Title: EDUC 6033
1EDUC 6033
- Research Design and Analysis
- Week 6
2Internal Validity
- The changes that are measured in the dependent
variable result from the manipulation of the
independent variable and not something else (an
extraneous variable).
3Major Threats to Internal Validity
- History
- Maturation
- Testing
- Instrumentation
- Statistical Regression
- Selection
- Mortality
4History
- Specific events that occur between the first and
second measurements. - Example
- A government teacher gave his students a survey
on August, 2001 and a second survey in December,
2001 to assess their patriotism. He concludes
that his course caused his students to view the
US differently.
5Maturation
- Changes within the subjects resulting from the
passage of time not specific to the particular
events), including growing older, growing
hungrier, growing more tired, and the like. - Example
- A superintendent believes that the increase in
the number of discipline problems between
elementary and middle schools to be the result of
poor principalship in the middle schools.
6Testing
- The effects of taking a test upon the scores of a
second testing. - Example
- The average student who takes the SAT a second
time increases his or her scores by approximately
30 points however, that is the average student.
http//www.collegeboard.com/satscores/letter.html
7Instrumentation
- Changes in the calibration of a measuring
instrument or changes in the observers or scorers
used may produce changes in the obtained
measurements. - Example
- In a study to measure changes in aggressive
behavior on a school yard, an initial count of
such behaviors was determined by teacher A in
January and Teacher B in June.
8Statistical Regression
- Extreme scores often are anomalous. Especially
when groups have been selected on the basis of
their extreme scores. - Example
- Students who take a test for the first time
sometimes get lucky and do exceptionally well,
while others have a bad day and do very poorly.
9Selection
- Biases resulting in differential selection of
respondents for the comparison groups. - Example
- A teacher uses a morning class and an afternoon
class as the experimental and control goups for a
study of the effects of video instruction on
attentiveness.
10Mortality
- Differential loss of respondents from the
comparison groups. - Example
- An education program in a university touts the
effectiveness of their program to increase
motivated behaviors by comparing the
motivated scores of entering students to those
that graduate.
11Weak Experimental Research Designs
- One-group posttest-only design.
- Which of the threats are controlled?
History Maturation Testing Instrumentation Statist
ical Regression Selection Mortality (Red
Controlled)
12Weak Experimental Research Designs
- One-group pretest-posttest design.
- Which of the threats are controlled?
History Maturation Testing Instrumentation Statist
ical Regression Selection Mortality
13Strong Experimental Designs
- Post-test only control-group design.
- Which of the threats are controlled?
History Maturation Testing Instrumentation Statist
ical Regression Selection Mortality
14Strong Experimental Designs
- Pretest-posttest control-group design.
- Which of the threats are controlled?
History Maturation Testing Instrumentation Statist
ical Regression Selection Mortality
15Strong Experimental Designs
- Solomon four-group design.
- Which of the threats are controlled?
History Maturation Testing Instrumentation Statist
ical Regression Selection Mortality
16Quasi-Experimental Designs
Nonequivalent Comparison Group Design
History Maturation Testing Instrumentation Statist
ical Regression Selection Mortality
- Which of the threats are controlled?
17Quasi-Experimental Designs
Interrupted Time-Series Design
History Maturation Testing Instrumentation Statist
ical Regression Selection Mortality
Which of the threats are controlled?