1 / 10

Quasi Experimental and single case experimental designs

Quasi Experimental and single case experimental designs. Chapter 11. Program Evaluation. Research on programs that are proposed and implemented to achieve some positive effect on a group of people i.e. DARE program evaluation Applies research approaches to evaluate types of programs.

jared
Download Presentation

Quasi Experimental and single case experimental designs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Quasi Experimental and single case experimental designs Chapter 11

  2. Program Evaluation • Research on programs that are proposed and implemented to achieve some positive effect on a group of people • i.e. DARE program evaluation • Applies research approaches to evaluate types of programs

  3. Program Evaluation • Types • Needs assessment • What problems, if any, need to be addressed? • Once identified researchers can plan accordingly • Assessment of program theory • Used to fix problems found in a needs assessment • Involves collaboration of service providers, researchers, clientele, etc… • Process evaluation • Program monitoring to determine if program is doing what it is supposed to • Is the target population being reached? • Are the research questions being answered?

  4. Program Evaluation • Types • Outcome evaluation • Impact assessment • What did the participants like/dislike about the study? • Studying the outcome and then assess the impact of the outcome measure. • Efficiency assessment • Was the program worth it? • Did the benefits outweigh the costs? • Uses quasi-experimental designs to assess effectiveness and efficiency

  5. Quasi experimental designs • 1 group posttest only design • Has no comparison group • Doesn’t have good internal validity • 1 group pretest-posttest design • History • Could confound results • Maturation • People change over time and this could skew results • Testing • Previous experience could change behavior • Instrument decay • the deterioration of research instruments or methods during a study

  6. Quasi experimental designs • Instrument decay • equipment may wear out, respondents may become more casual in recording their responses. • Regression toward the mean • a.k.a statistical regression • The tendency for extreme scores in a distribution to move (regress) toward the mean of the distribution w/ repeated testing. • Problem of reliability • Occurs when a set of extreme scores collected at one time point is compared to scores taken at another time point.

  7. Quasi experimental designs • Nonequivalent control group design • A separate control group • Selection differences – choosing groups based on naturally existing categories; this is why study is called nonequivalent • Nonequivalent control group pretest-posttest design • Benefit: a pretest for comparison purposes • Interrupted time series design • Measurement of dependent variable is interrupted by the quasi independent variable • By taking multiple measurements you can look at the effectiveness of a treatment before and after it is introduced. • Control series design • Extension of the interrupted time series design with a control group

  8. Quasi experimental designs • 1 group posttest only design • E X O • 1 group pretest-posttest design • E O X O • Nonequivalent control group design • E X O • C O • Nonequivalent control group pretest-posttest design • E O X O • C O O • Interrupted time series design • E O O O X O O O • Control series design • E O O O X O O O • C O O O O O O E = experimental group X = treatment C = control group O = observation to collect data

  9. Single case experimental designs • A.K.A. Single subject designs or Single participant designs • Baseline control period  treatment period • The change in behavior during these periods could be attributed to a variety of things • Reversal designs • To determine if treatment had an effect, revert back to baseline (no treatment) and look at the differences • ABA design • Baseline control period  treatment period  control period • Can also do a ABAB design

  10. Single case experimental designs • Multiple baseline designs • Observing behavior before and after a manipulation under multiple circumstances • Can be done • Across subjects • Across behaviors • Across situations

More Related