Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs...

14
Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3
  • date post

    21-Dec-2015
  • Category

    Documents

  • view

    224
  • download

    2

Transcript of Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs...

Page 1: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

Research Design:

Alan Monroe: Chapter 3

Page 2: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

The Concept of Causality (31)

The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one variable causes another or causes variation in another.

Page 3: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

Three (3) Requirements of Causality (31-32)

Correlation: two things tend to occur at the same time (notsufficient to est. causation)

Examples:Whenever there is a foreign policy crisis, presidential

popularity increases.If Catholic, then more likely to oppose abortion.

Time Order: cause has to happen before the effect.

Non-Spuriousness: to make sure any correlation we observebetween the independent and dependent variables is not

causedby other factors.

Page 4: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

Types of Research Designs (32)

1. True Experimental DesignIt involves a group of subjects (units of analysis), which is

divided into two groups (randomly, to assure they are identical on the DV).

Experimental and Control GroupsThe first group is the experimental group, the second is the control group. The experimental group receives a stimulus (the Independent Variable), the control does not.

Post-TestA Post-Test is then given to both groups to test the effect (DV) of the stimulus (IV). You then compare the results.

Page 5: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

True Experimental Design

Page 6: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

Examples of Experimental Design (33)

Introduction to American Government Example: Does it Increase Political Interest? (see Chart on p. 33)

Hypothesis: taking course increases political interest in

college students.

Page 7: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

Problems With True Experimental Design

Hard to get truly Representative Samples (hard to get accurate

sample of an entire population, one solution is to reduce size of

population: college students for example.)

Artificial setting (does it test real behavior)

Outside Influences (you can never fully isolate subjects fromother variables.)

Ethical Considerations (cannot mistreat or expose humans toharmful stimuli)

Page 8: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

The Quasi Experimental (Natural Experiment) (37)

2) Quasi Experimental It is also called the before and after test: you compare the DV (a Pretest and Posttest) before and after the IV has been applied.

Differs from Experimental Design in several ways:Groups are not assigned (we observe some happen, and then go back and sort into experimental and control groups.)

Requires a Pretest of DV so amount of change can be measured.

Page 9: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

Quasi Experimental Design

Page 10: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

Quasi Experimental: Presidential Debate Example (38)

Hypothesis: watching a presidential debate increases intensity of support for the candidate.

Subjects: students in a class

Pretest: before debate give them a survey measuring their attitudes about the candidates

Posttest: did they watch the debate, and what is the strength of their preference.

Page 11: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

Meeting Conditions of Causality: Quasi Experimental (38)

Correlation: change between pretest and post-test has to besignificant (indicating IV had an effect)

Time Order: includes measure of DV before and after IV.

Non-Spurious: effect of all outside forces is theoretically equalon all subjects. (they are all exposed to same amount of TV ads, thus any changes comes from the IV).

Page 12: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

Correlational Design (40)

It is very simple: collecting data on the IV and DV in order to see if there is a pattern or relationship. It is the most common design in political science.

Examples:Turnout in Urban Areas

IV: urbanizationDV: voter turnout

Operational Definitions:

Urbanization: percentage of pop. Living in “urban places,” according to US Census.

Turnout: votes cast divided by voting-age population.

Page 13: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

Correlational Design

Page 14: Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether one.

Meeting Conditions of Causality: Correlational Design (38)

Correlation: is directly tested between the IV and DV.

Time Order: it is weakest here: there is no consideration for the point in time when the IV and DV occurred. Have to reliable on IV that are known to exist before DV, like race, gender.

Non-Spurious: considers control variables.…