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UAPP 702: Research Design for Urban

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Ch. 4: Research DesignPurposes of Research. Exploration: typically done for three purposes: to satisfy the researcher s curiosity and desire for better understanding – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: UAPP 702: Research Design for Urban


1
UAPP 702 Research Design for Urban Public
PolicyClass NotesBabbie, The Practice of Social
Research, Chaps.45
  • Danilo Yanich
  • School of Public Policy Administration
  • Center for Community Research Service
  • University of Delaware

2
Ch. 4 Research DesignPurposes of Research
  • Exploration typically done for three purposes
  • to satisfy the researchers curiosity and desire
    for better understanding
  • to test the feasibility of undertaking a more
    extensive study
  • to develop the methods to be employed in a
    subsequent study
  • Description describe situations and events
  • Census is good example of descriptive research
  • Explanation the why? of events, situations,
    behavior, attitudes, etc.

3
Logic of Nomothetic Explanation
  • Nomothetic explanation refers to the accounting
    of many variations in a given phenomenon
  • In contrast to
  • Idiographic explanation that seeks an in-depth
    understanding of a single case

4
Criteria for Nomothetic Causality
  • Correlation the variables must be correlated
  • Time order the cause takes place before the
    effect
  • Non-spurious the variables are non-spurious
  • Spurious relationship a coincidental statistical
    correlation between two variables, shown to be
    caused by some third variable

5
Correlation
  • Some relationship---or correlationbetween the
    variables must exist before we can consider
    causality
  • Correlation empirical relationship between two
    variables such that
  • Changes in one are associated with changes in the
    other
  • Particular attributes of one variable are
    associated with particular attributes of the other

6
False Criteria for Nomothetic Causality
  • Complete causation
  • Causation is incomplete and probabalistic
  • Exceptional cases
  • Exceptional cases do not disprove general overall
    pattern of causation
  • Majority of cases
  • Causal relationship may be true even if they
    dont apply to the majority of cases
  • Example lack of supervision delinquency
  • as long as unsupervised juveniles are more likely
    to be become delinquent, social science can say
    there is a causal relationship

7
Necessary and Sufficient Causes
  • Necessary cause represents a condition that must
    be present for the effect to follow
  • Ex must be female to become pregnant
  • Ex must take college courses to get a
    degreebut
  • Simply taking courses is not a sufficient cause
  • Must take the right ones

8
Necessary and Sufficient Causes
  • Sufficient cause represents a condition that, if
    it is present, guarantees the effect in question
  • Not saying that sufficient cause is only possible
    cause for effect
  • Ex skipping exam in course would be sufficient
    cause for failing, but students could fail in
    other ways, too
  • So, cause can be sufficient but not necessary

9
Units of Analysis
  • No limit to what or whom can be studied
  • Common social science units of analysis
  • Individuals
  • Groups
  • Organizations
  • Social artifacts.
  • Important what you call a given unit of
    analysis is almost irrelevantbut you must be
    clear what that unit is
  • Are you studying marriages or marriage partners?
  • Crimes or criminals?
  • Historic buildings or the process for selecting
    them?
  • Efficiency of the hotel or the satisfaction of
    customers?

10
Ecological Fallacy
  • Ecological in this context refers to groups or
    sets or systems, something larger than
    individuals.
  • Fallacy is to assume that something learned about
    such a unit says something about the individuals
    comprising that unit.
  • Babbie uses example of data that shows which
    precincts supported a female candidate
  • Some census data for each precinct that shows
    that precincts with relatively young voters gave
    her more support
  • Could not assume that young voters were most
    likely to support a female candidate...
  • That iswe cannot assume that age affects support
  • The unit of analysis was the precinct, NOT the
    individuals in the precinct

11
Reductionism
  • Tendency to explain everything in terms of a
    particular, narrow set of concepts
  • Remember paradigms that predispose researcher to
    a particular explanation
  • Definition of order by coercion, shared values,
    exchange

12
Ch. 5 Conceptualization, Operationalization
Measurement
  • Conceptualization
  • The refinement and specification of abstract
    concepts
  • A specific agreed-upon meaning of the concept
    under study
  • Ex. compassion does not exist in any sense that
    we can measure in an objective sense
  • Operationalization
  • The development of specific research procedures
    (operations) that will result in empirical
    observations representing those concepts in the
    real world

13
What social scientists measureTable 5.1, p. 129
Examples
Direct observables Physical characteristics of a person being observed/interviewed
Indirect observables Characteristics of a person as indicated by answers given in a self-administered questionnaire
Constructs Level of alienation, as measured by a scale that is created combining several direct and/or indirect observables
14
Indicators and Dimensions
  • Indicator
  • An observation that we consider as a reflection
    of the variable under study
  • Ex attending church as an indicator or
    religiosity
  • Dimension
  • A specific aspect of a concept
  • Ex action aspects of religiosity (attending
    church, giving money) and contemplative aspects
    (prayer, etc)

15
Operational definition
  • Specifies precisely how a concept will be
    measured
  • Operationalization
  • The development of specific research procedures
    (operations) that will result in empirical
    observations representing those concepts in the
    real world

16
Progression of measurement steps
  • Conceptualization
  • ?
  • Nominal definition
  • ?
  • Operational definition
  • ?
  • Measurements in the real world

conceptual funnel
17
Progression of measurementTable 5.2, p. 136
Measurement step Example social class
Conceptualization What are the different meanings and dimensions of the concept social class?
Nominal definition For our study, we will define social class as representing economic difference specifically, income
Operational definition We will measure economic differences via responses to the survey question What was your annual income, before taxes, last year?
Measurements in the real world The interviewer will ask What was your annual income, before taxes, last year?
18
Operationalization Choices
  • Range of variation Must be clear about the range
    of variation in any concept that interests you.
  • Babbie uses as an example studying certain ranges
    of income, i.e., using 100,000 as the floor for
    the highest income group rather than a higher
    amount
  • Attitudes toward nuclear power...might use a
    range of favor it very much to dont favor it
    at all...
  • But, that would leave out the people who are
    opposed to it.
  • Variations between extremes Get as much detail
    in the measurement as possible.
  • Can always aggregate data (that is, combine
    precise attributes) into more general
    categories...
  • But can never separate out any variations that
    were lumped together during observation and
    measurement.

19
Two important qualities of variables Exhaustive
Mutually Exclusive
  • Exhaustive For the variable to have any utility
    in research, must be able to classify every
    observation in terms of one of the attributes
    composing the variable
  • Babbie uses example of political party
    affiliation that specifies just Democrat or
    Republican
  • When that would leave out others who do not
    identify with either
  • Use other or no affiliation to make it
    exhaustive.
  • Mutually exclusive Must be able to classify
    every observation in terms of one and only one
    attribute.
  • Babbie uses defining employed and unemployed in
    such a way that nobody can be both at the same
    time
  • Refer to Graber social type variable...farmer,
    ner-do-well, etc. Family Court gender
    variable.

20
Levels of measurement (NOIR)
  • Nominal variables whose attribute have only the
    characteristics of exhaustiveness and mutual
    exclusivity
  • Examples gender, religious affiliation,
    birthplace, etc
  • Ordinal variables with attributes that can
    logically rank-order the different attributes
    represent relatively more or less of a variable.
  • Examples social class, conservatism, alienation,
    prejudice, coolness
  • Interval variables in which the actual distance
    separating them can be expressed in meaningful
    standard variables
  • Examples temperature, intelligence tests
  • Ratio variables that have all of the
    characteristics of the previous levels of
    measurement AND are based on a true zero point
  • Examples age, length of residence in a home,
    duration of news story, etc.

21
Implications of levels of measurement
  • Requirements of analytical techniques
  • Certain analytical techniques require variables
    that meet certain minimum levels of measurement
  • Must plan analytical techniques according to the
    level of measurement at which you will gather
    your data.
  • Should anticipate drawing research conclusions
    appropriate to the levels of measurement used in
    your variables.
  • Caution Seek highest level of measurement
    possible because...
  • Although you can reduce a ratio measure to
    ordinal...
  • You cannot convert an ordinal measure into a
    ratio measure...
  • It is a one-way street

22
Criteria of measurement quality
  • Precision and accuracy
  • Precisionfineness of the distinction made
    between the attributes that compose a variable
  • Saying that a woman is 43 years old is more
    precise than saying that she is in her forties
  • Degree of precision is dictated by your research
    requirements
  • If your research question does not require her
    precise age, then additional effort to gather it
    precisely is wasted
  • However, if your needs are unclear, be more
    precise rather than less
  • Do not confuse precision with accuracy
  • Saying that someone was born in Stowe, VT is
    more precise than born in New England
  • Butsuppose the person in question was born in
    Boston
  • The more general description of New England is
    less precise, but accurate

23
Criteria of measurement quality, p.2
  • Reliability
  • Whether a particular technique, applied
    repeatedly to the same object, yields the same
    result every time
  • Example Measuring weight using two different
    persons estimates versus a scale
  • Reliability does NOT ensure accuracy
  • Suppose the scale is set five pounds too light
  • Measurement would be reliable each time, but it
    would also be wrong each time
  • Ways to cross-check the reliability of measures
  • Test-retest method
  • Split-half method
  • Using established measures (Miller book is useful
    here)
  • Reliability of research workers

24
Criteria of measurement quality, p.3
  • Validity
  • Refers to the extent to which an empirical
    measure adequately reflects the real meaning of
    the concept under consideration
  • Social research does operate on agreements about
    the terms we use and the concepts they represent

25
Criteria of measurement quality, p.4
  • Testing validity
  • Face validity empirical measures that jibe with
    our common understanding of a concept
  • Ex. Grievances worker morale
  • Criterion-based validity based on external
    criterion
  • Ex. College board scores student success in
    college

26
Criteria of measurement quality, p.5
  • Testing validity
  • Construct validity based on logical
    relationships among variables
  • Ex. Marital fidelity marital satisfaction
  • Content validity refers to how much a measure
    covers the range of meanings in a concept
  • Ex test of math ability cant be limited to
    addition alone

27
Criteria of measurement quality, p.6
  • Tension between reliability validity
  • Often a trade-off between the two because
    resources limit the research
  • Ex. Measuring morale by spending days on assembly
    line talking w/ workers seems a more valid
    measure of morale than counting grievances
  • If there is no clear agreement on how to measure
    a conceptmeasure it several ways
  • Ex. Recidivism, court success, hotel efficiency,
    etc.
  • Concept does not have any meaning other than what
    we give it.
  • Only justification to give concept a particular
    meaning is utility

28
Basic Research Outline
  • The Social Problem
  • Present a clear, brief statement of the problem,
    with concepts defined where necessary
  • Show that the problem is limited to bounds
    amenable to treatment or test
  • Describe the significance of the problem with
    reference to specific criteria

Source Miller, Delbert C. 1991. Handbook of
Research Design and Social Measurement, 5th
Edition. Newbury Park Sage Publications, pp.
15-16.
29
Basic Research Outline, p.2
  • The Theoretical Framework
  • Describe the relationship of the problem to a
    theoretical framework
  • Demonstrate the relationship of the problem to
    previous research
  • Present alternate hypotheses considered feasible
    within the framework of the theory.

30
Basic Research Outline, p.3
  • The Research Question/Hypotheses
  • Clearly state the research questions or the
    hypotheses selected for test. (Null and
    alternate)
  • Indicate the significance of test hypotheses to
    the advancement of research and theory.
  • For policy research state how research might
    inform policy.
  • Define concepts or variables (preferably in
    operational terms).
  • Describe possible mistakes and their
    consequences.
  • Note seriousness of possible mistakes.

31
Basic Research Outline, p.4
  • Design of the Experiment or Inquiry
  • Describe ideal design or designs with particular
    attention to the control of interfering variables
  • Describe selected operational design
  • Specify statistical tests including dummy
    variables

32
Basic Research Outline, p.5
  • Sampling Procedures
  • Describe experimental and control samples
  • Specify method of drawing or selecting sample

33
Basic Research Outline, p.6
  • Methods of Gathering Data
  • Describe measures of quantitative variables
    showing reliability and validity when these are
    known. Describe means of identifying qualitative
    variables
  • Include descriptions of questionnaires or
    schedules
  • Describe interview procedure
  • Describe use made of pilot study, pretest, trial
    run.

34
Basic Research Outline, p.7
  • Working Guide
  • Prepare working guide with time and budget
    estimates
  • Estimate total person-hours and cost

35
Basic Research Outline, p.8
  • Analysis of Results
  • Specify methods of analysis

36
Basic Research Outline, p.9
  • Interpretation of Results
  • Discuss how conclusions will be fed back into
    theoryOR
  • Inform policy/practice.

37
Basic Research Outline, p.10
  • Publication or Reporting Plans...Communication
    Plans
  • Monograph, Executive summary
  • Testimony to policy makers.
  • Presentations to institutions, non-governmental
    agencies, media, public.
  • Journal publication

38
The Policy Research Process
Present a clear, brief statement of the problem, with concepts defined where necessary. Over half of the criminal cases in Delaware exceed the Supreme Courts standard for the time from arrest to disposition (plea, verdict, etc.).
Show that the problem is limited to bounds amenable to treatment or test. An analysis of the period from arrest to disposition of criminal cases in Delawares Superior Court during a randomly chosen calendar year will provide the required data to examine the issue.
D. Yanich example using model in Miller,
Delbert C. (1991). Handbook of Research Design
and Social Measurement. Fifth Edition. Newbury
Park, CA Sage Publications, pp15-16
39
The Policy Research Process, p.2
Criterion Comment
Timely The Constitution requires that justice is delivered in a timely manner. To the extent that Delaware is not in compliance with its own 120 standard, it jeopardizes that requirement.
Practical problem The costs, the ethics, the legal liability for operating a system in violation of its own standard.
Wide population All citizens bear the cost of a dysfunctional court system, whether in taxes or large policy choices.
Influential/Critical population Main audience for the research is the Delaware General Assembly and the agents of the court.
Research gap Never has been a comprehensive look at the case processing in Delaware
40
The Policy Research Process, p.3
Criterion Comment
Generalizations Can NOT generalize to populations (court systems) beyond Delaware.
Sharpens concept Offers a more detailed examination of case processing through critical phases
Practical implications Practice and policy will change as a result of the research.
Improve data analysis instrument The courts never had a data-gathering instrument to understand case processing. The research will provide a base-line.
Data gathering constrained by time One calendar year is precisely geared to acquire the critical data within a manageable time period.
Fruitful exploration The research extends the analysis of court processing.
41
The Policy Research Process, p.4
Clearly state the research question/hypotheses selected for test. Null hypothesis There is no difference between the cases that are disposed within 120-day mandate and those that exceed it. Research hypothesis Differences exist between the cases that comply and do not comply with the 120-day mandate along case and courts culture dimensions.
Indicate the significance of test hypotheses to the advancement of research and theory. For policy research state how research might inform policy. A systematic examination of the case processing activity of Delawares Superior Court will give policy-makers a baseline from which to make changes in the courts policy and practice.
42
The Policy Research Process, p.5
Define concepts or variables (preferably in operational terms). Contained in coding instructions in which all variables are operationalized Examples unit of analysiscase instant offensecrime for which case is prosecuted criminal historynumber of previous convictions
Describe possible mistakes and their consequences. Possible mistakes focus on validity and reliability issues.
Note seriousness of possible mistakes. Validity or reliability mistakes are fatal to the research process.
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