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 EDF 5481-01       FALL 2001
WELCOME!
METHODS OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Department of Educational Research
Florida State University
COURSE OVERVIEW
REQUIRED MATERIALS
ASSIGNMENTS
WEB-ASSISTED INFO
COURSE TOPICS

 
GUIDE 1: INTRODUCTION
GUIDE 2: VARIABLES AND HYPOTHESES
GUIDE 3: RELIABILITY, VALIDITY, CAUSALITY, AND EXPERIMENTS
GUIDE 4: EXPERIMENTS & QUASI-EXPERIMENTS
GUIDE 5: A SURVEY RESEARCH PRIMER
GUIDE 6: FOCUS GROUP BASICS
GUIDE 7: LESS STRUCTURED METHODS
GUIDE 8: ARCHIVES AND DATABASES
Fall 2001
MY OFFICE: 307L Stone Building 
850-644-8778 
OFFICE HOURS: 1-3 P.M. Monday & Wednesday
(please see me about other days or times)

slosh@garnet.acns.fsu.edu

FSU Stone Building 
INSTRUCTOR: Professor Susan Carol Losh
126  Stone Building
Wednesdays  3:35-6:00 P.M.
CLICK HERE  to find the Stone Building

PLEASE INFORM ME IMMEDIATELY IF YOU REQUIRE ANY ASSISTANCE WITH DISABILITIES!
 

COURSE OVERVIEW

In METHODS OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH we study how researchers conceptualize and collect research data. You will learn how to construct  a research question and how to search the relevant literature, as well as about issues arising in:

Along the way, we will examine practical applications and problems that can occur in trying to translate concepts into concrete research operations.

There is more to methods than learning about different types of study designs. Each researcher hopes and believes that they will demonstrate valid relationships among factors, typically valid causal relationships. When we are able to establish causality, we have a much better idea about which policy changes are feasible, how to design a better curriculum, or how to motivate players to a better performance. But the road to causal influence is often difficult, presenting unforeseen obstacles. A solid grounding in methodology will help you to identify and either overcome or compensate for such obstacles.

Even if you engage in other professional tasks besides conducting research studies, there should be important outcomes for you as a result of this course. These include:

EDF 5481-01 is an introductory graduate course. For many students, this may also be the only course on data collection elected during one's entire graduate school career. Thus we study the fundamentals of several methods. This approach means our course is very intense; you will be exposed to several very different methods during the semester. Each method has unique problems to be addressed, and each has unique advantages and disadvantages. Take a deep breath! You are about to encounter a lot of terminology and an “information overload” of concepts.
 
NOTE: Our greatest focus will be on more structured (sometimes called more "quantitative") research methods. For more depth on less structured, more "qualitative" methods, please click HERE for a list of possible courses.

Previous experience with research methods and statistics may be helpful, but is definitely not essential. There will be very, very few formulas, and virtually no applications of statistics in this course. As you may know, Educational Research has several statistics courses but only ONE basic course on data collection.

By the end of the semester you should:

REQUIRED COURSE TEXTS & READINGS

McMILLAN:   James H. McMillan (2000) Educational Research: Fundamentals for the Consumer, THIRD EDITION. New York: Longman. Paper. ISBN = 0-321-02337

WIERSMA:  William Wiersma (2000). Research Methods in Education: An Introduction, SEVENTH EDITION.  Boston: Allyn and Bacon. Cloth. ISBN = 0-205-28492-2

COURSE LECTURES will be placed on the Internet and linked in with each course topic.

COURSE ASSIGNMENTS

ACCESS ASSIGNMENT FIVE WEBSITE HERE

Below is information about  assignments, exams, due dates, and course weights. There will be three equally weighted exams, each about one hour. While each exam will focus on the immediately prior units, be advised that much of the methods material is cumulative in nature. In addition, if a concept or concepts appeared to give considerable trouble in one exam, there will probably be questions addressing that concept on the next exam. Exams will be a mix of short answer, short essay and multiple choice and have a strong problem-solving orientation.

Assignments are weighted so that if you make a mistake, it will not hurt your final grade to a large extent, and mistakes can then be corrected on the exams, which weight more heavily.

Details on each assignment will be posted to our course WEB site prior to the due date.

Assignments have two primary foci:

  1. To help develop your research interests in your discipline by writing a research problem statement, hypotheses, and a structured data collection procedure (especially assignments 1-3) and
  2. To alert you to common problems that occur with different kinds of methodologies and ways to solve these problems.

 
ASSIGNMENT
DUE DATE
COURSE WEIGHT
1: Research Problem Statement September 14 5 percent
2. Dual Assignment:
Research Hypotheses & Experimental Critique
September 21 5 percent
EXAM ONE (STUDY GUIDE HERE) October 3 25 percent
3. Dual Assignment:
Question/Procedures Design & Survey Research Critique
October 24 5 percent
EXAM TWO (STUDY GUIDE HERE) November 7 25 percent
4. Qualitative Design Critique November 28 5 percent
5. Database Search December 12 5 percent
Scheduled EXAM THREE (STUDY GUIDE HERE) December 12 5:30 P.M 25 percent

 
A NOTE ON ASSIGNMENT DUE DATES

 
As you examine the syllabus you will see that Assignments 1 and 2 are due two days after a unit ends on a Friday BY NOON in my mailbox in 307L Stone Building. Assignments 3, 4 and 5 are due by our class period. We are on a tight schedule so assignments must reach me BY THE DUE DATE. Because of the intensive nature of this course, late assignments are not accepted.

 
I AM SORRY. I DO NOT ACCEPT EMAIL ATTACHMENTS!

THIS POLICY HAS BEEN UPDATED. I PREFER NOT TO RECEIVE EMAIL ATTACHMENTS (three virus attempts just last week) BUT IF THE CIRCUMSTANCES ARE DIRE (FINAL DRAFT ASSIGNMENTS ONLY), YOU CAN SEND HERE: 

PLEASE DO NOT SLIDE PAPERS UNDER MY DOOR OR UNDER THE EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH SUITE DOOR!

There have been too many problems with computer viruses. This is especially true for University computers, which have proven to be hotbeds of infection. In addition, one of my Eudora programs CANNOT convert documents coming from a MAC and turns them into unreadable binary code instead. 

DO NOT slide papers under my office door.They may or may not be placed on my desk--where I may not be able to find them! Similar problems occur with materials slid under the Educational Research suite door.

Here are some alternatives if you absolutely cannot hand assignments to me in person:

  • My office mailbox in 307 Stone Building
  • FAX to the Educational Research Office (850) 644-8776. Be sure to put my name and EDF 5481 on the Cover Sheet and include the total number of pages
  • Mail (USE FIVE DAYS ADVANCE NOTICE!)  to Dr. Susan Carol Losh, Educational Research, FSU, Tallahassee, FL 32306-4453
  • Include as text in an email. PLEASE DO NOT USE HTML, which my Eudora programs will turn into unreadable source code.
In all these alternatives, your assignment MUST reach me by the stated due  dates. Please be sure to include your name!

During the semester, I may ask for a copy of your work on disk. All disks are scanned with Norton or McAfee Anti Virus software. I will let you know if your disk is infected.
 
More information about course assignments will be posted and linked later in the semester prior to the assignment. 
Be sure to visit this site again!

 
GRADING CONSIDERATIONS

While each assignment focuses on unit readings and other course requirements, material on research methods is cumulative by nature. For example, principles of internal or external validity are considered throughout, even if their applications more directly apply to one research method as opposed to another.

I use plus and minus grading, throughout and for final grades. Improvement over the course of the semester is considered in grading, and exams weight more heavily  toward your final grade than exercises. Adherence to principles of essay organization, and the conventions of spelling and grammar is expected and understood. Spell checkers on word processors are there to be used! I know that English is a second language for many students, but I also know that the overwhelming majority of international students are extremely careful with their writing. If I believe that you need assistance in principles of essay organization, etc., I will alert you so that you may take advantage of several of the FREE centers on campus that specialize in these areas.

WE’RE ONLINE!
Our course is WEB assisted through the CourseInfo/Blackboard 5.0 and WEB-MC  systems at FSU. You must be registered for edf5481-01 to access our site. To access our course, here is what to do. Go online to:

http://campus.fsu.edu

Enter your GARNET username (USERNAME ONLY!) and password to log in. For example, I would enter "slosh" ONLY and omit the "@garnet.acns.fsu.edu" part. Then click on “METH EDUCATNL RESRCH” to enter our site.

If you DON'T have a garnet account, you need to get one NOW. Go to the Academic Computing and Network Services website (address below) and follow the links to register online for your garnet account at FSU.

http://www.acns.fsu.edu

I will use WEB-assist for several course features:


BASIC COURSE TOPICS

 
DATES TOPICS TO BE COVERED ISSUES AND OBJECTIVES
August 29-
September 5
Introduction
Developing a Research Question
Types of Variables

Levels of Measurement
Concepts and Measurement
Hypotheses

Navigating our course WEB sites
How do you select a research problem?
Issues in alternative explanations
What are the characteristics of a variable?
What are nominal, ordinal, interval and ratio variables?
SEPTEMBER 3 LABOR DAY. University closed.  
September 12-
September 19
Causality and Internal Validity
Randomized treatment groups
Experiments 

Quasi-Experiments
Threats to Internal Validity
Experimental Objectivity

Reliability, Internal Validity, External Validity, and Construct Validity
Causal rules in nonexperimental designs
What makes an experiment?
How do experiments differ from "quasi" experiments?
Internal validity and study design
FRIDAY NOON
SEPTEMBER 14
MY MAILBOX
   ASSIGNMENT 1 DUE RESEARCH PROBLEM  STATEMENT DUE BY NOON
NO EXCEPTIONS
SEPTEMBER 19 Feedback on Assignment 1
THE "MILGRAM VIDEO "OBEDIENCE
An Experimental Example
FRIDAY NOON
SEPTEMBER 21
MY MAILBOX
ASSIGNMENT 2 DUE OBSERVE DUE DATE! NO EXCEPTIONS
(A) RESEARCH HYPOTHESES EXERCISE
(B) BRIEF EXPERIMENT CRITIQUE EXERCISE
September 26 External Validity and Generalizing
Introduction to Survey Research
Feedback on Assignment 2
"Catch up" and EXAM REVIEW
Types of Probability and Nonprobability samples
Type of Surveys
Question Construction
Interviewer Training
OCTOBER 3 "Catch up" and EXAM REVIEW
             EXAM ONE
EXAM ONE COVERS MATERIAL THROUGH SEPTEMBER 19
October 10-
October 17
Exam One Feedback
More on Survey Research
Probability and Non-Probability 
   Samples
Questionnaire Design
Interviewing
Focus on Focus Groups
See the special lectures associated with each of these topics. Click on the link to pull up each topic.
WEDNESDAY
OCTOBER 24
ASSIGNMENT 3 DUE BY CLASS (A) QUESTION DESIGN
(B) BRIEF SURVEY RESEARCH CRITIQUE 
October 24-
October 31
A "Whirlwind tour" of less structured studies:
Ethnographies Studies, Historical 
   Research,Content Analysis, "Gleaning"
Feedback on Assignment 3
Generic differences between more and less structured research
Terms & comparisons

TIMMS video: Observing  school math and science instruction in three cultures

OCTOBER 28 DAYLIGHT SAVINGS TIME ENDS.  Set your clocks back one hour. 
One more hour's sleep!
OCTOBER 31 "Catch up" and EXAM TWO REVIEW
  
NOVEMBER 7 "Catch up" and EXAM REVIEW
            EXAM TWO
EXAM COVERS THROUGH SURVEY RESEARCH AND FOCUS GROUPS
NOVEMBER 12 VETERAN'S DAY. University closed.     
November 14-
November 28
Exam Two Feedback
Research Resources on the Internet: Searching, Accessing, On-line analysis
 
 Learn about archives and databases.
 Problems to anticipate with databases.
 Where to hunt for databases.  
 Lots of links to databases you may be able to use.
NOVEMBER 21 NO CLASS. HAPPY THANKSGIVING! 
WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER 28
ASSIGNMENT 4 DUE BY CLASS QUALITATIVE DESIGN CRITIQUE
December 5 The Educated Consumer
Feedback on Assignment 4 
Last day of class.
"Catch up" and EXAM REVIEW
Alas, we will not get to the last unit, but there has been an emphasis on "the educated consumer" all semester so this largely would have been review.     
DECEMBER 12 ASSIGNMENT 5 DUE BY EXAM ONLINE DATABASE ASSIGMENT
DECEMBER 12 Scheduled Final Exam 5:30-7:30 P.M. EXAM THREE

A LECTURE (AND ASSOCIATED MATERIALS) WILL BE LINKED WITH EACH TOPIC AS THE SEMESTER PROGRESSES.
SPECIFIC COURSE OBJECTIVES WILL ALSO BE PRESENTED WITH EACH TOPIC AS THE SEMESTER PROGRESSES.
 
 DETAILED SCHEDULE OF EDF 5481 
READINGS AND ASSIGNMENT DUE DATES  HERE!

 
LEARN MORE ABOUT SYP 5105: 
THEORIES OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
CLICK HERE! 

This page created with Netscape Composer
and is best viewed with Netscape Navigator
600 X 800 display resolution.
Under construction with more to come as the semester progresses.
Your patience is appreciated.
Susan Carol Losh August 29, 2001.