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Measurement Issues General steps –Determine concept –Decide best way to measure –What indicators are available –Select intermediate, alternate or indirect.

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Presentation on theme: "Measurement Issues General steps –Determine concept –Decide best way to measure –What indicators are available –Select intermediate, alternate or indirect."— Presentation transcript:

1 Measurement Issues General steps –Determine concept –Decide best way to measure –What indicators are available –Select intermediate, alternate or indirect measures

2 Measurement Issues General steps –Consider limitations of measures selected –Collect or secure info/data –Summarize findings in writing

3 What is the relation between concepts, variables, instruments & measures?

4 Concepts Program is based on conceptual basis of why people behave the way they do

5 Why do you think people behave the way they do? Think of food and nutrition issues

6 Variables A theory has variables Variables define concepts Theory states how the variables interact or are related

7 Variables Variables of the theory are what you measure Variables are the verbal or written abstractions of the ideas that exist in the mind

8 Why should an intervention be based on a theory?

9 Why use theory? Know what you are to address in the intervention Makes evaluation easier Know what to measure to evaluate

10 Figure 6.1 A simple social learning theory model for reducing salt in the diet Comes next

11 Fig. 6.1 Social learning theory

12 Need measurements and instruments to assess changes in the variables of interest

13 Instruments Something that produces a measure of an object Series of questions to measure the variable, concept Includes instructions

14 Measures The numbers that come from the person answering questions on the instrument

15 Figure 6.2 Relation among models, variables, measures, and an instrument Comes next

16 Fig. 6.2

17 Based on why you think people behave the way the do, list possible variables to consider to measure this variable. What might be variables of the social learning theory?

18 What about variables that would verify if a change has or has not taken place?

19 Figure 6.1 A simple social learning theory model for reducing salt in the diet Comes next See how the program links with the theory & what measure

20 Fig. 6.1 Social learning theory

21 Reliability The extent to which an instrument will produce the same result (measure or score) if applied two different or more times.

22 Reliability X = T + E X is measure T is true value E is random error

23 Reliability Measurement error reduces the ability to have reliable and valid results.

24 Reliability Random error is all chance factors that confound the measurement. Always present Effects reliability but doesn’t bias results

25 Reliability Figure 6.5 Distribution of scores of multiple applications of a test with random error A is true score a is measure

26 Fig. 6.5 Distribution of scores of multiple applications of a test and random error

27 Distribution Can have the same mean with two different distributions Figure 6.6 next

28 Fig. 6.6 Two distributions of scores around the true mean

29 Which distribution has less variability? Which distribution has less random error?

30 Sources of Random Error Day-to-day variability Confusing instructions Unclear instrument Sloppy data collector

31 Sources of Random Error Distracting environment Respondents Data-management error

32 What can you do to reduce random error and increase reliability?

33 Variability & the Subject What you want to measure will vary from day to day and within the person

34 Variability & the Subject Intraindividual variability –variability among the true scores within a person over time

35 Figure 6.7 True activity scores (A, B, C) for 3 days with three measures (a, b, c) per day Comes next

36 Fig. 6.7 True activity (A, B, C) for 3 days with three measures (a, b, c) per day

37 Variability & the Subject Interindividual variability –variability between each person in the sample

38 Figure 6.8 Interindividual (A, X) and intraindividual (A1, A2, A3) variability for two people (A, X) in level of physical activity Comes next

39 Fig. 6.8 Interindividual (A, X) and intraindividual (A1, A2, A3) variability for two people (A, X) in level of physical activity

40 Assessing Reliability Need to know the reliability of your instruments Reliability coefficient of 1 is highest, no error Reliability coefficient of 0 is lowest, all error

41 Factors of Reliability Type of instrument –observer –self-report Times instrument applied –same time –different time

42 Figure 6.9 Types of reliability Comes next

43 Fig. 6.9 Types of reliability

44 Assessing Reliability Interobserver reliability –have 2 different observers rate same action at same time –reproducibility

45 Assessing Reliability Intraobserver reliability –1 observer assesses same person at two different times –video tape the action & practice

46 Assessing Reliability Repeat method –self-report or survey –repeat the same item/question at 2 points in survey

47 Assessing Reliability Internal consistency –average inter-item correlation among items in an instrument that are cognitively related

48 Assessing Reliability Internal consistency –Cronbach’s alpha –0.70 & above a good score

49 Assessing Reliability Test-retest reliability (internal consistency method) –same survey/test at 2 different times to same person

50 Validity Degree to which an instrument measures what the evaluator wants it to measure

51 Bias Systematic error that produces a systematic difference between an obtained score and the true score Bias threatens validity

52 Bias Figure 6.10 Distribution of scores of multiple applications of a test with systematic error Comes next

53 Fig. 6.10 Distribution of scores of multiple applications of a test with systematic error

54 What will basis do to your ability to make conclusions about your subjects?

55 Figure 6.11 Effect of bias on conclusions Comes next

56 Fig. 6.11 Effect of bias on conclusions

57 Types of Validity Face Content Criterion

58 Face Validity Describes the extent to which an instrument appears to measure what it is suppose to measure How many veg did you eat yesterday?

59 Content Validity Extent to which an instrument is expected to cover several domains of the content Consult a group of experts

60 Criterion Validity How accurate is a less costly way to measure the variable compared to the valid and more expensive instrument

61 What can lower validity? Guinea pig effect –awareness of being tested Role selection –awareness of being measured may make people feel they have to play a role

62 What can lower validity? Measurement as a change agent –act of measurement could change future behavior

63 What can lower validity? Response sets –respond in a predictable way that has nothing to do with the questions

64 What can lower validity? Interviewer effects –characteristics of the interviewer affects the receptivity and answers of the respondent

65 What can lower validity? Population restrictions –if people can’t use the method of data collection, can’t generalize to others

66 End of reliability and validity Questions Look at CNEP Survey


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