Controlling Extraneous Variables Environmental issues Naturally occurring variables: usual with...
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Transcript of Controlling Extraneous Variables Environmental issues Naturally occurring variables: usual with...
Controlling Extraneous VariablesEnvironmental issues
Naturally occurring variables: usual with several groups of people• Noise• Temperature• Light• Time of day• Seating arrangements
Artificiality:Classroom or Office are not “real world” or “natural”Using a recording device or a camera
People act differently when they are aware they are being observed
People change attitudes and actions when social situation changes
People often want to please and be praised
People are influenced by physical environment and personal physical state
People bring emotional states caused by extraneous factors
Self-selection: let subjets decide which group to join• Volunteers: different from the outsed, more highly
motivated• Two class sections could have wide differences
Mortality (attrition, dropout):Students elect to leave a group: leaves slant toward more motivated
Maturation: studies conducted over longer period must account for changes in group and individuals
People IssuesHawthorn Effect: pleasure of being included in the study enhances performance
Halo Effect: people respond well to those whom they like.
Subject Expectancy: people tend to want to please
Researcher Expectancy: Subtle and uncontrolled attitude toward subjects: like high performers, dislike low performers
Measurement Issues(Results are only as good as the data.)Measures (tests, questionnaires, interviews) should not introduce extra variables
Practice Effect: same test given repeatedly
Reactivity Effect: attitude surveys form or solidify attitudes in response to survey
Instability of Measures and Results: degree to which results likely to recur if study is replicated
Controlling for Validity
Logic = internal validityMeaningfulness = external validity
Control extraneous variables• Environmental issues: comfortable• Grouping issues (avoid volunteer grouping): take steps to assure
that the group is representative and equivalent• Short-term study avoids maturation• People issues: • try to find a double-blind technique• Minimize obviousness to subjects• Control expressions of attitude
• Measurement issues: • Counterbalancing: no individual takers of the same test more
than once• Reactivity: question subjects and gauge thought processes
Control versus Generalizability
If two or more uncontrolled extraneous variables also influence each other…Example: Researcher expectancy can trigger subject expectancy, creating a practice effect.
INTERNAL VALIDITY (Logic): results due solely to variables identified and compared.
EXTERNAL VALIDITY (Meaningfulness): Factors affect generalizability of study to real world, i.e. artificiality.
1. Purpose: purpose of experimental research is to study cause-and-effect relationships between two variables, whereby the causal variable can be manipulated.
2. Hypothesis: Stated at the beginning of the study.3. Data Collection/Sources: quantitative data from test scores,
attitudinal surveys and other measurements. Researcher controls for internal validity.
4. Data Analysis: data are coded and converted into an electronic format and analyzed using a computer software program such as SPSS. Researcher can use any number of analytical processes. Differences in rwo or more groups using t tests and analysis of variance.
5. Reporting Results: brief, clear and to the point. Description of methodology and procedural controls. Results of data analysis presented. Can infer external validity if threats to external validity were controlled.