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Published byRosamond Cobb Modified over 9 years ago
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G544 – Practical project SELF REPORT
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Revision Socrative quiz In pairs – answer each question. We will then discuss each answer given
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Section A You will be given sample material You then design a suitable project that fulfils the requirements Sufficiently detailed Valid (to enable someone to go ahead and run the project) Putting your knowledge into practice Range of techniques (Self report, experiment, correlation or observation) Today we will focus on self report
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If the material provided requires a self report technique then you do not need to operationalise a hypothesis You would need to provide details on of the questionnaire you would construct Qualitative data Quantitative data Open/close questions Use of rating scales
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Selection of research question Description and justification of the design Independent samples, repeated measures, matched pairs Populations Using tests that generate nominal or ordinal data Materials Procedure (keeping in mind the research question) (next lesson) Advantages/limitations of using self report in your practical project Validity and reliability of measurements Strength/weaknesses – using open and closed questions How can leading questions influence results Ethics of the procedure (i.e. How would you ensure that it does not cause distress?) (improvement) Alternative designs/sample methods (i.e. suggest a more appropriate sampling method) Possible future research
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TIPS Do not give general answers Always provide context – relate it to the project All questions require explanations/justification Group work (word document – practice question) Peer mark – swap answers
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Homework Practice questions (Section A) – scenario (not procedure)
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Procedure Writing Recap Section A (Q&A) After you have constructed a research question – we move on to: Procedure writing 13 marks – Replicable and appropriate (including all relevant details) 6 marks –Quality of design and feasibility (fit for purpose?) Back to AS – how to write out a procedure. Pairs/groups discuss: What are the steps? What do you have to keep in mind throughout?
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Standardised procedure Standardised instructions Extraneous variables: demand characteristics, social desirability, researcher bias, environmental Easy to repeat, replicate
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Decide sampling method (who, where, why) Anonymous? Explain process (how will you recruit) Explain construction of questionnaire Demand characteristics (I.e. ask lots of different questions) Provide examples of questions Open/closed and why? Scale – 1-5? Where 1 is….. How would the respond? Circle? Write out answers to open questions? Distribution of questionnaire (+ informed consent) How? Paper? Email? Participants respond (data collection) Deadline Once they respond – collate data Data from closed statements – how would you analyse? Data from open statements – how would you analyse? Debrief
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Practice! From last lesson – back in groups/pairs. A researcher wants to investigate stress levels. There are a number of possible of possible sources of stress in people’s lives. One way to find out more about one of these sources of stress and its effects is to ask people to fill out a questionnaire. In this way they can respond in some detail about this aspect of their lives as a potential stressor. In the exam you will have different options to choose from. For the purpose of this exercise we are going to use Job-related stress. Describe the method you would use to conduct your practical project (13+6 marks)
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Swap answers Provide feedback (ideas and advice) Use the procedure writing checklist to ensure everything has been included
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Homework Exam practice – Complete a whole section A question
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Section B – Research methods and issues G544 – choice of 2 questions 1. Focused on approaches and perspectives 2. Focused on research methods and methodological issues In pairs: Make a list of research methods Make a list of issues
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Research methods Lab experiment Field experiment Observation Self-report Correlation Case Study Issues Ecological Validity Ethics Reliability and validity Snapshot & longitudinal Qualitative and quantitative Usefulness
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Section B One 5-part question – 40 marks 5 parts will relate primarily to one research method and one issue (a,b,c,e) (d)- compare two different research methods (e)- will link with an issue (a) & (b) require factual knowledge (c) – (e) require evaluative points
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In pairs – complete table (comparing self report to other methods)
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Jan 2011 a) Briefly outline what is meant by qualitative and quantitative data (4 marks) b) Describe two pieces of experimental research that collect quantitative data (4 marks) c) Discuss the strengths and limitations of conducting experimental research which produces quantitative data. Use examples of psychological research to support your answer. (12 marks) d) Compare the experimental method with the self-report method. Use examples of psychological research to support your answer. (8 marks) e) Discuss the usefulness of psychological research that collects qualitative data. (8 marks)
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