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EDPSY 500

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Title: EDPSY 500


1
EDPSY 500
  • Introduction to Educational Research Methods

2
Syllabus
  • Key points
  • Introductory course
  • For consumers
  • Ph.D. students should take 505
  • Office hours
  • Tuesday 330 to 500
  • Thursday 200 to 330
  • Or by appointment

3
Syllabus
  • Key points (cont.).
  • Assessment plan.
  • Three exams (100 points each).
  • Before exams we will generate a study guide.
  • First and second exam items can be corrected for
    half credit.
  • Well talk about this more after the first exam.
  • Participation/quizzes (100 points).
  • We will discuss in greater detail today.

4
Syllabus
  • Assessment (cont.).
  • No extra credit.
  • No incompletes.
  • Except for extreme circumstances (e.g., Illness,
    death of family member).
  • A comment on grades.
  • They are earned not given.
  • I am interested in your learning of marketable
    skills.
  • Assignments require the mastery of course
    materials.
  • High effort high mastery.
  • High mastery high grades.

5
Syllabus
  • Professionalism
  • Pathfinder
  • Honesty
  • Integrity
  • Cheating, plagiarism, etc. will not be tolerated
    and will result in a referral to whoever is in
    charge of this place.
  • Behavior
  • Class starts at promptly at 400
  • Turn off cell phones
  • If you must leave early let me know
  • Be respectful of others

6
Syllabus
  • Work habits.
  • Read.
  • Due dates are non-negotiable.
  • All work should conform to APA guidelines.
  • If in a field that does not use APA let me know
    in advance what guidelines your field uses.
  • Other course policies.
  • Religious accommodations.
  • Disabilities.
  • Inform and provide documentation.

7
Who Is Here?
  • In groups of three or four.
  • Identify yourself and get know one another.
  • Ask the following questions.
  • What are your professional experiences?
  • What is your program of study?
  • What topics within your program interest you?
  • What is your favorite recreational activity?
  • What is your claim to fame?
  • Be prepared to introduce one member of your
    group.
  • Exchange email addresses and/or phone numbers.
  • Contact if you miss class.
  • Bounce ideas.
  • New friends.
  • Misery loves company -).

8
Discussion
  • As a group discuss the following questions
  • What is research?
  • Is reality knowable?
  • What is the relationship between the knower and
    what can be known?
  • How does one go about knowing reality?

9
What Is Research?
It depends on how you answered the three other
questions
Ontology
What is reality?
What is the relationship between knowledge and
the knower?
Epistemology
  • How does one go about knowing reality?

Methodology
10
A Paradigm Is
  • "A set of basic beliefs (or metaphysics) that
    deals with ultimate or first principles. It
    represents a worldview that defines, for its
    holder, the nature of the 'world', the
    individual's place in it, and the range of
    possible relationships to that world and its
    parts, as, for example, cosmologies and
    theologies do." Guba Lincoln.

11
A Paradigm Is
  • Kuhn defines paradigms as having two
    characteristics
  • "Their achievement was sufficiently unprecedented
    to attract an enduring group of adherents away
    from competing modes of scientific activity."
  • "It was sufficiently open-ended to leave all
    sorts of problems for the redefined group of
    practitioners to solve."

12
So what?
  • "Differences in paradigm assumptions cannot be
    dismissed as mere 'philosophical' differences
    implicitly or explicitly, these positions have
    important consequences for the practical conduct
    of inquiry, as well as for the interpretation of
    findings and policy choices."
  • Guba
    Lincoln

13
Paradigms As Human Constructions
  • Any given paradigm represents simply the most
    informed and sophisticated view of its
    proponents.
  • Must rely on utility and persuasiveness rather
    than proof.

14
Paradigms
  • Positivism
  • Deterministic
  • Reductionism
  • Empirical observation and measurement
  • Methods
  • Experimental, manipulative, verification

15
Paradigms (Cont.)
  • Postpositivism
  • Theory testing
  • Probabilistic
  • Know reality imperfectly
  • Replication
  • Methods
  • Experimental, surveys, causal-comparative,
    observational, interviews

16
Paradigms (Cont.)
  • Critical theory
  • Political
  • Empowerment
  • Collaborative
  • Change-oriented
  • Social justice
  • Methods
  • Participatory action research

17
Paradigms (cont.)
  • Constructivism
  • Understanding
  • Multiple participant meanings
  • Social construction
  • Theory generation
  • Methods
  • Grounded theory, case studies, narrative research

18
Truth
creatings
Verification
Falsification
What is can only be whats known
Accretion
Misunderstood as a central element
19
CP194
???
20
What Makes ResearchScientific?
21
According to the Dictionary Science
  • Is the observation, identification, description,
    experimental investigation, and theoretical
    explanation of phenomena.

22
How does the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001
(NCLB) impact educational research?
23
Who Cares? You should.
  • The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 uses the
    phrase scientifically-based research (SBR) 111
    times.
  • This has spawned an industry of consultants.
  • It has created a very volatile atmosphere.

24
What Is Scientific Research?(According to NCLB)
  • The application of rigorous, systematic, and
    objective procedures to obtain reliable and valid
    knowledge.
  • Systematic, empirical methods that draw on
    observation or experiment.
  • Involves rigorous data analyses that are adequate
    to test the hypotheses.
  • Is evaluated using experimental or
    quasi-experimental designs.
  • Is reported in sufficient detail to allow
    replication.
  • Has been accepted by a peer-reviewed journal or
    approved by an independent panel of experts
    through rigorous, objective, and scientific
    review.

25
What Paradigm Appears to Be Influencing NCLB?
  • Postivism?
  • Post-positivism?
  • Critical Theory?
  • Constructivism?

26
Between a Rock and a Hard Place
  • The rock.
  • Calling for scientifically based research is good
    and needed.
  • The recent enactment of no child left behind,
    and its central principle that federal funds
    should support educational activities backed by
    scientifically-based research, offers an
    opportunity to bring rapid, evidence-driven
    progress for the first time to U.S.
    Elementary and secondary education. Coalition
    for evidence-based policy.
  • The hard place.
  • Defining SBR as randomized experimental designs
    is over-restrictive.
  • The requirement that research methods be
    restricted to group design with a preference for
    randomized clinical trials will significantly
    inhibit the development and validation of new
    scientific knowledge in education. American
    association on mental retardation (AAMR) board of
    directors.

27
  • Council recognizes randomized trials among the
    sound methodologies to be used in the conduct of
    educational research and commends increased
    attention to their use as is particularly
    appropriate to intervention and evaluation
    studies. However, the council of the association
    expresses dismay that the department of education
    through its public statements and programs of
    funding is devoting singular attention to this
    one tool of science, jeopardizing a broader range
    of problems best addressed through other
    scientific methods. The council urges the
    department of education to expand its current
    conception of scientifically-based research.
    AERA council

28
What Is Scientific Research?(According to the
NRC)
  • Science poses significant questions that can be
    investigated empirically.
  • Science links research to relevant theory.
  • Science uses methods that permit direct
    investigation of the question.
  • Science provides a coherent and explicit chain of
    reasoning.

29
What Is Scientific Research?(According to the
NRC)
  • Scientific findings replicate and generalize
    across studies.
  • Scientists disclose research and encourage
    professional scrutiny and critique.

30
Mayer (2000)
  • Lets take a few minutes and read Mayer.
  • What makes research scientific?
  • How important is it that educational research be
    respected in academia and in society in
    general?
  • Should science and research mean the same
    things in different disciplines?
  • What questions/ comments do you have?

31
Mayer (2000)
32
The Big Picture
  • There are many different research processes
  • Each has its own
  • Philosophy of inquiry
  • Methods of inquiry
  • Purposes for doing research
  • Processes and rules
  • Here is one process

33
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34
Scientific Thinking Vs. Everyday Thinking
  • Everyday thinking
  • Biased questions
  • Do you really support the war?
  • Limited sampling
  • Your friends and family are different from my
    friends and family
  • Selective attention
  • Confirmation bias
  • Inaccurate generalization
  • Stereotypes

35
Scientific Thinking Vs. Everyday Thinking (Cont.)
  • Scientific thinking.
  • Empirical observations.
  • Empirical capable of being confirmed, verified,
    or disproved by observation or experiment.
  • Systematic.
  • Objective.
  • Less dependent on emotion or personal prejudices.
  • Replicable.

36
Purposes of Scientific Research
  • Exploratory
  • What is out there?
  • Descriptive
  • What does this group look like?
  • Explanatory
  • Why and how are these constructs related?
  • Evaluation
  • Does this program work?
  • Prediction
  • Who will become depressed?
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