Exam 4: Descriptive Methods
Exam 1: Thinking Like a Scientist54 Questions
Exam 2: Getting Started: Ideas, resources, and Ethics34 Questions
Exam 3: Defining, measuring, and Manipulating Variables62 Questions
Exam 4: Descriptive Methods55 Questions
Exam 5: Data Organization and Descriptive Statistics46 Questions
Exam 6: Correlational Methods and Statistics37 Questions
Exam 7: Probability and Hypothesis Testing61 Questions
Exam 8: Introduction to Inferential Statistics63 Questions
Exam 9: The Logic of Experimental Design43 Questions
Exam 10: Inferential Statistics: Two-Group Designs39 Questions
Exam 11: Experimental Designs With More Than Two Levels of an Independent Variable34 Questions
Exam 12: Complex Experimental Design46 Questions
Exam 13: Quasi-Experimental and Single-Case Designs43 Questions
Exam 14: Apa Communication Guidelines14 Questions
Select questions type
The extent to which research can be generalized to real-life situations is known as
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(37)
Doug is conducting a study of gender differences in conversation dyads.He decides to sit in the student center and watch male/male dyads versus female/female dyads.He believes that the distance between the female/female dyads will be much smaller than that between the male/male dyads.When collecting the data,he notes all cases that fit his hypothesis but tends to "miss" most cases that do not fit his hypothesis.Doug's data collection behavior illustrates the pitfall of
(Multiple Choice)
4.7/5
(36)
Rich is conducting a survey of student opinion of the dining hall at his university.Rich decided to conduct his survey using students enrolled in introductory psychology classes.The type of sampling technique that Rich is using is
(Multiple Choice)
4.7/5
(31)
Marnie keeps answering the questions on the survey she is taking as she thinks most others in society would answer them,rather than with her true responses.Marnie's answers illustrate
(Multiple Choice)
4.7/5
(37)
Explain how sampling bias,interviewer bias,and socially desirable responses are problematic for survey research.
(Essay)
4.8/5
(22)
Mail surveys are to _____ as personal interviews are to _____.
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(27)
Imagine that you are writing a survey on student perceptions of the food in the dining hall.Write one open-ended,one closed-ended,and one partially open-ended question concerning quality of the food in the dining hall.
(Essay)
4.9/5
(32)
_____ observation affords _____ control,but increases the chance of _____.
(Multiple Choice)
5.0/5
(30)
A question including non-neutral or emotionally laden terms is to a _____ question as a question that sways the respondent to answer in a desired manner is to a _____ question.
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(34)
Explain how the terms nonparticipant,participant,disguised,and undisguised relate to observational research.
(Essay)
4.9/5
(38)
Consider the following survey question: "Do you consider a microwave to be fast and convenient?" This is an example of a _____ question.
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(32)
_____ is/are more of a concern when using _____ observation.
(Multiple Choice)
4.7/5
(33)
Telephone surveys have the concern of _____ but have the advantage of _____.
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(32)
A numerical scale on which survey respondents indicate the direction and strength of their response is a
(Multiple Choice)
4.7/5
(30)
Explain the difference between using narrative records versus checklists for data collection.What are the advantages and disadvantages of each method?
(Essay)
4.7/5
(32)
Explain what demographic questions are and why it is recommended that they appear at the end of the survey.
(Essay)
4.9/5
(32)
Questions for which participants choose from a limited number of alternatives are _____ questions.
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(30)
Showing 21 - 40 of 55
Filters
- Essay(0)
- Multiple Choice(0)
- Short Answer(0)
- True False(0)
- Matching(0)