Measurement and measures. Professor Brian Oldenburg



Similar documents
Qualitative Research. A primer. Developed by: Vicki L. Wise, Ph.D. Portland State University

Comparison of Research Designs Template

CHAPTER THREE: METHODOLOGY Introduction. emerging markets can successfully organize activities related to event marketing.

What is Grounded Theory? Dr Lynn Calman Research Fellow School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work

Evaluation: Designs and Approaches

Qualitative Interview Design: A Practical Guide for Novice Investigators

Using Case Studies in Research

Grounded Theory. 1 Introduction Applications of grounded theory Outline of the design... 2

Qualitative and Quantitative Research

Analysing Qualitative Data

Practical Research. Paul D. Leedy Jeanne Ellis Ormrod. Planning and Design. Tenth Edition

How to Conduct Ethnographic Research

QUALITATIVE RESEARCH

Chapter 2 Quantitative, Qualitative, and Mixed Research

Research Methods: Qualitative Approach

Research design and methods Part II. Dr Brian van Wyk POST-GRADUATE ENROLMENT AND THROUGHPUT

Research Design and Research Methods

Semi-structured interviews

Reliability and Validity of Qualitative and Operational Research Paradigm

The Comparison between. Qualitative, Quantitative, and Single subject design. A Paper presented by. Dr. Bander N. Alotaibi

Using Grounded Theory in Writing Assessment

School of Advanced Studies Doctor Of Health Administration. DHA 003 Requirements

How do we know what we know?

MARKETING RESEARCH AND MARKET INTELLIGENCE (MRM711S) FEEDBACK TUTORIAL LETTER SEMESTER `1 OF Dear Student

CASE STUDIES: Research Methods

How to Develop a Research Protocol

Research Methods Carrie Williams, ( Grand Canyon University

Phenomenological Research Methods

Overview. Triplett (1898) Social Influence - 1. PSYCHOLOGY 305 / 305G Social Psychology. Research in Social Psychology 2005

Understanding the importance of collecting qualitative data creatively

Observing and describing the behavior of a subject without influencing it in any way.

MRes Psychological Research Methods

TOOL D14 Monitoring and evaluation: a framework

Chapter 2. Sociological Investigation

Developing an implementation research proposal. Session 2: Research design

Research Methods & Experimental Design

California State University, Los Angeles Department of Sociology. Guide to Preparing a Masters Thesis Proposal

Single and Multiple-Case Study Designs IS493

Overview of mixed methods: a health services research perspective

Interviews and Focus Groups in Advertising, Public relations and Media

Research Methods in Psychology 3rd edition

School of Advanced Studies Doctor Of Management In Organizational Leadership. DM 004 Requirements

Methodology in Social Psychology. Logics of inquiry

Using qualitative research to explore women s responses

Interview studies. 1 Introduction Applications of interview study designs Outline of the design... 3

A methodological proposal to analyse interactions in online collaborative learning environments

DEVELOPING HYPOTHESIS AND

Data Collection Methods

IHTE-1800 Research methods: Case and action research. Sari Kujala, spring 2007

Chapter 1 Introduction to the Study

THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH. PROGRAMME SPECIFICATION M.A. Honours in Psychology and Business Studies1

DESIGNING A QUALITATIVE RESEARCH CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK AND RESEARCH QUESTIONS. Nicholas J. Sitko PROJECT: INDABA AGRICULTURAL POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE

Qualitative Research.

Survey Research. Classifying surveys on the basis of their scope and their focus gives four categories:

EVALUATION METHODS TIP SHEET

4. Is the study design appropriate for the research question and objectives?

SOME IMPORTANT NOTES ON QUALITATIVE RESEARCH. Prof. Dr. Andreas Budihardjo August, 2013

GLOSSARY OF EVALUATION TERMS

AN ANALYSIS OF THE STRENGTHS AND LIMITATION OF QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH PARADIGMS

Descriptive analysis IAEA. International Atomic Energy Agency

What is a case study in accounting and business management? Professor Robert W. Scapens Manchester Business School

Experimental methods. Elisabeth Ahlsén Linguistic Methods Course

Job Design from an Alternative Perspective

School of Advanced Studies Doctor Of Management In Organizational Leadership/information Systems And Technology. DM/IST 004 Requirements

COM 365: INTRODUCTION TO COMMUNICATION RESEARCH METHODS Unit Test 3 Study Guide

Evaluating Survey Questions

Using Qualitative & Quantitative Research Methods to Answer your Research Questions

QUALITATIVE RESEARCH DESIGNS: A CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK

Guided Reading 9 th Edition. informed consent, protection from harm, deception, confidentiality, and anonymity.

CHAPTER III METHODOLOGY. The purpose of this study was to describe which aspects of course design

THE EFFECT OF MATHMAGIC ON THE ALGEBRAIC KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS OF LOW-PERFORMING HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS

Pragmatic theories 1/15/2010 CHAPTER 2 ACCOUNTING THEORY CONSTRUCTION. Descriptive pragmatic approach: Criticisms of descriptive pragmatic approach:

By: Omar AL-Rawajfah, RN, PhD

Prepared by the Policy, Performance and Quality Assurance Unit (Adults) Tamsin White

Undergraduate Psychology Major Learning Goals and Outcomes i

Chapter 6 Multiple Choice Questions (The answers are provided after the last question.)

Developing an R Series Plan that Incorporates Mixed Methods Research

Introduction to quantitative research

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND DIAGNOSTIC RESEARCH

Guidelines for Critical Review Form: Qualitative Studies (Version 2.0)

Specific learning outcomes (Course: Introduction to experimental research)

Q FACTOR ANALYSIS (Q-METHODOLOGY) AS DATA ANALYSIS TECHNIQUE

Investigators place signposts to carry the reader through a plan for a

STUDENT THESIS PROPOSAL GUIDELINES

Scientific Methods in Psychology

Introduction Qualitative Data Collection Methods... 7 In depth interviews... 7 Observation methods... 8 Document review... 8 Focus groups...

Quantitative Versus Qualitative Research, or Both?

Using the PRECEDE- PROCEED Planning Model PRECEDE-PROCEED P R E C E D E. Model for health promotion programming Best known among health scientists

Chapter 6 Experiment Process

Theories of consumer behavior and methodology applied in research of products with H&N claims

How To Understand The Therapeutic Alliance In Therapy Research

WHAT IS A JOURNAL CLUB?

School of Advanced Studies Doctor Of Education In Educational Leadership With A Specialization In Educational Technology. EDD/ET 003 Requirements

The Mozart effect Methods of Scientific Research

Running head: WHO S RESPONSIBLE FOR RESEARCH ETHICS?

Transcription:

Measurement and measures Professor Brian Oldenburg

Learning objectives 1. To identify similarities/differences between qualitative & quantitative measures 2. To identify steps involved in choosing and/or developing appropriate measures 3. To describe features of good questions 4. To understand basic principles of test theory and psychometrics.

Steps involved in research 1. Literature review and Formation of the topic 2. Hypothesis 3. Conceptual/theoretical definitions 4. Operational definition/methods 5. Gathering of data 6. Analysis of data 7. Test, revising of hypothesis 8. Conclusion, iteration if necessary

Developing mesures for your study What to measure? Choosing measure of the variable(s) Use existing measure(s) Adapt existing measure(s) Develop new measures (s0 How to measure?

What to measure? How to decide?

What is psychometrics? The field concerned with the theory and technique of (psychological) measurement The field is primarily concerned with the construction and validation of measurement instruments, such as questionnaires, tests and assessments. Two major research tasks of this field - construction of instruments and procedures for measurement - development/refinement of theoretical approaches

Definition of measurement in social sciences the assignment of numerals to objects or events according to some rule

Theoretical and analytic approaches Classical test theory, item response theory Rasch model for measurement Factor analysis, multidimensional scaling, Structural equation modeling, path analysis etc.

Classical testy theory X = T + E Observed score True score Error

Key concepts Reliability measuring a construct consistently across time, individuals, and situations. Validity measuring what is intended to mesure. A measure may be reliable without being valid, however, reliability is necessary, but not sufficient, for validity.

Measures Measures are often categorised as being either quantitative and/or qualitative. What matters is that the chosen measures fit the intended purposes of the research!

Qualitative and Quantitative Paradigms The qualitative paradigm concentrates on investigating subjective data, in particular, the perceptions of the people involved. The intention is to illuminate these perceptions and, thus, gain greater insight and knowledge. The quantitative paradigm concentrates on what can be measured. It involves collecting and analysing objective (often numerical) data that can be organised into statistics.

Qualitative and Quantitative Research Qualitative Research Quantitative Research Also known as interpretative / responsive positivist /hypothetico-deductive Type of reasoning Link with concepts Action (usually) inductive identifies concepts sometimes only describes a situation BUT in actionresearch openly intervenes (usually) deductive identified concepts and investigates relationships tests relationships between concepts Outcome illuminates the situation accepts or rejects proposed theory Approach to validity truth seen as context bound (socially constructed) truth seen as objective and universal

Comparison: Quantitative vs. Qualitative Research: Quantitative Methods: Formulate hypothesis Observe events/present questionnaire with fixed answers. Tabulate responses Summarize data Analyze and draw conclusions Qualitative Methods: Observe events and/or ask questions with open-ended answers. Record observations Interpret observations Return for new and refined observations Review data and draw conclusions Formulate hypothesis or theory

Role of Measurement Creates variables that are amenable to statistical analysis External, easily verifiable Uses discourse as data, long descriptive text using people s own words and dialogues. Seeks techniques to explore a phenomenon from under the skin of another

Deductive vs. Inductive Variables are conceived a priori Research question/hypothesis comes first No preconceived assumptions/ suspend your beliefs Patterns emerged from the collected data after the fact

Interventions vs. Naturalistic Interventions are seen as a way of discovery Manipulate the environment and measure changes Sensitive to the effects of the research(er) on the population studied Try to develop trust in the population being studied

Role of the Researcher Researcher s judgement essential before and after Researcher should be absent during experiment Researcher becomes the instrument Tries to suspend any predispostions and assume it is being experienced for the first time

Reduction vs. Holist Truth is to be found incrementally, one small tweak after another Science has always found out about phenomena little at a time Humanistic perspective urges a holist approach When we reduce people to variables, we lose the larger understandings possible

Determining the Research Approach Use quantitative if your research problem requires you to: Measure Variables Assess the impact of these variables on an outcome Test existing theories or broad explanations Apply results to a large number of people Use qualitative if your research problem requires you to: Learn about the views of the people you plan to study Assess a process over time Generate theories based on participant perspectives Obtain detailed information about a few people or research sites.

Quantitative Designs and Uses Intervention Research Explaining whether an intervention influences an outcome for one group as opposed to another group Associating or relating variables in a predictable pattern for one group of individuals Non-Intervention Research Describing trends or characteristics for the population of people Experimental Research Correlational Research Descriptive Research

Qualitative Designs and Uses Exploring the shared culture of a people group Exploring common experiences of individuals to develop a theory Exploring individual stories to describe the lives of people Ethnographic Research Grounded Theory Research Narrative Research

Research Methods Qualitative Research Quantitative Research Hybrid Ethnographic Grounded theory Narrative research Case Study Action Research Experimental Correlational Descriptive Current Differences Differences Over Time Basic Descriptions Case Study Action Research

Hybrids: Combined Designs and Uses Case Study Qualitative design w/ Quantitative data collected. Action Research Forming a theory in advance and collecting qualitative observations to quickly see if the theory has any validity or application in a small and preselected population.

Criteria for Judging Research Traditional Criteria for Judging Quantitative Research internal validity external validity objectivity reliability Alternative Criteria for Judging Qualitative Research credibility transferability confirmability dependability Lincoln, YS. & Guba, EG. (1985). Naturalistic Inquiry. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications.

Lincoln and Guba's Evaluative Criteria Lincoln and Guba posit that trustworthiness of a research study is important to evaluating its worth. Credibility - confidence in the 'truth' of the findings Transferability - showing that the findings have applicability in other contexts Dependability - showing that the findings are consistent and could be repeated Confirmability - a degree of neutrality or the extent to which the findings of a study are shaped by the respondents and not researcher bias, motivation, or interest.

Measurement Methods How you collect data and conduct measurement? Process indicators may be collected using a variety of collection tools, such as: Attendance records Lesson reports Sign-in sheets Activity logs

Types of Indicators Outcome indicators measure your outcome objectives. Health Promotion outcomes: Knowledge Attitudes Behaviors Healthcare outcomes Death Disease Disability

Methods Outcome indicators may be collected using a variety of collection tools, such as: Survey Participant interviews Focus groups Observations Measurements

Choosing the right method Example: there are many methods of measuring physical activity few are appropriate for large population groups Some are very accurate (e.g. DLW and indirect calorimetry as measures of energy expenditure), but do not provide information about behaviour and are very expensive. diaries and logs provide rich behavioural information, but are burdensome for respondents and require a great deal of coding for the researcher.

Increasing practicality PA Measurement options Global self-assessments s Recall s Pedometers o Accelerometers o Heart rate o PA logs s Diaries s Direct observation o O Objective S Subjective DLW Indirect o calorimetry o Increasing accuracy Acknowledgment: Fiona Bull; Stewart Trost

Designing good questions/questionnaire Keep questions as short as possible Use simple words Relax your grammar Assure a common understanding Start with interesting questions Avoid leading questions Avoid double negatives

Balance rating scales Don t make the list of choices too long Avoid difficult choices Avoid difficult recall questions Use closed-ended questions rather than open-ended Pre-test and pilot Give clear instructions