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VALIDITY & RELIABILITY
VALIDITY
Validity refers to the degree of
appropriateness, correctness, truthfulness
and accuracy of the study. In other words,
the procedure shall measure what is
intended to measure.
Types of Validity

• Content Validity - pertains to the degree
  to which the instrument fully assesses or
  measures the construct of interest. For
  example, an educational test with strong
  content validity will represent the subjects
  actually taught to students, rather than
  asking unrelated questions.
• Face Validity - is a component of content
  validity and is established when an
  individual reviewing the instrument
  concludes that it measures the
  characteristic or trait of interest. It requires
  a personal judgment, such as asking
  participants whether they thought that a
  test was well constructed and useful.
• Criterion Validity - assesses whether a
  test reflects a certain set of abilities. To
  measure the criterion validity of a test,
  researchers must calibrate it against a
  known standard or against itself.
  Example:
  One famous example is when Coca-Cola
  decided to change the flavor of their
  trademark drink.
RELIABILITY
The degree of consistency between two
 measures of the same thing.
The measure of how stable, dependable,
 trustworthy, and consistent a test is in
 measuring the same thing each time
Reliability is the extent to which an
 experiment, test, or any measuring
 procedure yields the same result on
 repeated trials.
4 TYPES OF RELIABILITY
1. Equivalency Reliability - is the extent to
   which two items measure identical
   concepts at an identical level of difficulty.
 Also called alternate forms reliability, this
   type of reliability is used when there is an
   equivalent test (or another form of the
   same test) available. Both tests are
   administered and a correlation between
   the two is calculated.
2. Stability Reliability - sometimes called
  test, re-test reliability) is the agreement of
  measuring instruments over time.
this method requires two administrations of
  the same test, separated by some time
  delay (a few days to a few weeks). The
  scores between the two tests are then
  correlated.
3. Internal consistency is the extent to
  which tests or procedures assess the
  same characteristic, skill or quality.

Measures how well one part of a single test
 correlates to another part of the same test.
• For example, a researcher designs a
  questionnaire to find out about college
  students' dissatisfaction with a particular
  textbook. Analyzing the internal
  consistency of the survey items dealing
  with dissatisfaction will reveal the extent to
  which items on the questionnaire focus on
  the notion of dissatisfaction.
4.Interrater reliability is the extent to which
  two or more individuals agree. Interrater
  reliability addresses the consistency of the
  implementation of a rating system
Statistical Treatment of Data
Basic Statistics
1. MEAN - The average of a set of n data x

   M = ∑x

      n
Standard Deviation
Deviation just means how far from the
  normal.
• Its symbol is σ (the greek letter sigma)
The formula is easy: it is the square root of
  the Variance. So now you ask, "What is
  the Variance?"
What is a Variance?

• The average of the squared differences
  from the Mean.
You and your friends have just measured the heights of
your dogs (in millimeters):




  The heights (at the shoulders) are: 600mm, 470mm, 170mm, 430mm
  and 300mm.

  Find out the Mean, the Variance, and the Standard Deviation.
•   Step 1: Mean   =   600 + 470 + 170 + 430 + 300 = 1970 = 394
                                    5                 5
    so the mean (average) height is 394 mm.
Step 2: o calculate the Variance, take each difference,
square it, and then average the result:
Standard Deviation: square root of variance


        21,704

= 147.32... = 147 (to the nearest mm)
And the good thing about the Standard Deviation is that it is useful. Now we
can show which heights are within one Standard Deviation (147mm) of the
Mean:

So, using the Standard Deviation we have a "standard" way of knowing what
is normal, and what is extra large or extra small.
Rottweilers are tall dogs. And Dachshunds are a bit short ..
Let’s try:
Compute the Standard Deviation of the survey conducted
  by the 4th yr. researchers on the level of customer
  satisfaction of a ABC Restaurant:
Out 30 respondents, this is what they gathered:
                 Not satisfied    =     4
                 Moderately satisfied = 7
                 Satisfied            = 9
                 Very Satisfied       = 6
                 Extremely Satisfied = 4
Mean = 6
Variance = (-2)2 + (1)2 + (3)2 + (0)2 + (-2)2
         =4+1+9+0+4
         = 18
Standard Deviation =         18      = 9

Majority of the respondents are “satisfied” in the customer
  service of ABC Restaurant.
Summary, Conclusion and
RECOMMENDATION
Results of Summary

You should keep this section brief and
identify the result with a general statement
paragraph which it then followed by
another paragraph that supports the
evidence collected. You should avoid
interpretation here and thus be objective
about the results.
Discussion of Results
You should discuss the meaning of the
results here, in brief, and highlight any
important areas that you have identified.
You should also look at the different things
that the study means and how this is
evaluated to the overall understanding in
your thesis.
Recommendations
• These could be to your employer or to the
  academic community. You will want to
  keep this section brief and maybe to one
  paragraph or two, and explain what, from
  the research that has been conducted,
  there will be recommendations to the
  organizations or, if you are presenting to
  academia, then what further research
  should be conducted in the future
BIBLIOGRAPHY
APPENDICES
CURRICULUM VITAE
Bibliography
                            APA Style
•   References. Alphabetize the entries in your list by the author's last
    name, using the letter-by-letter system (ignore spaces and other
    punctuation.) Only the initials of the first and middle names are
    given. If the author's name is unknown, alphabetize by the title,
    ignoring any A, An, or The.

Example:
• Allen, T. (1974). Vanishing Wildlife of North America. Washington,
  D.C.: National Geographic Society.
• Boorstin, D. (1992). The creators: A history of the heroes of the
  imagination. New York: Random House.
• Nicol, A. M., & Pexman, P. M. (1999). Presenting your findings: A
  practical guide for creating tables. Washington, DC: American
  Psychological Association.
• For dates, spell out the names of months in the text of
  your paper, but abbreviate them in the list of works
  cited, except for May, June, and July.

Example : (22 July 1999) or the month-day-year style (July
  22, 1999)
Underlining or Italics?
Typewriter : Publications were underlined
(typewriters have no italics)
  Hand : Name of publication were underlined
  Computer : Publications should be written in
italics
Hanging Indentation
All APA citations should use hanging indents,
that is, the first line of an entry should be flush
left, and the second and subsequent lines
should be indented 1/2".
Capitalization, Abbreviation,
         and Punctuation
•   Capitalize only the first word of a title and subtitle. The exceptions to
    this rule would be periodical titles and proper names in a title which
    should still be capitalized. The periodical title is run in title case, and
    is followed by the volume number which, with the title, is also
    italicized.
•   If there is more than one author, use an ampersand (&) before the
    name of the last author. If there are more than six authors, list only
    the first one and use et al. for the rest.
•   Place the date of publication in parentheses immediately after the
    name of the author. Place a period after the closing parenthesis. Do
    not italicize, underline, or put quotes around the titles of shorter
    works within longer works
FORMAT EXAMPLE:
Books :
Author's last name, first initial. (Publication date). Book title.
  Additional information. City of publication: Publishing
  company.

Example:
Allen, T. (1974). Vanishing wildlife of North America.
   Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society.
Boorstin, D. (1992). The creators: A history of the heroes of
   the imagination. New York: Random House
ENCYCLOPEDIA & DICTIONARY:
Format:
  Author's last name, first initial. (Date). Title of Article.
  Title of Encyclopedia (Volume, pages). City of
  publication: Publishing company.
Example:
Bergmann, P. G. (1993). Relativity. In The new
  encyclopedia britannica (Vol. 26, pp. 501-508). Chicago:
  Encyclopedia Britannica.
Merriam-Webster's collegiate dictionary (10th ed.). (1993).
  Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster.
Magazine & Newspaper Articles
Format:
  Author's last name, first initial. (Publication date). Article
  title. Periodical title, volume number(issue number if
  available), inclusive pages.
Example:
Harlow, H. F. (1983). Fundamentals for preparing psychology
  journal articles. Journal of Comparative and Physiological
  Psychology, 55, 893-896.
Henry, W. A., III. (1990, April 9). Making the grade in today's
  schools. Time, 135, 28-31.
Website or Webpage
Format:
  Online periodical:
  Author's name. (Date of publication). Title of article. Title of
  Periodical, volume number, Retrieved month day, year, from full
  URLOnline document:
  Author's name. (Date of publication). Title of work. Retrieved month
  day, year, from full URL

Ex.
Devitt, T. (2001, August 2). Lightning injures four at music festival. The
   Why? Files. Retrieved January 23, 2002, from
   http://whyfiles.org/137lightning/index.html
References

Battery. (1990). Encyclopedia britannica. (pp. 100-101). Chicago:
Encyclopedia Britannica.
Best batteries. (December 1994). Consumer Reports Magazine, 32, 71-72.
Booth, Steven A. (January 1999). High-Drain Alkaline AA-Batteries. Popular
Electronics, 62, 58.
Brain, Marshall. How batteries work. howstuffworks. Retrieved August 1,
2006, from http://home.howstuffworks.com/battery.htm
Cells and batteries. (1993). The DK science encyclopedia. New York: DK
Publishing.
Dell, R. M., and D. A. J. Rand. (2001). Understanding batteries. Cambridge,
UK: The Royal Society of Chemistry.
Learning center. Energizer. Eveready Battery Company, Inc. Retrieved
August 1, 2006, from http://www.energizer.com/learning/default.asp
Learning centre. Duracell. The Gillette Company. Retrieved July 31, 2006,
from http://www.duracell.com/au/main/pages/learning-centre-what-is-a-
battery.asp

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Chapter 6 validity & reliability

  • 2. VALIDITY Validity refers to the degree of appropriateness, correctness, truthfulness and accuracy of the study. In other words, the procedure shall measure what is intended to measure.
  • 3. Types of Validity • Content Validity - pertains to the degree to which the instrument fully assesses or measures the construct of interest. For example, an educational test with strong content validity will represent the subjects actually taught to students, rather than asking unrelated questions.
  • 4. • Face Validity - is a component of content validity and is established when an individual reviewing the instrument concludes that it measures the characteristic or trait of interest. It requires a personal judgment, such as asking participants whether they thought that a test was well constructed and useful.
  • 5. • Criterion Validity - assesses whether a test reflects a certain set of abilities. To measure the criterion validity of a test, researchers must calibrate it against a known standard or against itself. Example: One famous example is when Coca-Cola decided to change the flavor of their trademark drink.
  • 6. RELIABILITY The degree of consistency between two measures of the same thing. The measure of how stable, dependable, trustworthy, and consistent a test is in measuring the same thing each time Reliability is the extent to which an experiment, test, or any measuring procedure yields the same result on repeated trials.
  • 7. 4 TYPES OF RELIABILITY 1. Equivalency Reliability - is the extent to which two items measure identical concepts at an identical level of difficulty.  Also called alternate forms reliability, this type of reliability is used when there is an equivalent test (or another form of the same test) available. Both tests are administered and a correlation between the two is calculated.
  • 8. 2. Stability Reliability - sometimes called test, re-test reliability) is the agreement of measuring instruments over time. this method requires two administrations of the same test, separated by some time delay (a few days to a few weeks). The scores between the two tests are then correlated.
  • 9. 3. Internal consistency is the extent to which tests or procedures assess the same characteristic, skill or quality. Measures how well one part of a single test correlates to another part of the same test.
  • 10. • For example, a researcher designs a questionnaire to find out about college students' dissatisfaction with a particular textbook. Analyzing the internal consistency of the survey items dealing with dissatisfaction will reveal the extent to which items on the questionnaire focus on the notion of dissatisfaction.
  • 11. 4.Interrater reliability is the extent to which two or more individuals agree. Interrater reliability addresses the consistency of the implementation of a rating system
  • 13. Basic Statistics 1. MEAN - The average of a set of n data x M = ∑x n
  • 14. Standard Deviation Deviation just means how far from the normal. • Its symbol is σ (the greek letter sigma) The formula is easy: it is the square root of the Variance. So now you ask, "What is the Variance?"
  • 15. What is a Variance? • The average of the squared differences from the Mean.
  • 16. You and your friends have just measured the heights of your dogs (in millimeters): The heights (at the shoulders) are: 600mm, 470mm, 170mm, 430mm and 300mm. Find out the Mean, the Variance, and the Standard Deviation.
  • 17. Step 1: Mean = 600 + 470 + 170 + 430 + 300 = 1970 = 394 5 5 so the mean (average) height is 394 mm.
  • 18. Step 2: o calculate the Variance, take each difference, square it, and then average the result:
  • 19.
  • 20. Standard Deviation: square root of variance 21,704 = 147.32... = 147 (to the nearest mm)
  • 21. And the good thing about the Standard Deviation is that it is useful. Now we can show which heights are within one Standard Deviation (147mm) of the Mean: So, using the Standard Deviation we have a "standard" way of knowing what is normal, and what is extra large or extra small. Rottweilers are tall dogs. And Dachshunds are a bit short ..
  • 22. Let’s try: Compute the Standard Deviation of the survey conducted by the 4th yr. researchers on the level of customer satisfaction of a ABC Restaurant: Out 30 respondents, this is what they gathered: Not satisfied = 4 Moderately satisfied = 7 Satisfied = 9 Very Satisfied = 6 Extremely Satisfied = 4
  • 23. Mean = 6 Variance = (-2)2 + (1)2 + (3)2 + (0)2 + (-2)2 =4+1+9+0+4 = 18 Standard Deviation = 18 = 9 Majority of the respondents are “satisfied” in the customer service of ABC Restaurant.
  • 25. Results of Summary You should keep this section brief and identify the result with a general statement paragraph which it then followed by another paragraph that supports the evidence collected. You should avoid interpretation here and thus be objective about the results.
  • 26. Discussion of Results You should discuss the meaning of the results here, in brief, and highlight any important areas that you have identified. You should also look at the different things that the study means and how this is evaluated to the overall understanding in your thesis.
  • 27. Recommendations • These could be to your employer or to the academic community. You will want to keep this section brief and maybe to one paragraph or two, and explain what, from the research that has been conducted, there will be recommendations to the organizations or, if you are presenting to academia, then what further research should be conducted in the future
  • 29. Bibliography APA Style • References. Alphabetize the entries in your list by the author's last name, using the letter-by-letter system (ignore spaces and other punctuation.) Only the initials of the first and middle names are given. If the author's name is unknown, alphabetize by the title, ignoring any A, An, or The. Example: • Allen, T. (1974). Vanishing Wildlife of North America. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society. • Boorstin, D. (1992). The creators: A history of the heroes of the imagination. New York: Random House. • Nicol, A. M., & Pexman, P. M. (1999). Presenting your findings: A practical guide for creating tables. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
  • 30. • For dates, spell out the names of months in the text of your paper, but abbreviate them in the list of works cited, except for May, June, and July. Example : (22 July 1999) or the month-day-year style (July 22, 1999)
  • 31. Underlining or Italics? Typewriter : Publications were underlined (typewriters have no italics) Hand : Name of publication were underlined Computer : Publications should be written in italics
  • 32. Hanging Indentation All APA citations should use hanging indents, that is, the first line of an entry should be flush left, and the second and subsequent lines should be indented 1/2".
  • 33. Capitalization, Abbreviation, and Punctuation • Capitalize only the first word of a title and subtitle. The exceptions to this rule would be periodical titles and proper names in a title which should still be capitalized. The periodical title is run in title case, and is followed by the volume number which, with the title, is also italicized. • If there is more than one author, use an ampersand (&) before the name of the last author. If there are more than six authors, list only the first one and use et al. for the rest. • Place the date of publication in parentheses immediately after the name of the author. Place a period after the closing parenthesis. Do not italicize, underline, or put quotes around the titles of shorter works within longer works
  • 34. FORMAT EXAMPLE: Books : Author's last name, first initial. (Publication date). Book title. Additional information. City of publication: Publishing company. Example: Allen, T. (1974). Vanishing wildlife of North America. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society. Boorstin, D. (1992). The creators: A history of the heroes of the imagination. New York: Random House
  • 35. ENCYCLOPEDIA & DICTIONARY: Format: Author's last name, first initial. (Date). Title of Article. Title of Encyclopedia (Volume, pages). City of publication: Publishing company. Example: Bergmann, P. G. (1993). Relativity. In The new encyclopedia britannica (Vol. 26, pp. 501-508). Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica. Merriam-Webster's collegiate dictionary (10th ed.). (1993). Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster.
  • 36. Magazine & Newspaper Articles Format: Author's last name, first initial. (Publication date). Article title. Periodical title, volume number(issue number if available), inclusive pages. Example: Harlow, H. F. (1983). Fundamentals for preparing psychology journal articles. Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 55, 893-896. Henry, W. A., III. (1990, April 9). Making the grade in today's schools. Time, 135, 28-31.
  • 37. Website or Webpage Format: Online periodical: Author's name. (Date of publication). Title of article. Title of Periodical, volume number, Retrieved month day, year, from full URLOnline document: Author's name. (Date of publication). Title of work. Retrieved month day, year, from full URL Ex. Devitt, T. (2001, August 2). Lightning injures four at music festival. The Why? Files. Retrieved January 23, 2002, from http://whyfiles.org/137lightning/index.html
  • 38. References Battery. (1990). Encyclopedia britannica. (pp. 100-101). Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica. Best batteries. (December 1994). Consumer Reports Magazine, 32, 71-72. Booth, Steven A. (January 1999). High-Drain Alkaline AA-Batteries. Popular Electronics, 62, 58. Brain, Marshall. How batteries work. howstuffworks. Retrieved August 1, 2006, from http://home.howstuffworks.com/battery.htm Cells and batteries. (1993). The DK science encyclopedia. New York: DK Publishing. Dell, R. M., and D. A. J. Rand. (2001). Understanding batteries. Cambridge, UK: The Royal Society of Chemistry. Learning center. Energizer. Eveready Battery Company, Inc. Retrieved August 1, 2006, from http://www.energizer.com/learning/default.asp Learning centre. Duracell. The Gillette Company. Retrieved July 31, 2006, from http://www.duracell.com/au/main/pages/learning-centre-what-is-a- battery.asp

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Validity and Reliability are two important characteristics of both the research process and research output.
  2. Diligently, they researched whether people liked the new flavor, performing taste tests and giving out questionnaires. People loved the new flavor, so Coca-Cola rushed New Coke into production, where it was a titanic flop. The mistake that Coke made was that they forgot about criterion validity, and omitted one important question from the survey.   People were not asked if they preferred the new flavor to the old, a failure to establish concurrent validity. The Old Coke, known to be popular, was the perfect benchmark, but it was never used. A simple blind taste test, asking people which flavor they preferred out of the two, would have saved Coca Cola millions of dollars.
  3. For example, a researcher designs a questionnaire to find out about college students' dissatisfaction with a particular textbook. Analyzing the internal consistency of the survey items dealing with dissatisfaction will reveal the extent to which items on the questionnaire focus on the notion of dissatisfaction.
  4. Two or more researchers are observing a high school classroom. The class is discussing a movie that they have just viewed as a group. The researchers have a sliding rating scale (1 being most positive, 5 being most negative) with which they are rating the student's oral responses. Interrater reliability assesses the consistency of how the rating system is implemented. For example, if one researcher gives a "1" to a student response, while another researcher gives a "5," obviously the interrater reliability would be inconsistent. Interrater reliability is dependent upon the ability of two or more individuals to be consistent. Training, education and monitoring skills can enhance interrater reliability.
  5. Scientists frequently use  statistics to analyze  their results.  Why do researchers use statistics?  Statistics can help understand a phenomenon by confirming or rejecting a hypothesis. It is vital to how we acquire knowledge to most scientific theories.
  6.   Statistical treatment of data also involves describing the data. The best way to do this is through the measures of central tendencies like mean, median and mode. These help the researcher explain in short how the data are concentrated. Range, uncertainty and standard deviation help to understand the distribution of the data. Therefore two distributions with the same mean can have wildly different standard deviation, which shows how well the data points are concentrated around the mean.
  7. Note: Variance: Rotweiller = 600 – 394 = 206
  8. So, the Variance is  21,704 . And the Standard Deviation is just the square root of Variance, so:
  9. Mean = 4 +7+9+6+4 = 30/5 = 6 Variance = Not satisfied : 4-6 = -2 Mod.satisfied : 7-6 = 1 Satisfied : 9-6 = 3 Very Satisfied = 6-6 = 0 Extremely satisfied = 4-6 = -2
  10. When reports were written on typewriters, the names of publications were underlined because most typewriters had no way to print italics. If you write a bibliography by hand, you should still underline the names of publications. But, if you use a computer, then publication names should be in italics as they are below. Always check with your instructor regarding their preference of using italics or underlining
  11. Format: Books : Author's last name, first initial. (Publication date). Book title . Additional information. City of publication: Publishing company. Encyclopedia : Author's last name, first initial. (Date). Title of Article. Title of Encyclopedia (Volume, pages). City of publication: Publishing company. Examples:
  12. Note: Do not enclose the title in quotation marks. Put a period after the title. If a periodical includes a volume number, italicize it and then give the page range (in regular type) without "pp." If the periodical does not use volume numbers, as in newspapers, use p . or pp . for page numbers. Note: Unlike other periodicals, p. or pp. precedes page numbers for a newspaper reference in APA style.
  13. Note: When citing Internet sources, refer to the specific website document. If a document is undated, use "n.d." (for no date) immediately after the document title. Break a lengthy URL that goes to another line after a slash or before a period. Continually check your references to online documents. There is no period following a URL. Note: If you cannot find some of this information, cite what is available.