SOWK 6003 Social Work Research Week 4 Research process, variables, hypothesis, and research designs By Dr. Paul Wong.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Educational Research: Causal-Comparative Studies
Advertisements

Andrea M. Landis, PhD, RN UW LEAH
Postgraduate Course 7. Evidence-based management: Research designs.
Research Methodology Lecture No : 11 (Goodness Of Measures)
Defining Characteristics
Chapter 2: The Research Process
GROUP-LEVEL DESIGNS Chapter 9.
Reviewing and Critiquing Research
Reliability, Validity, Trustworthiness If a research says it must be right, then it must be right,… right??
RESEARCH METHODS IN SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
SOWK 6003 Social Work Research Week 6 Designs for Evaluating Programmes and Practice – Single case study eveluation By Dr. Paul Wong.
MSc Applied Psychology PYM403 Research Methods Validity and Reliability in Research.
The Methods of Social Psychology
SOWK 6003 Social Work Research Week 4 Research process, variables, hypothesis, and research designs By Dr. Paul Wong.
SOWK 6003 Social Work Research Week 5 Measurement By Dr. Paul Wong.
Psych 231: Research Methods in Psychology
Personality, 9e Jerry M. Burger
Validity, Reliability, & Sampling
Formulating the research design
Methodology: How Social Psychologists Do Research
Fig Theory construction. A good theory will generate a host of testable hypotheses. In a typical study, only one or a few of these hypotheses can.
I want to test a wound treatment or educational program but I have no funding or resources, How do I do it? Implementing & evaluating wound research conducted.
Descriptive and Causal Research Designs
Chapter 4 Principles of Quantitative Research. Answering Questions  Quantitative Research attempts to answer questions by ascribing importance (significance)
Experimental Research
Action Research March 12, 2012 Data Collection. Qualities of Data Collection  Generalizability – not necessary; goal is to improve school or classroom.
Validity & Reliability Trustworthiness
Research Methodology For IB Psychology Students. Empirical Investigation The collecting of objective information firsthand, by making careful measurements.
Methodology Experiments.
Final Study Guide Research Design. Experimental Research.
Planning an Applied Research Project Chapter 7 – Forms of Quantitative Research © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
MODULE 3 INVESTIGATING HUMAN AND SOCIL DEVELOPMENT IN THE CARIBBEAN.
Chapter 2 AP Psychology Outline
Copyright ©2008 by Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ Foundations of Nursing Research, 5e By Rose Marie Nieswiadomy.
The Research Enterprise in Psychology
Reliability and Validity Why is this so important and why is this so difficult?
URBDP 491 A Lecture 7: Research Approaches Objectives How to compare alternative approaches Experimental vs. non-experimental approaches Cross-sectional.
The Basics of Experimentation Ch7 – Reliability and Validity.
Slides to accompany Weathington, Cunningham & Pittenger (2010), Chapter 3: The Foundations of Research 1.
URBDP 591 I Lecture 3: Research Process Objectives What are the major steps in the research process? What is an operational definition of variables? What.
Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches
Quantitative SOTL Research Methods Krista Trinder, College of Medicine Brad Wuetherick, GMCTE October 28, 2010.
1 Experimental Research Cause + Effect Manipulation Control.
Chapter 4 – Research Methods in Clinical Psych Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
1 Copyright © 2011 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 8 Clarifying Quantitative Research Designs.
TRUSTWORTHINESS OF THE RESEARCH Assoc. Prof. Dr. Şehnaz Şahinkarakaş.
Experiment Basics: Variables Psych 231: Research Methods in Psychology.
Issues in Validity and Reliability Conducting Educational Research Chapter 4 Presented by: Vanessa Colón.
Review of Research Methods. Overview of the Research Process I. Develop a research question II. Develop a hypothesis III. Choose a research design IV.
Reading and Evaluating Research Method. Essential question to ask about the Method: “Is the operationalization of the hypothesis valid? Sections: Section.
Research Methodology and Methods of Social Inquiry Nov 8, 2011 Assessing Measurement Reliability & Validity.
CHAPTER 2 Research Methods in Industrial/Organizational Psychology
EXPERIMENTS AND EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN
Research for Nurses: Methods and Interpretation Chapter 1 What is research? What is nursing research? What are the goals of Nursing research?
Methods of Data Collection Survey Methods Self-Administered Questionnaires Interviews Methods of Observation Non-Participant Observation Participant Observation.
Measurement Experiment - effect of IV on DV. Independent Variable (2 or more levels) MANIPULATED a) situational - features in the environment b) task.
Methodology: How Social Psychologists Do Research
©2005, Pearson Education/Prentice Hall CHAPTER 6 Nonexperimental Strategies.
Elspeth Slayter, Ph.D. Assistant Professor, Salem State University Lecture notes on threats to validity, threats to trustworthiness and the optimization.
Chapter 2: The Research Enterprise in Psychology.
Session 3 Overview of Research Designs Introduction to Research and Evaluation in Education.
Research Methods & Design Outline
CRITICALLY APPRAISING EVIDENCE Lisa Broughton, PhD, RN, CCRN.
Research Methods in Psychology
Reliability and Validity in Research
Research Design: Terms to Know
DUET.
Evaluating research Is this valid research?.
Formulating the research design
Research Methods for the Behavioral Sciences
Presentation transcript:

SOWK 6003 Social Work Research Week 4 Research process, variables, hypothesis, and research designs By Dr. Paul Wong

Research Process? Problem formulation Designing the study Data collection Data processing Data analysis Interpreting the findings Writing the report

Purposes of Research Exploration Description Explanation Evaluation Multiple purposes

This week we will focus on the first 2 steps in a research process Formulating a problem and Designing a study

Operationalization of Concepts Concept as a mental image that symbolizes an idea, an object, an event, a behavior, a person and so on……word that people agree upon to symbolize something. Attributes are concepts that can be grouped together to form a broader concept. Variable is - something of interest to us that can take on different values; an element in a research project that, when measured, can take on more than one value A variable is a characteristic that has two or more values.

Relationships between Variables Correlations Correlational relationship simply says that two things perform in a synchronized manner.

Think about this relationship! Weather and fashion, how are they relate to each other?

Independent Variables (IVs) vs. Dependent Variables (DVs) Types of Variables Independent Variables (IVs) vs. Dependent Variables (DVs) IV is a variable that explains or causes something, and is not depending on the other variables. It is what the researcher (or nature) manipulates. DV is the variable which is the effect, being explained or caused.

Extraneous Variables vs Mediating Variables Extraneous variables represent alternative explanations for the relationships that are observed between the independent variable and dependent variables

Mediating Variable is the mechanism by which an independent variable affects a dependent variable. Sometimes it is also referred as intervening variables.

How do Extraneous Variables come in to the picture between weather and fashion?

Continuous, Discrete, and Dichotomous Variables Continuous variable has an infinite number of different values between the highest and lowest score. E.g., ? Discrete variable has a limited and countable number of distinct steps between the highest and lowest score. E.g.,? Dichotomous variable has only two levels. E.g.,?

What is research design? http://www.csulb.edu/~msaintg/ppa696/696preex.htm

When we talk about study design, we need to consider the following aspects: Nature Setting Time Participants

Nature Experimental Design - investigation that involves manipulation and control of an independent or treatment variable with the intent of assessing whether the independent variables causes a change in the level of a dependent variable. Note: Randomization : random assignment to the control and experimental group, which is not equal to random sampling. It is about the reduction of systematic error such as selection bias. Quasi-Experimental Design - research study set up to resemble a true experiment but that does not involve random assignment of the participants to a group or manipulation and control of a true independent variable, instead relying on measuring groups based on pre-existing characteristics. (Beins, 2009) Pre-Experimental Design - the features of experimental design and quasi-experimental design are not present.

Setting Applied Research: take place in a natural environment where people are acting as they normally do. It usually attempts to address practical questions rather than theoretical questions Basic Research is more likely to occur in a laboratory or other controlled setting. It tests or expands on theory, with no direct application intended. (Beins, 2009)

Time One time: Cross-sectional/One shot/Posttest only Two time: pretest – posttest design More than two times: Longitudinal Many many times: Time Series

Participant/Subject One person – Case study One group – A cohort More than one person More than one group – Comparison study

Treatment/intervention

Data Source Qualitative Quantitative Observations Journal/Diary/Self report Indepth Interview Focus Group Art work Archives Documents Quantitative Measurements through self-administered questionnaires (by hand, by mail, or online) Interview survey (telephone, home visit) Health indicators (BP, skin temperature, saliva cortisol etc.)

Research rigor (means good standard) Ethical Rigor - concerns about ethical consideration Methodology Rigor 1. The matching of research questions with the research methods 2. The appropriateness and reliability of the data collection method 3. The representativeness of the samples 4. The generalizability of the data

Reliability : Validity: Rigor of Data Collection Method (we will talk more about them next week) Reliability : consistency of measurement over-time (test-retest reliability) consistency of measurement by different rater (interrater reliability) consistency of measurement on different subgroup (split-half reliability) consistency of measurement on items of the measurement tools (internal consistency reliability. Cronbach’s alpha) Validity: - refers to the extent to which an empirical measure adequately reflects the real meaning of the concept under consideration. Face validity Content validity Criterion-related validity Construct validity: convergent and discriminant validity Factorial validity

Establishing Trustworthiness (Lincoln & Guba, 1999) Credibility - activities increasing the probability that credible findings will be produced: prolonged engagement, persistent observation and triangulation); - an activity that provides an external check on the inquiry process (peer debriefing); - an activity aimed at refining working hypotheses as more and more information becomes available (negative case analysis); - an activity that makes possible checking preliminary findings and interpretations against archived “raw data” (referential adequacy); - an activity providing for the direct test of findings and interpretations with the human sources from which they have come (member checking).

Confirmability - Inquiry audit: auditor to examine the products: whether findings are grounded in the data - A sample of findings is traced back, via audit trail to the raw data.

Discussions on last week’s homework In class activity 1 Discussions on last week’s homework

How to write a research proposal? In class activity 2 How to write a research proposal?