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Published byNoel George Modified over 6 years ago
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HYPOTHESES Null hypothesis (H1) Alternative hypothesis (H0)
Direction of hypothesis: states the kind of difference or relationship between two conditions or two groups of participants One-tailed (directional): ‘people who study in silent surroundings achieve better than those who study in noisy surroundings’ Two-tailed (no direction): ‘there is a difference between people who study in silent surroundings and those who study in noisy surroundings’
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OPERATIONALISING HYPOTHESES
Hypothesis: ‘people who study in quiet surroundings achieve better than those who study in noisy surroundings’ What do ‘work better’, ‘quiet’ and ‘noisy’ mean? Define the operations: ‘work better’ = obtain a higher score on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale ‘quiet’ = silence ‘noisy’ = CD music playing Operationalised hypothesis: ‘people who study in silence achieve a higher score on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale than those who study with CD music playing’
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DIRECTIONAL AND NON-DIRECTIONAL HYPOTHESES
Directional (one-tailed): People who do homework without the TV on produce better results than those who do homework with the TV on. Non-directional (two-tailed): There is a difference between work produced in noisy or silent conditions.
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INDEPENDENT AND DEPENDENT VARIABLES
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