Ed 510 Applications of Educational Research
Here
are some terms that help you understand the material in this course. Define
these terms and try to create your own example of each.
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How to become
a better consumer of published research
Knowing more about the design of educational research will help you to accomplish some of the following goals of professional practice:
Merit pay for
teachers should be implemented. With merit pay teachers will be more productive
and productivity in turn will lead to improved student performance, especially
student performance on standardized tests.
The argument
may or may not be a valid one. Educational research helps us to evaluate
arguments like this one in terms of testing the argument.
Where do the
questions that are the basis of educational research studies come from?
The answer is that education is both an art and a science and draws its
knowledge base from more than one discipline. Education is not a pure discipline,
but an applied one. Therefore, the knowledge from many fields is included
in its content. This is reflected in the nature of educational research.
Consider the
following research questions. Each is influenced by either philosophy,
sociology, anthropology history, or psychology.
Two paradigms
of educational research
Paradigms are
ways of organizing information so that fundamental, abstract relationships
can be clearly understood. In educational research two paradigms guide
the design of studies and the ways in which researchers conduct research.
One paradigm is qualitative, the other is quantitative.
Qualitative
research examines issues that are difficult if not impossible to measure.
For example, qualitative studies investigate points of view, perspectives,
opinion, emotional significance, subjective experience, traditions and
mores, customs, and many other connotative and symbolic aspects of human
experience. What is key to understanding this approach to research is that
qualitative research does not merely study perspective, opinion, etc. Rather
it aims to find out more about how people interact with each other, their
collective past, their physical and social environment, and the world of
foreign experience in terms of connectedness, transaction and social exchange.
Even when something as subjective as a point of view is measured, what
cannot be measured is how point of view is a way of inter-relating with
others who share a similar set of experiences.
Thus those
who engage in qualitative research tend to avoid measurement and instead
look at how meaning is created or interpreted from experience. They use
interviews that are open ended and unstructured. They reconstruct the stories
of individuals and groups. They use biography. They immerse themselves
in the world of their subjects. They observe and record, and question their
assumptions. Ultimately the perspectives and meanings of those whom they
study is of paramount importance.
When we try
to understand why urban gangs have social rules and a system of punishment
or reward for those who break or follow rules, we are essentially saying
that we want to understand more about how members of urban gangs have developed
shared meaning about the nature of life in a gang. We are saying that we
want to understand their experience from their point of view. Thus we study
the problem using qualitative research.
Quantitative
research
When researchers
are interested in working through observed information systematically in
order to make inferences about relationships in data they are probably
going to engage in quantitative research. Quantitative research explores
objective relationships, those that can be reproduced time and again just
as long as all the conditions from one study to another are kept as constant
as possible.
Objectivity
in the paradigm of quantitative research refers to a researcher's ability
to replicate observations and measurements so that findings from one study
can be reproduced in subsequent studies. Replication depends upon a number
of conditions being met. These include systematic controls of bias, random
sampling, the use of control groups, the use of standardized measurement,
statistical evaluation of data, and measurement and replicability of the
data itself.
When a researcher
tries to understand why spatial reasoning is a good predictor of performance
on tests of mathematical reasoning, that researcher is making assumptions
about both the nature of research and the nature of experience that lead
to the decision to follow the quantitative paradigm. These would include:
Describe how
you would carry out a qualitative study in which you explore the social
adjustment of Cambodian refugee teenagers in an urban high school.
Describe how
you would set up a prediction study in which you attempt to find out if
scores on a standardized test of reading predict social studies grades?
Critique your
decisions in each example. What were some of the more difficult choices
you made? When were you unsure that you would be able to control
biases or evaluate data in a satisfactory way?
Page created January 5, 2001. Page modified January 14, 2002. Copyright Antonia D'Onofrio 2001/2002/2003.