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Week 3: From Ideas to Measures

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Title: Week 3: From Ideas to Measures


1
Week 3 From Ideas to Measures
2
Conceptualization
  • process whereby fuzzy or imprecise ideas are
    made specific and precise
  • (Babbie p. 124)
  • Includes creating a set of indicators
  • Which can be grouped into dimensions
  • eg

3
49-UPThe richer the child at birth, the higher
his/her quality of life will be
  • By rich we mean
  • Income of parents
  • spiritual strength
  • parents own their home/ car
  • Good relationships with family
  • Number of holidays/year

4
49-UPThe richer the child at birth, the higher
his/her quality of life will be
  • By rich we mean
  • Income of parents
  • spiritual strength
  • parents own their home/ car
  • Good relationships with family
  • Number of holidays/year

These are all Indicators
5
49-UPThe richer the child at birth, the higher
his/her quality of life will be
  • By rich we mean
  • Income of parents
  • spiritual strength
  • parents own their home/ car
  • Good relationships with family
  • Number of holidays/year

These are economic dimensions of the indicators
These are all Indicators
6
49-UPThe richer the child at birth, the higher
his/her quality of life will be
  • By rich we mean
  • Income of parents
  • spiritual strength
  • parents own their home/ car
  • Good relationships with family
  • Number of holidays/year

This is a social dimension of the indicators
These are all Indicators
7
49-UPThe richer the child at birth, the higher
his/her quality of life will be
  • By rich we mean
  • Income of parents
  • spiritual strength
  • parents own their home/ car
  • Good relationships with family
  • Number of holidays/year

This is a spiritual dimension of the indicators
8
With three keys dimensions economic, social and
mental quality of life
  • By higher quality we mean
  • Low level of stress
  • Rewarding relationships with friends
  • Strong mental stability
  • Successful marriage
  • Access to basic needs
  • Early retirement.

9
Operationalization
  • development of specific measuring techniques and
    decisions on how the data will be collected
    (what method to use)
  • We operationalize our variables and
    (specifically) their attributes

10
The richer the child at birth, the higher his/her
quality of life will be
  • By rich we mean
  • Income of parents
  • spiritual strength
  • parents own their home/ car
  • Good family relations
  • Number of holidays/year

Ratio
(0-10,000, 10,001- 20, 000, 20,001-30,000)
(attends religious service 1/month, 2/month,
3/month)
Ordinal
(yes/no)
Nominal
(argue never, sometimes, often, always)
Ordinal
(0,1,2,3.)
Ratio
11
Measurement QualityBabbie p143
  • A study is reliable if
  • A study is valid if

12
Measurement QualityBabbie p143
  • A study is reliable if
  • When we repeat it many times we get the same
    results/ observations
  • eg the bathroom scale

13
  • A study is valid if
  • The measure used accurately reflects the concept
  • eg IQ as an accepted measure of intelligence

14
Validity and Reliability
Which bullseye represents which statement?
Discuss with your neighbor
  • Neither Valid nor reliable
  • Reliable, not valid
  • Both Valid and reliable
  • Valid, not reliable

15
Validity and Reliability
To be continued..!
16
Professor Sarah Elwood
  • I am interested in understanding the social and
    political impacts of spatial technologies such as
    GIS, and the changing role and power of
    community-based planning and local activism in
    shaping urban geographies
  • Social, urban, GIS Geographer
  • Speaking in our class week 3!

17
Validity and Reliability
To be continued..!
18
How do I know my measure is reliable?
  • (Babbie p.145-146)
  • 1. Test-Retest method eg Health surveys, weighing
    yourself
  • 2. Split-half method
  • for complex concepts eg fear, prejudice, social
    anxiety
  • Measure in different ways/ using different
    questions
  • 3. Use established measures
  • eg the IQ test for intelligence
  • 4. Check on your researcher!
  • Re-ask a sample of your questions to a sample of
    the respondents to see of they answer in the same
    way.
  • Have the same set of results coded by different
    people (eg transcripts, newspaper articles etc)
  • Discuss at length with researchers goals,
    methods, train them etc.
  • ..eg Myers-Briggs Personality Test

19
How do I know my measure is valid?
  • Babbie p. 146-147
  • Face-validity Common sense agreement that the
    measure is a good one
  • eg IQ is a good measure of intelligence, better
    than say number of times you rented books from
    the library last year
  • eg Census definitions for family, race etc
    have a workable validity
  • Criterion-related validity/ predictive validity
    Based on some external criterion
  • eg the validity of a written drivers test is
    determined by the relationship between the scores
    received and the subsequent driving record
  • Construct validity Variable in question is
    related to other similar variables
  • eg Measuring marital satisfaction? See if your
    measure correlates with of infidelities. They
    should be correlated
  • Note Both use comparison variables
  • 4. Content validity How much does your measure
    cover the range of meanings included within a
    concept.
  • eg quality of life are we measuring all
    variants of quality or just economic quality of
    life? What about spiritual, social, cultural etc
  • eg 2. testing health inequities access to
    health care? Morbidity? Infant mortality?
    Psychological inequalities etc? How valid is our
    measurement in terms of covering all these
    aspects? It is fine if it only focuses on one or
    two but we need to acknowledge this as a
    limitation in our study.

20
Sampling
  • Today Non-probability sampling
  • When to use?
  • 1. Available subjects
  • 2. Purposive/ Judgmental sampling
  • 3. Snowball sampling
  • 4. Quota sampling
  • .
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