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Research Proposal Methods and Procedures

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Title: Research Proposal Methods and Procedures


1
Research ProposalMethods and Procedures
2
OBJECTIVES
  • Recognize component subheadings under Methods and
    Procedures section.
  • Identify characteristics of subheadings in
    Methods and Procedures section.
  • Be able to write a Methods and Procedures section
    for research proposal.

3
Introduction
  • Four Questions Should be Addressed
  • 1. Who will participate in the study?
  • 2. What types of materials will be needed?
  • 3. What data will be collected?
  • 4. What will participants do?

4
Participants
  • How will they be selected?
  • volunteers? paid?
  • random selection?
  • From where will participants come?
  • geographic region?
  • institutional affiliation

5
Participants (continued)
  • Demographic characteristics
  • Approximations in terms of
  • age/age ranges
  • gender
  • ethnicity
  • Other information for replication

6
Example of Participants
  • Participants
  • A total of about 50 participants will be
    selected from a population of about 160 students
    enrolled in an Algebra I course at Floyd Dunlap
    High school, a large urban high school, in Miami,
    FL during the 1998-99 school year. The population
    is tri-cultural, composed primarily of Caucasian
    non-Hispanic, African-American, and Hispanic
    students

7
  • from a variety of Latin American backgrounds.
    Moreover, 100 of students at this school are
    enrolled in the free or reduced price lunch
    program. Participants, comprised of
    approximately 54 female and approximately 46
    male, will be selected randomly through use of a
    random numbers table (Ary, Jacobs, Razavieh,
    1996).

8
Instrumentation
  • Describes things to be used
  • Sources from where data will come
  • tests, questionnaires,
  • archival sources
  • Why were instruments selected
  • Reliabilities and validities

9
Instrumentation (continued)
  • Who will administer?
  • How will it will be administered?
  • how many items?
  • how long to complete?
  • how scored?
  • If new instrument has been developed
  • why? field tested?
  • include in entirety as table or appendix

10
Example of Instrumentation
  • Instrumentation
  • The Stanford Achievement Test (SAT)
    Arithmetic Test (level 7.0 - 9.9) will be
    utilized as the data gathering instrument.
    Split-half reliability coefficients are reported
    to range from .86 to .93 (Davies, 1994) and
    reviewers (Locus, 1995 Smythe,

11
  • 1994) are in agreement concerning its high
    content validity. The SAT Arithmetic test,
    comprised of 45 multiple-choice items, requires
    students approximately 35 minutes to complete.
    Taken via paper-and-pencil, students respond to
    questions on a Scantron that is computer scored
    by the SAT publishing company.

12
Procedures
  • What will the researchers and the participants
    do? When? In what order will the activities be
    conducted?
  • If an intervention or treatment occurs, describe
    in detail the nature of the program.
  • Write in a cookbook manner Step-by-step process
  • Error made by students in writing a procedures
    section is insufficient detail for replication.

13
Example of Procedures
  • Procedures
  • In the fall of 1999, prior to the
    assignment of students to classes, a list of all
    students scheduled to enroll in General Math I in
    the fall (approximately 150 students) will be

14
  • obtained from the principal of the school.
    Using this list, 60 students will be randomly
    selected through use of a random numbers table
    (Ary et al., 1996) to participate in the study.
    These 60 students will then be

15
  • randomly assigned to one of two General Math I
    classes, one class to receive programmed
    instruction and one class to receive
    lecture-discussion instruction. The random
    assignment to class type will also be performed
    through the use of a random numbers table.

16
  • The programmed instruction class will utilize
    a computer program titled Herculette, published
    by the Programmers Institute of Technology School
    (1996), and used on IBM or IBM compatible
    computers with a Pentium 686 processor. In this
    program,

17
  • students are required to exhibit mastery
    learning on each lesson prior to making a
    transition to the next higher lesson in the math
    sequence. The lecture-discussion classroom
    teacher will present the same math concepts used
    in the Herculette

18
  • program but through a lecture format instead of
    through use of a computer. Discussion will occur
    between the teacher and students when students
    ask questions about math concepts.

19
Data Analysis
  • Describes statistical technique(s) to be used to
    analyze your data
  • Use a dependent samples t-test for comparing pre-
    and post- test scores of a group of students
  • Use an independent samples t-test for comparing
    means between two different groups of students.
  • Use an analysis of variance for comparing the
    means of three or more groups
  • Use .05 for level of statistical significance

20
Example of Data Analysis
  • Data Analysis
  • To address the extent to which mean
    differences will be present in reading between
    students enrolled in block scheduled schools and
    those students enrolled in non-block scheduled
    schools, an independent samples t-test will be
    used.

21
  • Should the independent samples t-test provide a
    statistically significant result at the .05 level
    or below, then the null hypothesis will be
    rejected. That is, the assumption of no
    difference in reading between block and non-block
    schools will be rejected.

22
  • Should the independent samples t-test analysis
    not provide a statistically significant result at
    the .05 level, then the null hypothesis will not
    be rejected. That is, the assumption of no
    difference in reading between block and non-block
    scheduled schools will not be rejected. For this
    statistical comparison, an alpha level of .05
    will be used as the level of statistical
    significance.

23
Example of Methods and Procedures section
  • Participants
  • Participants will be approximately 100
    certified school personnel in South Georgia. Of
    this sample, about 20 will be male and about 80
    will be female. Approximately 75 of the sample
    will be regular education teachers and
    approximately 25 will be special education
    teachers. Experience of teachers will range from
    about 1 to about

24
  • 15 years in education. About 33 of teachers
    will be working in elementary schools, about 33
    of teachers will be working in middle schools,
    and about 33 of teachers will be working in high
    schools.

25
Methods and Procedures (continued)
  • Instrumentation
  • Participants will complete a
    questionnaire consisting of the following format
    demographic questions related to teaching
    position years of teaching experience grade
    level teaching and whether or not their students
    will take a state-mandated

26
  • minimum competency test. These demographic
    items will be followed by 27 attitude statements
    about standardized achievement tests to which
    participants will respond using a 5-point Likert
    format ranging from Strongly Agree to Strongly
    Disagree. A total score on the attitude items
    will be obtained by adding item responses for
    each.

27
  • participant. Items negatively phrased will be
    reverse scored. Thus, total scores will reflect
    more positive attitudes toward standardized
    testing.

28
  • Procedures
  • In the fall of 1997, all teachers at the
    Lowndes County High School will be asked at a
    routine faculty meeting, through a one page memo
    handed out by the school principal, if they would
    be willing to participate in

29
  • this study. At the end of the faculty
    meeting, those teachers who decide to participate
    will be handed a copy of the questionnaire, a
    computer scoring form, and a 2 pencil. Those
    teachers who decide not to

30
  • participate will leave at the end of the
    faculty meeting.
  • Following completion of the questionnaire,
    the senior researcher will collect the
    questionnaire, computer scoring form, and 2
    pencil when the teachers exit the room. Once all
    materials have been

31
  • collected, approximately 30 minutes after the
    end of the faculty meeting, the junior researcher
    will take the questionnaires and pencils back to
    the junior researchers university office. The
    computer scoring form will be taken to the
    university computer center to be recorded onto a
    3 1/4 IBM formatted disk.

32
  • Data Analysis
  • Questionnaire data, to be analyzed via
    frequencies, will be reported in terms of percent
    of educators who express agreement or
    disagreement with each questionnaire item.

33
  • Following the calculation of a total score on
    the survey, an analysis of variance will be
    conducted to determine whether mean differences
    are present in attitudes among elementary,
    middle, and secondary school teachers. Then, an
    independent samples t-test will be performed to
    determine whether mean differences in attitudes
    are present between male and female teachers. The
    level of statistical significance for statistical
    comparisons will be set at .05.
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