Title: The Language of Research
1The Language of Research
2Construct
- Abstraction that cannot be observed directly but
are useful in interpreting empirical data and in
theory building - People differ in what they can learn and how
quickly they can learn. Scientist invented a
construct called intelligence - other examples are motivation, reading
readiness, anxiety, underachievement, creativity,
self-concept, maturity and many more.
3Specification of meaning
- Constructs may be defined in a way that gives
general meaning or they may be defined in terms
of the operation by which they will be measured
or manipulated - Constitutive definition
- A dictionary type of definition or formal
definition - For example, inteligence may be defined as the
ability to think abstractly or the capacity to
acquire knowledge - Important to define so that readers know what is
meant by the term and to enable other research to
duplicate the research
4- Operational definition
- Helps researcher bridge the gap between
theoretical and observable - Two types of operational definition
- measured operational definition and
- experimental operational definition
5- Measured operational definition
- Details the operation by which the investigator
measure the construct - Example
- Inteligence may be defined operationally as
scores on Stanford-Binet Intel Scale - Creativity may operationally refer to
- So, when you define the construct in terms of how
they are measured, you know precisely what it is
meant by the term
6- Experimental Operation Definition
- Details the steps taken to produce certain
experimental conditions - Example
- Frustration in the study may take the form of
preventing subjects from reaching the goal
7- Why operationally defined the construct?
- To delimit a term
- To ensure that people understand particular way a
term is used - To allow researcher to proceed with investigation
that might not be possible - Example
- In practice, the investigation of the
relationship between construct creativity and the
construct intelligence refers to scores on an
intelligence test to scores on a measure of
creativity
8Variables
- Characteristics by which persons or objects can
be described - Characteristics that do vary and can be put on a
continuum or spectrum - Characteristics that can change from time to time
for given persons or objects - There are variation within the class or subjects
- Must have more than one level
9- Example
- To study the effect of reinforcement on students
achievement - Select 9th graders
- Divide into 3 groups
- Teachers give different reinforcement
- (verbal praise, monetary rewards, extra points)
10Types of variables
- Discrete or categorical or qualitative
- Can only take on specific values
- Do not vary in degree, amount, quantity but are
qualitatively different - The simplest form of categorical variable gender
(male-female). - When there are two categories it is known as
dichotomous
11Other examples of categorical variables
- Marital status
- Types of occupation
- Location of residence
- Ethnics
- Political pereference
- Hair colour,
- Brand of a car
12Quantitative variable
- Also known as continous variable
- It exist in some degrees along a continuum from
less to more - Numbers are assigned to indicate how much of the
variable they possess - Can take on any value
- IQ, Age, Height, Weigth, Interest
13Which of the folowing are categorical and
quantitative
- Religion
- Cleaness
- Hair calor
- Race
- Gender
- SES
- Curiosity
- Writing ability
- Efficiency
- CGPA
- Height
- Running Speed
- Teaching Mthods
- Leadership style
- Level of motivation
- Intelligence
- Komitment
- Job Satisfaction
- Level of Education
- Type oh Job
- School Climate
- Type of School
14Classification of variables
- Independent
- Presumed cause
- Antecedent
- Variable predicted from
- Denoted by X
- The thing you think will produce a difference and
thing the experimenter change somehow - Treatment
- factors
- Dependent
- Presumed effect
- Consequences
- Variable predicted from
- Denoted by Y
- The thing that is supposed to change
- Thing that shoud be affected
- Criterion
15Types of independent variable
- Attribute
- Variable that cannot be manipulated. gender,
SES, IQ, Hair Color etc - Also known as assigned, measured, organismic,
personological, sociological, psycho-sociological,
demographic
16- Some variables can be manipulated but are not
manipulated in a particular investigation - Type of curriculum
- Section of a course
- Usually subject self-select the level of the
independent variable or naturally occuring - Very common in ex post facto research
17- Active independent variable
- Also called experimental variable
- Manipulated variable
- Treatment variable
- Variable can be manipulated and are manipulated
in a particular investigation - Method of teaching
- What is manipulation?
- Random assigment of experimental units or
subjects to levels of the independent variable
18- Intervening variable, extraneous, confounding or
contaminating variables - Things affecting dependent variable other than
the independent variable - Cause a threat to the validity of the study
- This is a major problem in any study
- Give example
19- Test wiseness affect test performance
- Children who are blocked from reaching their
goals exhibit more aggressive acts than children
not so blocked - Girls who plan to pursue careers in science are
more aggressive, less conforming, more
independent and have a greater need for
achievement than girls who do not plan such
careers - Under intangible reinforcement conditiond,
middle-class children will learn significantly
better than lower-class children
20- Students who have completed how to study course
will make a significantly higher grade-point
average than students who have never taken such a
course - Individual who graduate with Doctor of Education
in educational administration attain better
paying jobs than those who received a Doctor of
Philosophy in educational administration - Perceptions of the characteristics of the good or
effective teacher are in part determined by the
perceivers attitude toward education
21Dependent variable
- Variable that the independent variable is
presumed to affect - Variable that depends on independent variable
- Outcome variable
- Example
- The amount of uneasiness that applicants for a
position express in an interview - How anxious students are before the examination
- Neatness
- Openness of a classroom
- Fluency in a foreign language
22- Research in education may study the relationship
between either - (a) two or more quantitative variables,
- (b) one categorical and one quantitative
variable, or - (c) two or more categorical variable
23Two quantitative variables
- Age and amount of interest in school
- Reading achievement and mathematics achievement
- Classroom humanism and student motivation
- Amount of time watching television and
agressiveness of behavior
24One categorical and one quantitative
- Method used to teach reading and reading
achievement - Counselling approach and level of anxiety
- Nationality and liking for school
- Student gender and amount of praise given by
teachers
25Two categorical variables
- Ethnicity and fathers occupation
- Gender of teacher and subject taught
- Administrative style and college major
- Religious affiliation and political party
membership
26Constant
- A fixed value within the study, that is all
members of the class are identical - There is no variation
- No change of characteristics
- Example
27Ugama yang dianuti Kecerdasan
Kebersihan Komitment
Warna mata/rambut Kepuasan bekerja
Bangsa Tahap pendidikan
Jantina Jenis pekerjaan
SES Leadership style
Curiousity Iklim sekolah
Writing ability Kualiti sekolah
Math ability Jenis sekolah
Kecekapan CGPA
Test anxiety Ketinggian
Grade level Kepantasan berlari
Kaedah mengajra Jenis kenderaan
28- Yang manakah independent dan yang manakah
dependent? - effects of instructional variables on languange
ability of preschool children - the validity of predictors of performance in law
school - computer based drill and practice in arithmatics
widening the gap between high and low achieving
students - learning disable children self concept
- sex difference in choice of college science
majors - Test wiseness affetct test performance
- Children who are blocked from reaching their
goals exhibit more aggressive act thath childern
who are blocked - Girls who plan to pursue career in science are
more aggressive than