Deck 6: Measurement, Validity, and Reliability

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Question
How do variables and constants differ?
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Question
What is operationalization?
Question
Why do we code survey answers into numbers?
Question
What is the difference between mutually exclusive and exhaustive?
Question
How do discrete and continuous variables differ?
Question
What are the two types of criterion validity?
Question
Which type of reliability becomes an issue only when we have multiple researchers working on a project together?
Question
What is the difference between interval-level data and ratio level data?
Question
______ is the process of defining concepts to make them measurable for research.

A) Sampling
B) Operationalization
C) Coding
D) Scaling
Question
A _______, such as victim harm, is a specifiable aspect of a concept.

A) Dimension
B) Code
C) Scale
D) Hypothesis
Question
Robert is interested in researching the impact of drug court participation on later recidivism. In this case, drug court participation is considered the ________________.

A) Control variable
B) Dependent variable
C) Independent variable
D) not enough information to tell
Question
Sam is interested in researching the factors associated with juvenile delinquency. We think that poor school performance will be associated with increased delinquent behavior, but we are also concerned about whether delinquent peer associations might also impact delinquency levels, so we want to take that into consideration as well. In this case, peer associations are considered ______.

A) A control variable
B) A dependent variable
C) An independent variable
D) not enough information to tell
Question
What is the process of assigning numerical values to answer options on our surveys?

A) Operationalization
B) Measurement
C) Analyzing
D) Coding
Question
A _______ survey item has only one possible answer option per respondent.

A) Open-ended
B) Coded
C) Mutually exclusive
D) Controlled
Question
A variable with a finite number of values is known as __________.

A) Mutually exclusive
B) Close-ended
C) Exhaustive
D) Discrete
Question
What level of measurement is a variable asking students to tell us how many college credits they have completed?

A) Nominal
B) Ordinal
C) Interval
D) Ratio
Question
What level of measurement is a variable asking each competitive eater what rank he/she got in the last chicken-wing eating competition?

A) Nominal
B) Ordinal
C) Interval
D) Ratio
Question
Adding up a number of responses to survey items gives us a(n) _________.

A) Exhaustive response set
B) Set of codes
C) Continuous variable
D) Index
Question
The extent to which our measure is capturing the full range and meaning of the concept in question is called __________.

A) Content validity
B) Concurrent validity
C) Inter-rater reliability
D) Criterion validity
Question
The extent to which our measure works well when compared to other items is called __________.

A) Concurrent validity
B) Content validity
C) Inter-rater reliability
D) Criterion validity
Question
The stability or consistency of a measurement is known as __________

A) Reliability
B) Criterion validity
C) Face validity
D) Content validity
Question
The highest levels of measurement, and the most informative, are ________ and ____________.

A) Nominal and Ordinal
B) Ordinal and Ratio
C) Nominal and Interval
D) Interval and Ratio
Question
If I distributed surveys to only a group of surgeons, the question of what job they have would be considered a variable.
Question
If we suspect that those who drop out of a court-recommended anger management program will be more likely to be arrested within a year, arrest is considered the dependent variable.
Question
In research we study how the dependent variable impacts the independent variable.
Question
It is easier to code close-ended survey questions than open-ended ones.
Question
As long as there is an answer option for every possible respondent, our survey item is mutually exclusive.
Question
A question "what is your hair color" would have ordinal-level response options.
Question
Likert scales are generally on a scale of 0 to 100.
Question
Validity refers to the stability or consistency of a measure.
Question
Reliability refers to the stability or consistency of a measure.
Question
Ensuring that all the researchers conducting data collection were trained in the same manner is an example of face validity.
Question
Predictive validity assessments, such as the SATs and GREs, aim to predict future performance.
Question
Once a measure is determined to be reliable, it is also always found to be valid.
Question
Discuss the four different levels of measurement and the types of information we can get from each.
Question
How can using multiple data collection methods help to test for and enhance validity and reliability. Provide at least one example of how we can do this.
Question
A __________ is a rather vague abstract that might cause different people to conjure different meanings.
Question
We need to ___________ concepts to make them measurable.
Question
A _________ is an attribute that does not vary at all from case to case.
Question
Having an answer option available on a close-ended survey question for all possible survey respondents means our item is __________ .
Question
Having an one, and only one, answer option available per respondent on a close-ended survey question means our item is __________ .
Question
________ level of measurement simply codes the answer options and provides us with the least amount of detail.
Question
_______ refers to the extent to which we are accurately measuring what we intend to measure.
Question
The _________ method involves including several items on a survey that measure the same construct and testing half of them against the other half for reliability.
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Deck 6: Measurement, Validity, and Reliability
1
How do variables and constants differ?
Variables differ from case to case, but a constant is the same for our entire sample.
2
What is operationalization?
The process of taking concepts and more defining them in a way that makes them measurable.
3
Why do we code survey answers into numbers?
We do that, because the statistical software packages will not run tests on words.
4
What is the difference between mutually exclusive and exhaustive?
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5
How do discrete and continuous variables differ?
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6
What are the two types of criterion validity?
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7
Which type of reliability becomes an issue only when we have multiple researchers working on a project together?
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8
What is the difference between interval-level data and ratio level data?
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9
______ is the process of defining concepts to make them measurable for research.

A) Sampling
B) Operationalization
C) Coding
D) Scaling
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10
A _______, such as victim harm, is a specifiable aspect of a concept.

A) Dimension
B) Code
C) Scale
D) Hypothesis
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11
Robert is interested in researching the impact of drug court participation on later recidivism. In this case, drug court participation is considered the ________________.

A) Control variable
B) Dependent variable
C) Independent variable
D) not enough information to tell
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k this deck
12
Sam is interested in researching the factors associated with juvenile delinquency. We think that poor school performance will be associated with increased delinquent behavior, but we are also concerned about whether delinquent peer associations might also impact delinquency levels, so we want to take that into consideration as well. In this case, peer associations are considered ______.

A) A control variable
B) A dependent variable
C) An independent variable
D) not enough information to tell
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k this deck
13
What is the process of assigning numerical values to answer options on our surveys?

A) Operationalization
B) Measurement
C) Analyzing
D) Coding
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14
A _______ survey item has only one possible answer option per respondent.

A) Open-ended
B) Coded
C) Mutually exclusive
D) Controlled
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15
A variable with a finite number of values is known as __________.

A) Mutually exclusive
B) Close-ended
C) Exhaustive
D) Discrete
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16
What level of measurement is a variable asking students to tell us how many college credits they have completed?

A) Nominal
B) Ordinal
C) Interval
D) Ratio
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17
What level of measurement is a variable asking each competitive eater what rank he/she got in the last chicken-wing eating competition?

A) Nominal
B) Ordinal
C) Interval
D) Ratio
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18
Adding up a number of responses to survey items gives us a(n) _________.

A) Exhaustive response set
B) Set of codes
C) Continuous variable
D) Index
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k this deck
19
The extent to which our measure is capturing the full range and meaning of the concept in question is called __________.

A) Content validity
B) Concurrent validity
C) Inter-rater reliability
D) Criterion validity
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20
The extent to which our measure works well when compared to other items is called __________.

A) Concurrent validity
B) Content validity
C) Inter-rater reliability
D) Criterion validity
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21
The stability or consistency of a measurement is known as __________

A) Reliability
B) Criterion validity
C) Face validity
D) Content validity
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22
The highest levels of measurement, and the most informative, are ________ and ____________.

A) Nominal and Ordinal
B) Ordinal and Ratio
C) Nominal and Interval
D) Interval and Ratio
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23
If I distributed surveys to only a group of surgeons, the question of what job they have would be considered a variable.
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24
If we suspect that those who drop out of a court-recommended anger management program will be more likely to be arrested within a year, arrest is considered the dependent variable.
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25
In research we study how the dependent variable impacts the independent variable.
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26
It is easier to code close-ended survey questions than open-ended ones.
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27
As long as there is an answer option for every possible respondent, our survey item is mutually exclusive.
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28
A question "what is your hair color" would have ordinal-level response options.
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29
Likert scales are generally on a scale of 0 to 100.
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30
Validity refers to the stability or consistency of a measure.
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31
Reliability refers to the stability or consistency of a measure.
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32
Ensuring that all the researchers conducting data collection were trained in the same manner is an example of face validity.
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33
Predictive validity assessments, such as the SATs and GREs, aim to predict future performance.
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34
Once a measure is determined to be reliable, it is also always found to be valid.
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35
Discuss the four different levels of measurement and the types of information we can get from each.
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36
How can using multiple data collection methods help to test for and enhance validity and reliability. Provide at least one example of how we can do this.
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37
A __________ is a rather vague abstract that might cause different people to conjure different meanings.
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38
We need to ___________ concepts to make them measurable.
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39
A _________ is an attribute that does not vary at all from case to case.
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40
Having an answer option available on a close-ended survey question for all possible survey respondents means our item is __________ .
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41
Having an one, and only one, answer option available per respondent on a close-ended survey question means our item is __________ .
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42
________ level of measurement simply codes the answer options and provides us with the least amount of detail.
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43
_______ refers to the extent to which we are accurately measuring what we intend to measure.
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44
The _________ method involves including several items on a survey that measure the same construct and testing half of them against the other half for reliability.
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