Experimental: Research
Experimental: Research
Experimental
DESIGNS
RESEARCH
Experimental Designs Should be Developed to Ensure Internal and External Validity of the Study
Internal Validity:
Are the results of the study (DV) caused by the factors included in the study (IV) or are they caused by other factors (EV) which were not part of the study?
Subject Characteristics
(Selection Bias/Differential Selection) -- The groups may have been different from the start. If you were testing instructional strategies to improve reading and one group enjoyed reading more than the other group, they may improve more in their reading because they enjoy it, rather than the instructional strategy you used.
Loss of Subjects
(Mortality) -- All of the high or low scoring subject may have dropped out or were missing from one of the groups. If we collected posttest data on a day when the honor society was on field trip at the treatment school, the mean for the treatment group would probably be much lower than it really should have been.
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Location
Perhaps one group was at a disadvantage because of their location. The city may have been demolishing a building next to one of the schools in our study and there are constant distractions which interfere with our treatment.
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Testing
The act of taking a pretest or posttest may influence the results of the experiment. Suppose we were conducting a unit to increase student sensitivity to prejudice. As a pretest we have the control and treatment groups watch Shindler's List and write a reaction essay. The pretest may have actually increased both groups' sensitivity and we find that our treatment groups didn't score any higher on a posttest given later than the control group did. If we hadn't given the pretest, we might have seen differences in the groups at the end of the study.
History
Something may happen at one site during our study that influences the results. Perhaps a classmate dies in a car accident at the control site for a study teaching children bike safety. The control group may actually demonstrate more concern about bike safety than the treatment group.
There may be natural changes in the subjects that can account for the changes found in a study. A critical thinking unit may appear more effective if it taught during a time when children are developing abstract reasoning.
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Maturation
Hawthorne Effect
The subjects may respond differently just because they are being studied. The name comes from a classic study in which researchers were studying the effect of lighting on worker productivity. As the intensity of the factory lights increased, so did the worker productivity. One researcher suggested that they reverse the treatment and lower the lights. The productivity of the workers continued to increase. It appears that being observed by the researchers was increasing productivity, not the intensity of the lights.
Regression
(Statistical Regression) -- A class that scores particularly low can be expected to score slightly higher just by chance. Likewise, a class that scores particularly high, will have a tendency to score slightly lower by chance. The change in these scores may have nothing to do with the treatment.
The treatment may not be implemented as intended. A study where teachers are asked to use student modeling techniques may not show positive results, not because modeling techniques don't work, but because the teacher didn't implement them or didn't implement them as they were designed.
Implementation
Once the researchers are confident that the outcome (dependent variable) of the experiment they are designing is the result of their treatment (independent variable) [internal validity], they determine for which people or situations the results of their study apply [external validity].
External Validity:
Are the results of the study generalizable to other populations and settings?
Threats to External Validity (Population) Population Validity is the extent to which the results of a study can be generalized from the specific sample that was studied to a larger group of subjects. It involves... 1. ...the extent to which one can generalize from the study sample to a defined population-If the sample is drawn from an accessible population, rather than the target population, generalizing the research results from the accessible population to the target population is risky.
2. ...the extent to which personological variables interact with treatment effects-If the study is an experiment, it may be possible that different results might be found with students at different grades (a personological variable).
Ecological Validity
is the extent to which the results of an experiment can be generalized from the set of environmental conditions created by the researcher to other environmental conditions (settings and conditions).
(not sufficiently described for others to replicate) If the researcher fails to adequately describe how he or she conducted a study, it is difficult to determine whether the results are applicable to other settings.
Multiple-treatment interference
(catalyst effect) If a researcher were to apply several treatments, it is difficult to determine how well each of the treatments would work individually. It might be that only the combination of the treatments is effective.
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Hawthorne effect
(attention causes differences) Subjects perform differently because they know they are being studied. "...External validity of the experiment is jeopardized because the findings might not generalize to a situation in which researchers or others who were involved in the research are not present" (Gall, Borg, & Gall, 1996, p. 475)
Experimenter effect
(it only works with this experimenter) The treatment might have worked because of the person implementing it. Given a different person, the treatment might not work at all.
Pretest sensitization
(pretest sets the stage) A treatment might only work if a pretest is given. Because they have taken a pretest, the subjects may be more sensitive to the treatment. Had they not taken a pretest, the treatment would not have worked.
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Posttest sensitization
(posttest helps treatment "fall into place") The posttest can become a learning experience. "For example, the posttest might cause certain ideas presented during the treatment to 'fall into place' " (p. 477). If the subjects had not taken a posttest, the treatment would not have worked.
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(it takes a while for the treatment to kick in) It may be that the treatment effect does not occur until several weeks after the end of the treatment. In this situation, a posttest at the end of the treatment would show no impact, but a posttest a month later might show an impact.
First, and foremost, an experiment must have internal validity. If the researchers cannot be certain that the results of the experiment are dependent on the treatment, it does not matter to which people or situations they wish to generalize (apply) their findings. The importance of external validity is reliant on having internal validity in much the same way that the validity of a measurement instrument is reliant on the instrument being reliable.
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However, the more tightly experimenters design their study, the more they limit the populations and settings to whom they can generalize their findings.
Suppose a researcher wants to study the effect of a reading program on reading achievement. She might implement the reading program with a group of students at the beginning of the school year and measure their achievement at the end of the year.
XO
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Unfortunately, the students end of year reading scores could be influenced by other instruction in school, the students maturation, or the treatment. We also do not know whether the students reading skills actually changed from the start to end of the school year. We could improve on this design by giving a pretest at the start of the study.
OXO
Unfortunately, the students end of year reading scores still could be influenced by other instruction in school, the students maturation, or the treatment. Our researcher may wish to have a comparison group.
OXO O O
This is a static-group pretest-posttest design.
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If our researcher believes that the pretest has an impact on the results of the study, she might not include it.
OXO O O
This is a static-group comparison design.
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Because our researcher did not pretest, she might wish to randomly assign subjects to treatment and control group.
Random assignment of subject to groups should spread the variety of extraneous characteristics that subjects possess equally across both groups.
ROXO RO O
This is a randomized posttest-only, control group design.
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Of course, our researcher could also include a pretest with her random assignment.
ROXO RO O
This is a randomized pretest-posttest control group design.
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Occasionally researchers combine the randomized pretest-posttest control group design with the randomized posttest-only, control group design.
ROXO RO O R XO R O
This is a randomized Solomon four-group design.
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With the randomized Solomon four-group design, all groups are randomly assigned and given the posttest. Two of the groups are given pretests.
ROXO RO O R XO R O
One of the pretest groups is assigned to treatment and one of the non-pretest groups is assigned to treatment.
Each of the designs described in this section has advantages and disadvantages that influence the studies internal and external validity.
This presentation was prepared by Del Siegle. Some of the material is from an earlier presentation by Scott Brown.
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