- Abstract -- A brief summary of a research project and its findings.
- Acculturation -- refers to the process of adapting to another
culture, particularly in reference to blending in with the majority
population [e.g., an immigrant adopting American customs]. However,
acculturation also implies that both cultures add something to one
another, but still remain distinct groups unto themselves.
- Accuracy -- a term used in survey research to refer to the
match between the target population and the sample.
- Affective
Measures -- procedures or devices
used to obtain quantified descriptions of an individual's feelings,
emotional states, or dispositions.
- Aggregate -- a total created from smaller units. For
instance, the population of a county is an aggregate of the populations of
the cities, rural areas, etc. that comprise the county. As a verb, it
refers to total data from smaller units into a large unit.
- Analysis
-- detailed examination of the
elements or structure of something.
- Anonymity -- a research condition in which no one,
including the researcher, knows the identities of research participants.
- Baseline -- a control measurement carried out before an
experimental treatment.
- Behaviorism -- school of psychological thought concerned with
the observable, tangible, objective facts of behavior, rather than with
subjective phenomena such as thoughts, emotions, or impulses. Contemporary
behaviorism also emphasizes the study of mental states such as feelings
and fantasies to the extent that they can be directly observed and
measured.
- Beliefs -- ideas, doctrines, tenets, etc. that are
accepted as true on grounds which are not immediately susceptible to
rigorous proof.
- Benchmarking -- systematically measuring and comparing the
operations and outcomes of organizations, systems, processes, etc.,
against agreed upon "best-in-class" frames of reference.
- Bias -- a loss of balance and accuracy in the use of
research methods. It can appear in research via the sampling frame, random
sampling, or non-response. It can also occur at other stages in research,
such as while interviewing, in the design of questions, or in the way data
are analyzed and presented. Bias means that the research findings will not
be representative of, or generalizable to, a wider population.
- Bibliography -- A list of the books referred to in a
research project. It usually appears at the end, or as a separate section,
known as an appendix.
- Case
Study -- the collection and
presentation of detailed information about a particular participant or
small group, frequently including data derived from the subjects
themselves.
- Causal
Hypothesis -- a statement
hypothesizing that the independent variable affects the dependent variable
in some way.
- Causal
Relationship -- the relationship
established that shows that an independent variable, and nothing else,
causes a change in a dependent variable. It also establishes how much of a
change is shown in the dependent variable.
- Causality -- the relation between cause and effect.
- Central
Tendency -- any way of describing
or characterizing typical, average, or common values in some distribution.
- Chi-square
Analysis -- a common
non-parametric statistical test which compares an expected proportion or
ratio to an actual proportion or ratio.
- Claim -- a statement, similar to a hypothesis, which is
made in response to the research question and that is affirmed with
evidence based on research.
- Classification -- ordering of related phenomena into categories,
groups, or systems according to characteristics or attributes.
- Cluster
Analysis -- a method of
statistical analysis where data that share a common trait are grouped
together. The data is collected in a way that allows the data collector to
group data according to certain characteristics.
- Cohort
Analysis -- group by group
analytic treatment of individuals having a statistical factor in common to
each group. Group members share a particular characteristic [e.g., born in
a given year] or a common experience [e.g., entering a college at a given
time].
- Conclusions -- A brief summary of how the results of an experiment support or contradict a hypothesis.
- Confidentiality -- a research condition in which no one except
the researcher(s) knows the identities of the participants in a study. It
refers to the treatment of information that a participant has disclosed to
the researcher in a relationship of trust and with the expectation that it
will not be revealed to others in ways that violate the original consent
agreement, unless permission is granted by the participant.
- Confirmability
Objectivity -- the findings of the
study could be confirmed by another person conducting the same study.
- Construct -- refers to any of the following: something that exists theoretically but is not directly observable; a concept developed [constructed] for describing relations among phenomena or for other research purposes; or, a theoretical definition in which concepts are defined in terms of other concepts. For example, intelligence cannot be directly observed or measured; it is a construct.
- Content Analysis -- the systematic, objective, and quantitative description of the manifest or latent content of print or non-print communications.
- Control
-- A duplicate setup, sample or observation treated identically to the
rest of an experiment except for the variable being tested. And the
control variable is meant to represent what’s normal or unchanged. For
instance, if one wanted to see the effect of adding fertilizer to a
plant’s soil, the control would be the growth of a plant with no
fertilizer.
- Construct
Validity -- seeks an agreement
between a theoretical concept and a specific measuring device, such as
observation.
- Constructionist -- the idea that reality is socially constructed.
It is the view that reality cannot be understood outside of the way humans
interact and that the idea that knowledge is constructed, not discovered. Constructionists believe that learning is more active and self-directed
than either behaviorism or cognitive theory would postulate.
- Content
Analysis -- the systematic,
objective, and quantitative description of the manifest or latent content
of print or non-print communications.
- Context
Sensitivity -- awareness by a
qualitative researcher of factors such as values and beliefs that
influence cultural behaviors.
- Control
Group -- the group in an
experimental design that receives either no treatment or a different treatment
from the experimental group. This group can thus be compared to the
experimental group.
- Controlled
Experiment -- an experimental design
with two or more randomly selected groups [an experimental group and
control group] in which the researcher controls or introduces the
independent variable and measures the dependent variable at least two
times [pre- and post-test measurements].
- Correlation -- a common statistical analysis, usually
abbreviated as r, that measures the degree of relationship between pairs
of interval variables in a sample. The range of correlation is from -1.00
to zero to +1.00. Also, a non-cause and effect relationship between two
variables.
- Co-variate -- a product of the correlation of two related
variables times their standard deviations. Used in true experiments to
measure the difference of treatment between them.
- Credibility -- a researcher's ability to demonstrate that the
object of a study is accurately identified and described based on the way
in which the study was conducted.
- Critical
Theory -- an evaluative approach
to social science research, associated with Germany's neo-Marxist
“Frankfurt School,” that aims to criticize as well as analyze society,
opposing the political orthodoxy of modern communism. Its goal is to
promote human emancipatory forces and to expose ideas and systems that
impede them.
- Data -- factual information [as measurements or
statistics] used as a basis for reasoning, discussion, or calculation.
- Data
Book (also Logbook) -- A documentation of the work done during
an experiment. It includes the findings, called data, collected during an
experiment, as well as any observed responses, reactions and results.
- Data
Mining -- the process of
analyzing data from different perspectives and summarizing it into useful
information, often to discover patterns and/or systematic relationships
among variables.
- Data
Quality -- this is the degree to
which the collected data [results of measurement or observation] meet the
standards of quality to be considered valid [trustworthy] and reliable
[dependable].
- Deductive -- a form of reasoning in which conclusions are formulated about particulars from general or universal premises.
- Demonstration Project -- A project that retests an experiment already conducted by someone else. A demonstration project can also show how something works. Adding a variable to a demonstration can make it into an experiment.
- Dependability -- being able to account for changes in the design of the study and the changing conditions surrounding what was studied.
- Dependent
Variable -- a variable that varies
due, at least in part, to the impact of the independent variable. In other
words, its value “depends” on the value of the independent variable. For
example, in the variables “gender” and “academic major,” academic major is
the dependent variable, meaning that you’re major cannot determine whether
you are male or female, but your gender might indirectly lead you to favor
one major over another.
- Deviation -- the distance between the mean and a particular
data point in a given distribution.
- Discourse
Community -- a community of
scholars and researchers in a given field who respond to and communicate
to each other through published articles in the community's journals and
presentations at conventions. All members of the discourse community
adhere to certain conventions for the presentation of their theories and
research.
- Discrete
Variable -- a variable that is
measured solely in whole units, such as, gender and number of siblings.
- Distribution -- the range of values of a particular variable.
- Effect
Size -- the amount of change
in a dependent variable that can be attributed to manipulations of the
independent variable. A large effect size exists when the value of the
dependent variable is strongly influenced by the independent variable. It
is the mean difference on a variable between experimental and control
groups divided by the standard deviation on that variable of the pooled
groups or of the control group alone.
- Emancipatory
Research -- research is conducted
on and with people from marginalized groups or communities. It is led by a
researcher or research team who is either an indigenous or external
insider; is interpreted within intellectual frameworks of that group; and,
is conducted largely for the purpose of empowering members of that
community and improving services for them. It also engages members of the
community as co-constructors or validations of knowledge.
- Empirical Research -- the process of developing systematized knowledge gained from observations that are formulated to support insights and generalizations about the phenomena being researched.
- Engineering Design -- A process or series of steps that guide an engineer in solving problems. The process starts with identifying a problem. It ends with creating a solution to solve that problem.
- Epistemology -- concerns knowledge construction; asks what
constitutes knowledge and how knowledge is validated.
- Ethnography -- method to study groups and/or cultures over a
period of time. The goal of this type of research is to comprehend the
particular group/culture through immersion into the culture or group.
Research is completed through various methods but, since the researcher is
immersed within the group for an extended period of time, more detailed
information is usually collected during the research.
- Expectancy
Effect -- any unconscious or
conscious cues that convey to the participant in a study how the
researcher wants them to respond. Expecting someone to behave in a
particular way has been shown to promote the expected behavior. Expectancy
effects can be minimized by using standardized interactions with subjects,
automated data-gathering methods, and double blind protocols.
- External
Validity -- the extent to which
the results of a study are generalization or transferable.
- Factor Analysis -- a statistical test that explores relationships among data. The test explores which variables in a data set are most related to each other. In a carefully constructed survey, for example, factor analysis can yield information on patterns of responses, not simply data on a single response. Larger tendencies may then be interpreted, indicating behavior trends rather than simply responses to specific questions.
- Falsification -- To change information or evidence to mislead.
- Field Studies -- academic or other investigative studies undertaken in a natural setting, rather than in laboratories, classrooms, or other structured environments.
- Focus
Groups -- small, round-table discussion
groups charged with examining specific topics or problems, including
possible options or solutions. Focus groups usually consist of 4-12
participants, guided by moderators to keep the discussion flowing and to
collect and report the results.
- Framework -- the structure and support that may be used as
both the launching point and the on-going guidelines for investigating a
research problem.
- Generalizability -- the extent to which research findings and conclusions conducted on a specific study to groups or situations can be applied to the population at large.
- Graph -- A diagram that illustrates a relationship, typically between two variables. Each variable is measured along one of two axes, positioned at right angles.
- Grounded
Theory -- practice of developing
other theories that emerge from observing a group. Theories are grounded
in the group's observable experiences, but researchers add their own
insight into why those experiences exist.
- Group Behavior -- behaviors of a group as a whole, as well as the behavior of an individual as influenced by his or her membership in a group.
- Hypothesis -- (or Research Question) A proposed explanation for a phenomenon. In science, a hypothesis is an idea that hasn’t yet been rigorously tested. Once a hypothesis has been extensively tested and is generally accepted to be the accurate explanation for an observation, it becomes a scientific theory. A tentative explanation based on theory to predict a causal relationship between variables.
- Independent Research Project -- An experiment designed, carried out and interpreted on one’s own.
- Independent
Variable -- the conditions of an
experiment that are systematically manipulated by the researcher. A
variable that is not impacted by the dependent variable, and that itself
impacts the dependent variable. In the earlier example of
"gender" and "academic major," (see Dependent
Variable) gender is the independent variable.
- Individualism -- a theory or policy having primary regard for
the liberty, rights, or independent actions of individuals.
- Inductive -- a form of reasoning in which a generalized
conclusion is formulated from particular instances.
- Inductive
Analysis -- a form of analysis
based on inductive reasoning; a researcher using inductive analysis starts
with answers, but formulates questions throughout the research process.
- Insiderness -- a concept in qualitative research that refers
to the degree to which a researcher has access to and an understanding of
persons, places, or things within a group or community based on being a
member of that group or community.
- Internal
Consistency -- the extent to which
all questions or items assess the same characteristic, skill, or quality.
- Internal
Validity -- the rigor with which
the study was conducted [e.g., the study's design, the care taken to
conduct measurements, and decisions concerning what was and was not
measured]. It is also the extent to which the designers of a study have
taken into account alternative explanations for any causal relationships
they explore. In studies that do not explore causal relationships, only the
first of these definitions should be considered when assessing internal
validity.
- Life History -- a record of an event/events in a respondent's life told [written down, but increasingly audio or video recorded] by the respondent from his/her own perspective in his/her own words. A life history is different from a "research story" in that it covers a longer time span, perhaps a complete life, or a significant period in a life.
- Literature Search -- An organized review of books, articles and published research on a specific topic.
- Margin
of Error -- the permittable or
acceptable deviation from the target or a specific value. The allowance
for slight error or miscalculation or changing circumstances in a study.
- Measurement -- process of obtaining a numerical description of the extent to which persons, organizations, or things possess specified characteristics.
- Mentor -- An experienced and trusted adviser who provides advice and counseling.
- Meta-Analysis -- an analysis combining the results of several studies that address a set of related hypotheses.
- Methodology -- (or Research Methods) A particular procedure or set of procedures. These may include the methods, techniques and instruments used in a research experiment. A theory or analysis of how research does and should proceed.
- Methods -- systematic approaches to the conduct of an
operation or process. It includes steps of procedure, application of
techniques, systems of reasoning or analysis, and the modes of inquiry
employed by a discipline.
- Mixed-Methods -- a research approach that uses two or more
methods from both the quantitative and qualitative research categories. It
is also referred to as blended methods, combined methods, or
methodological triangulation.
- Modeling -- the creation of a physical or computer analogy
to understand a particular phenomenon. Modeling helps in estimating the
relative magnitude of various factors involved in a phenomenon. A
successful model can be shown to account for unexpected behavior that has
been observed, to predict certain behaviors, which can then be tested
experimentally, and to demonstrate that a given theory cannot account for
certain phenomenon.
- Models -- representations of objects, principles,
processes, or ideas often used for imitation or emulation.
- Naturalistic
Observation -- observation of
behaviors and events in natural settings without experimental manipulation
or other forms of interference.
- Norm -- the norm in statistics is the average or usual
performance. For example, students usually complete their high school
graduation requirements when they are 18 years old. Even though some
students graduate when they are younger or older, the norm is that any
given student will graduate when he or she is 18 years old.
- Null
Hypothesis -- the proposition, to be
tested statistically, that the experimental intervention has "no
effect," meaning that the treatment and control groups will not
differ as a result of the intervention. Investigators usually hope that
the data will demonstrate some effect from the intervention, thus allowing
the investigator to reject the null hypothesis.
- Ontology -- a discipline of philosophy that explores the
science of what is, the kinds and structures of objects, properties,
events, processes, and relations in every area of reality.
- Panel
Study -- a longitudinal study in
which a group of individuals is interviewed at intervals over a period of
time.
- Participant -- individuals whose physiological and/or
behavioral characteristics and responses are the object of study in a
research project.
- Peer-Review -- the process in which the author of a book,
article, or other type of publication submits his or her work to experts
in the field for critical evaluation, usually prior to publication. This
is standard procedure in publishing scholarly research.
- Phenomenology -- a qualitative research approach concerned with
understanding certain group behaviors from that group's point of view.
- Philosophy -- critical examination of the grounds for
fundamental beliefs and analysis of the basic concepts, doctrines, or
practices that express such beliefs.
- Phonology -- the study of the ways in which speech sounds
form systems and patterns in language.
- Policy -- governing principles that serve as guidelines
or rules for decision making and action in a given area.
- Policy
Analysis -- systematic study of
the nature, rationale, cost, impact, effectiveness, implications, etc., of
existing or alternative policies, using the theories and methodologies of
relevant social science disciplines.
- Population -- the target group under investigation. The
population is the entire set under consideration. Samples are drawn from
populations.
- Position
Papers -- statements of official
or organizational viewpoints, often recommending a particular course of
action or response to a situation.
- Positivism -- a doctrine in the philosophy of science,
positivism argues that science can only deal with observable entities
known directly to experience. The positivist aims to construct general
laws, or theories, which express relationships between phenomena.
Observation and experiment is used to show whether the phenomena fit the
theory.
- Predictive
Measurement -- use of tests,
inventories, or other measures to determine or estimate future events,
conditions, outcomes, or trends.
- Principal
Investigator -- the scientist or
scholar with primary responsibility for the design and conduct of a
research project.
- Probability -- the chance that a phenomenon will occur
randomly. As a statistical measure, it is shown as p [the "p"
factor].
- Questionnaire -- structured sets of questions on specified
subjects that are used to gather information, attitudes, or opinions.
- Random
Sampling -- a process used in
research to draw a sample of a population strictly by chance, yielding no
discernible pattern beyond chance. Random sampling can be accomplished by
first numbering the population, then selecting the sample according to a
table of random numbers or using a random-number computer generator. The
sample is said to be random because there is no regular or discernible
pattern or order. Random sample selection is used under the assumption
that sufficiently large samples assigned randomly will exhibit a
distribution comparable to that of the population from which the sample is
drawn. The random assignment of participants increases the probability that
differences observed between participant groups are the result of the
experimental intervention.
- Reliability -- the degree to which a measure yields
consistent results. If the measuring instrument [e.g., survey] is
reliable, then administering it to similar groups would yield similar
results. Reliability is a prerequisite for validity. An unreliable
indicator cannot produce trustworthy results.
- Representative
Sample -- sample in which the
participants closely match the characteristics of the population, and
thus, all segments of the population are represented in the sample. A
representative sample allows results to be generalized from the sample to
the population.
- Results -- A statement that explains or interprets
the data produced in an experiment.
- Rigor -- degree to which research methods are
scrupulously and meticulously carried out in order to recognize important
influences occurring in an experimental study.
- Sample -- the population researched in a particular
study. Usually, attempts are made to select a "sample
population" that is considered representative of groups of people to
whom results will be generalized or transferred. In studies that use
inferential statistics to analyze results or which are designed to be
generalizable, sample size is critical, generally the larger the number in
the sample, the higher the likelihood of a representative distribution of
the population.
- Sampling
Error -- the degree to which
the results from the sample deviate from those that would be obtained from
the entire population, because of random error in the selection of
respondent and the corresponding reduction in reliability.
- Saturation -- a situation in which data analysis begins to
reveal repetition and redundancy and when new data tend to confirm
existing findings rather than expand upon them.
- Scientific
Method -- A sequence of steps followed in investigating natural
phenomena.
- Scientific
Research -- The organized investigation of questions raised by
scientific theories and hypotheses.
- Scientific
Theory -- In science, a
theory is a well-supported model or explanation of a natural phenomenon. A
scientific theory is based on observations, experiments and reason.
Repeated experiments can confirm the validity of a scientific theory.
- Semantics -- the relationship between symbols and meaning in
a linguistic system. Also, the cuing system that connects what is written
in the text to what is stored in the reader's prior knowledge.
- Social
Theories -- theories about the
structure, organization, and functioning of human societies.
- Sociolinguistics -- the study of language in society and, more
specifically, the study of language varieties, their functions, and their
speakers.
- Standard
Deviation -- a measure of variation
that indicates the typical distance between the scores of a distribution
and the mean; it is determined by taking the square root of the average of
the squared deviations in a given distribution. It can be used to indicate
the proportion of data within certain ranges of scale values when the
distribution conforms closely to the normal curve.
- Statistical
Analysis -- application of
statistical processes and theory to the compilation, presentation,
discussion, and interpretation of numerical data.
- Statistical
Bias -- characteristics of an
experimental or sampling design, or the mathematical treatment of data,
that systematically affects the results of a study so as to produce
incorrect, unjustified, or inappropriate inferences or conclusions.
- Statistical
Significance -- the probability that
the difference between the outcomes of the control and experimental group
are great enough that it is unlikely due solely to chance. The probability
that the null hypothesis can be rejected at a predetermined significance
level [0.05 or 0.01].
- Statistical
Tests -- researchers use
statistical tests to make quantitative decisions about whether a study's
data indicate a significant effect from the intervention and allow the
researcher to reject the null hypothesis. That is, statistical tests show
whether the differences between the outcomes of the control and
experimental groups are great enough to be statistically significant. If
differences are found to be statistically significant, it means that the
probability [likelihood] that these differences occurred solely due to
chance is relatively low. Most researchers agree that a significance value
of .05 or less [i.e., there is a 95% probability that the differences are
real] sufficiently determines significance.
- Subcultures -- ethnic, regional, economic, or social groups
exhibiting characteristic patterns of behavior sufficient to distinguish
them from the larger society to which they belong.
- Testing -- the act of gathering and processing
information about individuals' ability, skill, understanding, or knowledge
under controlled conditions.
- Theory -- a general explanation about a specific
behavior or set of events that is based on known principles and serves to
organize related events in a meaningful way. A theory is not as specific
as a hypothesis.
- Treatment -- the stimulus given to a dependent variable.
- Trend
Samples -- method of sampling
different groups of people at different points in time from the same
population.
- Trial -- One of a number of
repetitions of an experiment.
- Triangulation -- a multi-method or pluralistic approach, using
different methods in order to focus on the research topic from different
viewpoints and to produce a multi-faceted set of data. Also used to check
the validity of findings from any one method.
- Unit
of Analysis -- the basic observable
entity or phenomenon being analyzed by a study and for which data are
collected in the form of variables.
- Validity -- the degree to which a study accurately
reflects or assesses the specific concept that the researcher is
attempting to measure. A method can be reliable, consistently measuring
the same thing, but not valid.
- Variable -- In research, something that can be
changed or altered during an experiment. Each variable that is to be
tested would represent a different test condition. For instance, if you
were testing the effects of fertilizer on plant growth, the variable might
be amount of fertilizer used: such as none, the normal amount, twice the
normal amount and five times the normal amount. Any characteristic or trait
that can vary from one person to another [race, gender, academic major] or
for one person over time [age, political beliefs].
- Weighted
Scores -- scores in which the
components are modified by different multipliers to reflect their relative
importance.
- White
Paper -- an authoritative
report that often states the position or philosophy about a social,
political, or other subject, or a general explanation of an architecture,
framework, or product technology written by a group of researchers. A
white paper seeks to contain unbiased information and analysis regarding a
business or policy problem that the researchers may be facing.
SUN TZU QUOTES'..."You have to believe in yourself."
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