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ALEC 604: Writing for Professional Publication Week 7: Methodology
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Activities Examine the required components for the methods section Discuss scholarship specifics for methods inclusion Practice writing the methods section
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Methodology Section Components Describes how data were collected Research design Participants Population vs. Sample Instruments Collection procedures Data analyses Statistical procedures How did those procedures test your hypothesis or answer your research question?
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Research Design Eight basic designs used in education: Historical Descriptive Developmental Case and Field Associational Causal-Comparative True Experimental Quasi-Experimental
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Eight Basic Research Designs Historical To reconstruct the past objectively and accurately, often in relation to the tenability of a hypothesis Descriptive To describe systematically a situation or area of interest factually and accurately Developmental To investigate patterns and sequences of growth and/or change as a function of time
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Eight Basic Research Designs Case and Field To study intensively the background, current status, and environmental interactions of a given social unit (individual, group, institution, or community) Associational To investigate the extent of relationships between two or more characteristics; based on correlation coefficients
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Eight Basic Research Designs Causal-Comparative (Ex Post Facto) To investigate possible cause-and-effect relationships by observing some existing consequence and searching back through the data for plausible casual factors True Experimental To investigate possible cause-and-effect relationships by exposing one or more experimental groups to one or more control groups not receiving the treatment (random assignment being essential)
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Eight Basic Research Designs Quasi-Experimental To approximate the conditions of the true experiment in a setting which does not allow the control and/or manipulation of all relevant variables. The researcher must clearly understand what compromises exist in the internal and external validity of the design and proceed within these limitations
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Participants Target Population All members of a well-defined class of people, events, or objects Sampling Method Sampling Frame Sampling Method Random Sampling Systematic Sampling Purposive Sampling Sample Size Response Rates
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Instruments Describe your tools of observation Surveys (Quantitative) Type: mail, online, e-mail, telephone, face-to-face Construction: sections, open- vs. closed-ended Scales: type, use, summation, etc. Validity Reliability Structured Interviews (Qualitative) Telephone or face-to-face Types of questions asked How responses were recorded
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Collection Procedures Specific details about: When observations were made How nonrespondents were contacted How many observations were made Where responses were stored How confidentiality or anonymity were assured When data collection ceased
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Data Analyses - Quantitative Quantitative Analysis Describe the statistical procedures Univariate Frequencies Measures of Central Tendency (Mean/Median) Measures of Variation (Standard Deviations) Bivariate Measures of Association (Pearson’s r) t-Test Multivariate Regression, ANOVA, Describe how the procedures test your hypotheses
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Data Analyses - Qualitative Describes how you organized the response data Categorization of responses How did spontaneous comments from subjects formulate new questions Describe how your analysis will answer or address your research question
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Summary Writing the methods is one of the easiest sections because it is formulaic Provide sufficient detail so your study could be replicated by others Include due diligence when referencing well-known procedures, tests, or conventions used to operationalize the meaning of your procedures/outcomes
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