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Research Design

Research methodology (459500) Lecture 9: Research Designs Dr Jihad ABDALLAH Source: Research Methods Knowledge Base http://www.socialresearchmethods.net/. Research Design.

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Research Design

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  1. Research methodology (459500)Lecture 9: Research DesignsDr Jihad ABDALLAHSource: Research Methods Knowledge Basehttp://www.socialresearchmethods.net/

  2. Research Design • Research design can be thought of as the structure of research: it provides the glue that holds the research project together. • A design is used to structure the research, to show how all of the major parts of the research project -- the samples or groups, measures, treatments or programs, and methods of assignment -- work together to try to address the central research questions.

  3. What are the "elements" that a design includes? • Observations or Measures: These are symbolized by an 'O' in design notation. An O can refer to a single measure (e.g., a measure of body weight), a single instrument with multiple items (e.g., a 10-item self-esteem scale), a complex multi-part instrument (e.g., a survey), or a whole battery of tests or measures given out on one occasion. If you need to distinguish among specific measures, you can use subscripts with the O, as in O1, O2, and so on.

  4. Treatments or Programs: These are symbolized with an 'X' in design notations. The X can refer to a simple intervention (e.g., a one-time surgical technique) or to a complex program (e.g., an employment training program). Usually, a no-treatment control or comparison group has no symbol for the treatment (some researchers use X+ and X- to indicate the treatment and control respectively). As with observations, you can use subscripts to distinguish different programs or program variations.

  5. Groups: Each group in a design is given its own line in the design structure. if the design notation has three lines, there are three groups in the design. • Assignment to Group:is designated by a letter at the beginning of each line (i.e., group) that describes how the group was assigned. The major types of assignment are: R = random assignment N = nonequivalent groups C = assignment by cutoff • Time:Time moves from left to right. Elements that are listed on the left occur before elements that are listed on the right.

  6. Random Selection & Assignment • Selection is how you draw the sample of people for your study from a population. • Assignment is how you assign the sample that you draw to different groups or treatments in your study. • Example: Let's say you drew a random sample of 100 clients from a population list of 1000 current clients of your organization. That is random sampling. Now, let's say you randomly assign 50 of these clients to get some new additional treatment and the other 50 to be controls. That's random assignment.

  7. Random selection is related to sampling. Therefore it is most related to external validity (generalizability) of your results. After all, we would randomly sample so that our research participants better represent the larger group from which they're drawn. • Random assignment is most related to design. In fact, when we randomly assign participants to treatments we have, by definition, an experimental design. Therefore, random assignment is most related to internal validity. After all, we randomly assign in order to help assure that our treatment groups are similar to each other (i.e., equivalent) prior to the treatment.

  8. “Pretest-posttest (or before-after) treatment versus comparison group” randomized experimental design.

  9. Types of Designs A randomized experiment generally is the strongest of the three designs when your interest is in establishing a cause-effect relationship. A non-experiment is generally the weakest in this respect.

  10. Two group designs "nonequivalent" because in this design we do not explicitly control the assignment and the groups may be nonequivalent or not similar to each other  The simplest form of non-experiment is a one-shot survey design that consists of nothing but a single observation O. This is probably one of the most common forms of research and, for some research questions -- especially descriptive ones -- is clearly a strong design.

  11. Experimental Designs

  12. Two-Group Experimental Designs • The two-group posttest-only randomized experiment • The simplest of all experimental designs. • In design notation, it has two lines -- one for each group -- with an R at the beginning of each line to indicate that the groups were randomly assigned. • One group gets the treatment or program (the X) and the other group is the comparison group and doesn't get the program

  13. “Pretest-posttest (or before-after) treatment versus comparison group” randomized experimental design. (Analysis of Covariance Design ANCOVA) The ANCOVA design is a noise-reducing experimental design. It "adjusts" posttest scores for variability on the covariate (pretest).

  14. Completely Randomized Design (CRD) R O R X1 O R X2 O . . . R XT O

  15. Factorial Designs

  16. Parallel lines  No interaction effects in this case

  17. Change in scale An interaction effect exists when differences on one factor depend on the level you are on another factor.

  18. Change in rank  Strong interaction effect

  19. Randomized Block Designs • They require that the researcher divide the sample into relatively homogeneous subgroups or blocks (analogous to "strata" in stratified sampling). Then, the experimental design you want to implement is implemented within each block or homogeneous subgroup. • The key idea is that the variability within each block is less than the variability of the entire sample. Thus each estimate of the treatment effect within a block is more efficient than estimates across the entire sample.

  20. Quasi-experimental designs

  21. The Nonequivalent Groups Design • The Non-Equivalent Groups Design (NEGD) is probably the most frequently used design in social research. • It is structured like a pretest-posttest randomized experiment, but it lacks the key feature of the randomized designs -- random assignment. • In the NEGD, we most often use intact groups that we think are similar as the treatment and control groups. • In education, we might pick two comparable classrooms or schools. In community-based research, we might use two similar communities. • We try to select groups that are as similar as possible so we can fairly compare the treated one with the comparison one. But we can never be sure the groups are comparable.

  22. It's unlikely that the two groups would be as similar as they would if we assigned them randomly. Because it's often likely that the groups are not equivalent, this design was named the nonequivalent groups design.

  23. Regression-discontinuity design (RD) • In its simplest most traditional form, the RD design is a pretest-posttest program-comparison group strategy. • The unique characteristic which sets RD designs apart from other pre-post group designs is the method by which research participants are assigned to conditions. • In RD designs, participants are assigned to program or comparison groups solely on the basis of a cutoff score on a pre-program measure.

  24. The RD design has not been used frequently in social research. The most common implementation has been in compensatory education evaluation where school children who obtain scores which fall below some predetermined cutoff value on an achievement test are assigned to remedial training designed to improve their performance. • The "basic" RD design is a pretest-posttest two group design. The term "pretest- posttest" implies that the same measure (or perhaps alternate forms of the same measure) is administered before and after some program or treatment. • In fact, the RD design does not require that the pre and post measures are the same.

  25. C indicates that groups are assigned by means of a cutoff score, • an O stands for the administration of a measure to a group, • an X depicts the implementation of a program, • and each group is described on a single line (i.e., program group on top, control group on the bottom).

  26. No treatment or program is administered

  27. Treatment or program is administered which improved each treated person’s score by 10 points

  28. Internal Validity • It is the approximate truth about inferences regarding cause-effect or causal relationships. • Thus, internal validity is only relevant in studies that try to establish a causal relationship. It's not relevant in most observational or descriptive studies • For studies that assess the effects of social programs or interventions, internal validity is perhaps the primary consideration. In those contexts, you would like to be able to conclude that your program or treatment made a difference.

  29. But there may be lots of reasons, other than your program, that caused the difference. • The key question in internal validity is whether observed changes can be attributed to your program or intervention (i.e., the cause) and not to other possible causes (sometimes described as "alternative explanations" for the outcome). • All that internal validity means is that you have evidence that what you did in the study (i.e., the program) caused what you observed (i.e., the outcome) to happen.

  30. Establishing a Cause-Effect Relationship • Generally, there are three criteria that you must meet before you can say that you have evidence for a causal relationship: • 1. Temporal Precedence: you have to be able to show that your cause happened before your effect. • 2. Covariation of the Cause and Effect: you have to show that you have some type of relationship  if program then outcome, if not program then not outcome • 3. No Plausible Alternative Explanations

  31. Threats to Internal Validity History Threat: • It's not your math program that caused the outcome, it's something else, some historical event that occurred. • For instance, we know that lot's of first graders watch the public TV program Sesame Street. And, we know that in every Sesame Street show they present some very elementary math concepts. Perhaps these shows caused the outcome and not your math program.

  32. Maturation Threat: • The children would have had the exact same outcome even if they had never had your special math training program. • All you are doing is measuring normal maturation or growth in understanding that occurs as part of growing up -- your math program has no effect. • How is this maturation explanation different from a history threat? In general, if we're talking about a specific event or chain of events that could cause the outcome, we call it a history threat. If we're talking about all of the events that typically transpire in your life over a period of time (without being specific as to which ones are the active causal agents) we call it a maturation threat.

  33. Testing Threat: • This threat only occurs in the pre-post design. • What if taking the pre-test made some of the children more aware of that kind of math problem -- it "primed" them for the program so that when you began the math training they were ready for it in a way that they wouldn't have been without the pre-test. • This is what is meant by a testing threat -- taking the pre-test (not getting your program) affects how participants do on the post-test.

  34. Instrumentation Threat: • Like the testing threat, this one only operates in the pretest-posttest situation. • What if the change from pretest to posttest is due not to your math program but rather to a change in the test that was used? This is what's meant by an instrumentation threat.

  35. Mortality Threat: • Mortality doesn't mean that people in your study are dying (although if they are, it would be considered a mortality threat!). • It means that people are "dying" with respect to your study. Usually, it means that they are dropping out of the study.

  36. Regression Threat: • A regression threat, also known as a "regression artifact" or "regression to the mean" is a statistical phenomenon that occurs whenever you have a non-random sample from a population and two measures that are imperfectly correlated. • It refers to the tendency of very high pre-test scores to become lower and for very low pre-test scores to become higher on post-test.

  37. If you include in your program only the kids who constituted the lowest ten percent of the class on the pre-test, what are the chances that they would constitute exactly the lowest ten percent on the post-test? Not likely. Most of them would score low on the post-test, but they aren't likely to be the lowest ten percent twice. • Regression artifact is not a threat in the two group design because as long as the people in both groups are affected equally by the statistical regression effect, the difference between the two groups will not be due to regression to the mean.

  38. The Formula for the Percent of Regression to the Mean • You can estimate exactly the percent of regression to the mean in any given situation. The formula is: • Prm = 100(1 - r) • where: • Prm = the percent of regression to the meanr = the correlation between the two measures • Consider the following four cases: • if r = 1, there is no (i.e., 0%) regression to the mean • if r = .5, there is 50% regression to the mean • if r = .2, there is 80% regression to the mean • if r = 0, there is 100% regression to the mean

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