Evaluating Research Articles Approach With Skepticism Rebecca L. Fiedler January 16, 2002.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 22 Evaluating a Research Report Gay, Mills, and Airasian
Advertisements

Critical Reading Strategies: Overview of Research Process
Critical Reading Strategies: Overview of Research Process
Dr Ronni Michelle Greenwood Autumn  Introduction  Method  Results  Discussion.
Writing for Publication
8. Evidence-based management Step 3: Critical appraisal of studies
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2008 This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: any public.
Reviewing and Critiquing Research
Critiquing Research Articles For important and highly relevant articles: 1. Introduce the study, say how it exemplifies the point you are discussing 2.
MSc Applied Psychology PYM403 Research Methods Validity and Reliability in Research.
Tips on Critiquing Articles The goal of the educational research is to observe phenomena in the field of education and attempt to explain why these phenomena.
PPA 501 – Analytical Methods in Administration Lecture 2c – The Research Proposal.
Problem Identification
Research Proposal Development of research question
Topics - Reading a Research Article Brief Overview: Purpose and Process of Empirical Research Standard Format of Research Articles Evaluating/Critiquing.
Chapter 3 Preparing and Evaluating a Research Plan Gay and Airasian
Chapter One: The Science of Psychology
©2007 Prentice Hall Organizational Behavior: An Introduction to Your Life in Organizations Chapter 19 OB is for Life.
Chapter One of Your Thesis
WRITING A RESEARCH PROPOSAL
Introduction to Theory & Research Design
Writing a Research Proposal
McGraw-Hill © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. The Nature of Research Chapter One.
Reporting & Ethical Standards EPSY 5245 Michael C. Rodriguez.
 For the IB Diploma Programme psychology course, the experimental method is defined as requiring: 1. The manipulation of one independent variable while.
EMPRICAL RESEARCH REPORTS
Literature Review and Parts of Proposal
Formulating a Research Proposal
Please check, just in case…. Announcements: Office hour appointments filling up – get yours today! Don’t delay on getting started on next TWO assignments.
CRITICAL APPRAISAL OF SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE
Chapter One: The Science of Psychology. Ways to Acquire Knowledge Tenacity Tenacity Refers to the continued presentation of a particular bit of information.
Chris Luszczek Biol2050 week 3 Lecture September 23, 2013.
How to Write a Critical Review of Research Articles
Chapter 21 Preparing a Research Report Gay, Mills, and Airasian
Anatomy of an Article P152 Week 4. Three types of articles Reports of empirical studies Literature reviews/meta-analyses –Statistical reviewing procedure.
Undergraduate Dissertation Preparation – Research Strategy.
Andrea M. Landis, PhD, RN UW LEAH December 7, 2012.
CHAPTER III IMPLEMENTATIONANDPROCEDURES.  4-5 pages  Describes in detail how the study was conducted.  For a quantitative project, explain how you.
Evaluating a Research Report
Experimental Research Methods in Language Learning Chapter 16 Experimental Research Proposals.
Educational Research: Competencies for Analysis and Application, 9 th edition. Gay, Mills, & Airasian © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
McGraw-Hill © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Preparing Research Proposals and Reports Chapter Twenty-Four.
Educational Research: Competencies for Analysis and Application, 9 th edition. Gay, Mills, & Airasian © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
URBDP 591 I Lecture 3: Research Process Objectives What are the major steps in the research process? What is an operational definition of variables? What.
Writing about Methods in Dissertations and Doctoral Studies
Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches
Planning an Applied Research Project Chapter 3 – Conducting a Literature Review © 2014 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Project Thesis 2006 Adapted from Flor Siperstein Lecture 2004 Class CLASS Project Thesis (Fundamental Research Tools)
1.  Interpretation refers to the task of drawing inferences from the collected facts after an analytical and/or experimental study.  The task of interpretation.
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2008 Intelligent Consumer Chapter 14 This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following.
CHAPTER 2 Research Methods in Industrial/Organizational Psychology
Anatomy of a Research Article Five (or six) major sections Abstract Introduction (without a heading!) Method (and procedures) Results Discussion and conclusions.
Mark Schemes Practice Exploration (formerly Design) Honors Physical Science.
Title Sub-Title Open Writing it up! The content of the report/essay/article.
Communicating Marketing Research Findings
Principals of Research Writing. What is Research Writing? Process of communicating your research  Before the fact  Research proposal  After the fact.
CRITICALLY APPRAISING EVIDENCE Lisa Broughton, PhD, RN, CCRN.
CHAPTER ONE EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH. THINKING THROUGH REASONING (INDUCTIVELY) Inductive Reasoning : developing generalizations based on observation of a.
PowerPoint Presentation Guide
Writing a sound proposal
Research Skills.
Review of Related Literature
Parts of an Academic Paper
AN INTRODUCTION TO EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH.
Analyzing Qualitative Data
Reading Research Papers-A Basic Guide to Critical Analysis
Discussions and Conclusions
Managerial Decision Making and Evaluating Research
Presentation transcript:

Evaluating Research Articles Approach With Skepticism Rebecca L. Fiedler January 16, 2002

Preview of Article Does the abstract intrigue me to read this article? Will it be useful to me? Who are the researchers? Are they credible and unbiased? What sources did the researchers use?

Major Components Title Abstract Introduction Literature Review Research Question Hypothesis Methodology Summary of Results Discussion & Conclusion References

Qualitative Research The research is conducted in the natural setting Is descriptive Researcher observes a specific situation Sometimes variables are manipulated, but not always Goal is to gain insight or identify key variables or ask new questions for further research

Quantitative Research Attempts to quantify key variables and relate them Variables are manipulated in some way (Called a treatment) Results are measured and analyzed statistically Goal is to identify cause-and-effect relationships

Quantitative Research Hypothesis testing

Title Is it specific? Is the nature of the research clear? Does it reflect the content of the article? Are the results accurately indicated? Are the main variables clear? Is the population clear?

Abstract Was the purpose clear? Was the methodology indicated? Were the populations and samples clearly identified? Did the the abstract highlight the findings?

Introduction Is the purpose made clear? Did the authors explain the significance of the study? (Do you agree?) Clearly written and well- organized?

Literature Review Does the review establish significance of the study? Does the review address the problem area? Is the review easy to read and understand? Is it balanced? Are the reviewed articles relevant and current? Is the review comprehensive? How credible are the cited sources? Most should be primary sources.

Types of Sources General references Primary sources Secondary sources

Research Question/Hypothesis Is it clearly stated? Is there a hypothesis? How well is it related to the other components? Is it ethical to ask?

Methodology Experimental Survey Correlation Factorial study Causal-Comparative Regression analysis Ethnographic study

Methodology - Research Design Do the authors justify the design decisions? Did they discuss the limitations? Are variables identified? Dependent & independent. Are any external variables identified? Are those external variables controlled? Was the design appropriate?

Methodology - Samples Is the population identified? Are the samples representative of that population? How were the samples selected and will the techniques compromise the results? Can the information be generalized to the proposed population?

Methodology - Instruments What instruments were used to collect the data? Was the choice of instrument justified? Is evidence of reliability and validity provided? Were any limitations addressed?

Common Threats to Validity Subject Characteristics Mortality Location Instrument Maturation Regression Hawthorne Effect History Implementation

Methodology - Procedures Is the description of procedures robust? Are there any threats to validity due to the procedures discussed? Are you able to identify additional threats to validity? Are there any ethical issues in the procedures?

Summary of Results Are the results reported without any interpretation first? Are the results directly tied to the question, hypothesis or problem? Did the author provide enough detail for you to independently check the results? Is there enough description for you to interpret the results in context?

Discussion & Conclusion What are are the findings? Are they clearly stated? Are the findings related to the results of the study and the literature review? Any weaknesses or limitations? Did the authors make any statements about generalizability? Recommendations for future study?

References Are most references primary sources? How many citations are offered? Are the cited references recent? Based on the given info, can you find them for your own review?

Qualitative Very descriptive

Similarities to Quantitative Title Abstract Introduction Review of Literature

Research Problem Did the focus of the research shift? (That’s not bad) Was the shift justified? Did the researchers avoid a hypothesis at the start? What (if any) hypotheses were formed based on the data?

Samples Often purposive. The purpose should be identified. Accessibility is sometimes an important consideration. It should be named if it is/was a factor. Is there a detailed description of the sample?

Setting Is there a full rich description of the setting?

Researchers Are there biases that may interfere with the study? Was there interaction between the researcher and the participants? Or was the researcher only an observer? How were observers trained?

Data Collection Did the researchers use more than one way to observe the same phenomenon? Was there evidence of validity by triangulation? Was there any quantitative data? Frequency counts are common.

Procedures Should be the strongest section. Are procedures fully described? Are they appropriate? Are there any ethical concerns? Are there any threats to validity?

Data Analysis Is analysis in descriptive form? If so, is the description supported by the evidence? Is there any quantitative data? Is data provided for reader to review?

Results What were the reported results? Did the researcher form a hypothesis?

Discussion and Conclusions What conclusions did the researchers reach? What implications can be drawn from the research? Are there suggestions for further research? What limitations were mentioned?

Now what?

You might want to…. Use one of their suggestions for further research for your own topic Replicate a research study Cite the article in your own research Use the research design in your own work Pick up other ideas for your own research Read the cited articles

My Bibliography –Girden, E. (2001). Evaluating Research Articles: From Start to Finish (2nd edition ed.). Thousand Oaks, London, New Delhi: Sage Publications. –Goubil-Gambrell, P. (1992). A Practitioner's Guide to Research Methods. Technical Communication: Journal of the Society for Technical Communication, 39(4), pp –GraphicsLand. (2002). Squares PowerPoint template [template file]. GraphicsLand. Retrieved 1/12/02, 2002, from the World Wide Web: –Lunsford MSE CO, T. R., & Lunsford MS MAPT, B. R. (1996). How to Critically Read a Journal Research Article. Journal of Prosthetics and Orthotics, 8(1), pp

My Bibliography (continued) –Spyridakis, J. (1992). Conducting Research in Technical Communication: The Application of True Experimental Designs. Technical Communication: Journal of the Society for Technical Communication, 39(4), pp –Sullivan, P., & Spilka, R. (1992). Qualitative Research in Technical Communication: Issues of Value, Identity, and Use. Technical Communication: Journal of the Society for Technical Communication, 39(4), pp –Yaw, M. (2001). Notes from Fundamentals of Graduate Research in Education.

Class Exercise Divide into two groups Prepare 10-minute presentation (45 minutes allowed) –Presentation should critique one of the following articles Illustrations in User Manuals Learning How to Use a Cellular Phone Group presentations

Bibliography Management File cabinet Sticky notes Index card file Database Bibliographic software Free downloads on web –EndNote –Reference Manager –ProCite