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Measurement

Learn how to add measurement and iterations to your poster, discussing evidence, techniques, and clarity. Collaborate with your intellectual neighbor group for feedback.

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Measurement

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  1. Measurement Adding to your poster

  2. Iterations (from Fincher and Adams) Clarity Significance Evidence Technique

  3. To begin • Assemble your intellectual neighbor group. • Look at your most recent, most refined research question

  4. Evidence Empirical investigation • What evidence would you need to answer your question? What makes you believe your claims? • What would you need to convince a colleague – in AND out of “the choir”? [nearest neighbor, more distant member of the community] • What would a sufficient answer look like? • What would an unsatisfactory claim look like? • What might contradictory examples look like? Discuss your questions with your table. Begin to think about the evidence you’ll need to convince people that you’ve answered your question.

  5. Add to your poster • Based on your discussion about evidence, what kinds of measurements will you need to make to collect the appropriate evidence to answer your question? • Add a statement about measurement to your poster. • “Walk the wall” to provide and receive feedback from the larger community

  6. Iterations Clarity Significance Evidence Technique

  7. Technique • What technique(s) / method(s) might produce the evidence you need? • How do you know? [good opportunity to discuss in upcoming RREE sessions on methods] • What’s involved with using this technique? • Assessing “costs” – opportunity, time/resources, available knowledge • Do you know how to do it? [good opportunity for collaboration]

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