Writing testable
hypotheses and questions
ED 510
Applications of Educational Research
Introduction
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The refinement
of a review of relevant literature leads inevitably to greater focus in
a researcher's thinking. Eventually key ideas surface. These are
seen by a researcher as fundamental to understanding a particular research
problem Fundamental ideas will eventually take the form of concepts
and variables. The concepts and variables will be brought together in the
form of testable hypotheses and researchable questions.
Here
are some terms that will help you understand the material in this course.
Define them and create your own examples of each.
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Alternative hypothesis
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Association
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Concepts
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Constructs
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Correlation
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Dependent variable
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Directional hypothesis
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Experiment, experimental
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Group comparison
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Hypotheses
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Independent variable
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Measurement
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Nondirectional
hypothesis
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Null hypothesis
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Prediction
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Variables
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Concepts,
constructs, variables and measures
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Concepts and constructs
are two ideas that are difficult to distinguish in terms of their definitions.
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Concepts are mental
events that represent experience as ideas. But unlike the ordinary notion
of an idea, concepts are not unstructured or casual. Concepts contain information
that is organized according to the characteristics of an object, persons
or experience. These have been represented as a mental event or concepts.
The concept of motivation is organized mentally, usually in the form of
the experience of a motivated person or emotional state. We think of motivation
in terms of its characteristics of drive, intention and goal oriented behavior.
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Constructs on
the other hand are consciously developed from concepts. Constructs contain
the same base as words like structure or construction. They are made with
purpose and deliberation. When motivation is translated from concept to
construct a researcher is deliberately thinking about how the idea of motivation
can be demonstrated in a study, perhaps in terms of a task to be completed
and the drive to complete that task measured. Or a researcher may be thinking
of how to demonstrate motivation on a scale or survey that measures responses
to items that describe motivation using individual items to explore unique
aspects of the concept of motivation.
Variables and
Measures are in the same way closely related.
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Variables are
phenomena that are expected to vary in value. They vary in response to
changes in other phenomena that surround the variable in context and that
influence the variable. When motivation is translated into a variable a
researcher has found a way to objectify motivation, to make motivation
observable and something more than a subjective state reported by a participant
in a study. For example, the researcher may measure drive to complete a
task by setting up a situation where subjects are frustrated and are asked
to find ways to solve a problem in spite of their frustration. As a variable,
motivation describes how deliberately or insistently a subject strives
to complete the experimental task. Likewise when a researcher defines motivation
in terms of a scale or survey, the sum total of responses on the scale
represent motivation in some amount or quantity.
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Measures (measured
variables) - When a concept or construct is reinvented as a variable it
can be measured or documented in some way.
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The score on a
motivation scale will vary from high to low and provide a measure of motivation
on that scale. When a researcher counts the number of times a frustrated
subject tries once again to bypass frustrating conditions in an experimental
task frequency of tries becomes a measure of motivation on a task. Both
frequency of tries and score on a motivational scale take on a range of
values that indicate how high or how low the variable is demonstrated.
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Relationships
between variables stated as hypotheses
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We think of hypotheses
as guesses about how the world works and we often confuse hypotheses with
theories. Hypotheses are formal statements about the way in which two or
more variables are believed to be related. When variables are measurable,
then hypotheses are testable. Hypotheses are never actually proved to be
true; instead they are found to be supported at a particular level of probability.
When a study demonstrates that a hypothesis is probably true, what is really
being
demonstrated is that in a particular study, given its specific conditions,
a hypothesis can be supported. The chance that such a hypothesis would
be incorrect would be less than a chance occurrence.
Types of hypotheses
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Hypotheses must
explicitly indicate the nature of the relationship between variables. These
relationships are statistical and they include correlational, comparative
and explanatory relationships. Usually`the language used to relate variables
describes the kind of relationship that a researcher has in mind.
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Correlational
hypotheses indicate that the values of variables correspond to one
another systematically-- that changes in the value of one variable is accompanied
by changes in the value of the other (s). Correlational relationships may
be either predictive or associational.
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Predictive- When
prediction is expected, variables are related by verbs, such as predict,
anticipate, or project
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Associational
- when association is expected, variables are related by verbs, such as
related to, correlated to, associated with.
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Comparative
hypotheses relate variables by comparison or contrast. Subjects in
two or more groups are expected to differ in the scores or values they
achieve when study variables are measured.
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Thus males are
hypothesized to differ from females in the rate of language acquisition
in early childhood. Trained musicians are expected to differ in the musical
characteristics they attend to when listening to a sonata from untrained
listeners.
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Frequently verbs
and expressions such as differ, can be discriminated, are greater than,
are less than are used to relate variables in comparative hypotheses.
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Explanatory
hypotheses relate variables in terms of cause and effect relationships.
One variable is expected to cause the other. Explanatory hypotheses require
that a study be designed as a true experiment: That means that there is
an experimental group and a true control group, random assignment of subjects
to groups, and a manipulated variable that is controlled by the experimenter.
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Explanatory hypotheses
useverbs and expressions such as depends on, is inferred from, influences,
changes.
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Finally
the research question!
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A research question
is a hypothesis rewritten as statement. Once you have the elements of a
hypothesis, you can just turn the sentence around and state it as a question.
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You can see by
now that a researcher has narrowed the focus of the research task in order
to state the research question in such a controlled way.
Summarizing
questions
How can you
relate this lesson to your professional practice as an educator. What questions
still remain?
return
to the course schedule
Page created
January 5, 2001. Copyright - Antonia D'Onofrio - 2001/2002/2003.