
findings into applied classroom practices - Teacher reliance on practical experience rather
than data - Expertise based on subjective judgments of the
individual professional rather than student
learning and achievement
17Some Reasons Why Educational Practices and
Policies Are Not Guided and Informed by Science
(contd)
- Tendency to embrace fads in instruction rather
than identify and implement policies and
instructional practices based on data - DAP was never seen as needing to be exclusively
or even primarily based on research
literatureFolklore and personal accounts of best
practices passed on from one generation of
teachers to the next counted a great dealThe
types of citations used to reference the NAEYC
publications of DAP guidelines clearly indicate a
reliance on sources other than articles reporting
original empirical data (i.e. bona fide
research)only 13 of 25 references cited in the
DAP report were original reports of research.
(Kontos, 1989) - Limitations in research training.
18Principals For Fostering Science In Education
What The Federal Government Can Do
- Provide highly experienced research leadership
and research management - Develop rigorous and transparent peer-review
processes - Insulate the program from political interference
- Develop and manage coherent research
programs/portfolios that incorporate
agency-initiated programs, investigator/field-init
iated programs, and multiple funding mechanisms - Adequately fund the agency
- Stress trans-agency initiatives to increase
community of researchers.