Quant I
Quant II
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Qual I
Qual II
100

This feature distinguishes a true experiment from a quasi-experiment by helping control for preexisting group differences.

What is random assignment to groups? 

100

Gender and race are examples of variables measured with this type of scale. 

What is a nominal scale? 

100

This must include a description of any possible risks that could come from participating in the research study. 

What is an informed consent? 

100

This is a researcher's beliefs about how knowledge is gained. 

What is epistemology? 

100

This strategy for trustworthiness involves using several different sources of data. 

What is triangulation of data? 

200

Forgiveness, self-esteem, and intelligence are examples of this. 

What is a construct? 

200

Likert scales in counseling research are generally considered to be this type of scale. 

What is an interval scale? 

200

What is positive skew? 

200

This paradigm of qualitative research encompasses methods like content analysis and CQR that use strict procedures to minimize bias. 

What is postpositivism? 

200

This data analysis procedure involves coding data line-by-line and then organizing similar codes together. 

What is thematic analysis? 

300

This is the process of clearly defining how a concept will be measured in a study. 

What is operationalization? 

300

"There is no relationship between social anxiety and depression" is an example of this. 

What is a null hypothesis? 

300

Name 3 threats to internal validity of a quantitative experimental study. 

Maturation, history, testing, instrumentation, statistical regression to the mean, selection bias, attrition, mortality, experimenter bias

300

Qualitative research often uses this kind of sampling to find participants who will provide the deepest, richest data to "answer" the research question. 

What is purposeful (or purposive) sampling? 

300

This strategy for trustworthiness involves the researchers documenting their thoughts, biases, and reflections throughout the study. 

What is a reflexivity journal? 

400

This tells us how likely it is that a result is "real" and not just due to random chance. 

What is statistical significance, or p-value?

400

This is the maximum level of risk of a Type I error that most researchers are willing to accept. 

What is 5%, or .05? 

400

Name 2 threats to external validity of a quantitative experimental study. 

Interference of prior treatment, artificial experiment setting, interaction of selection and treatment, interaction of treatment implementation, interaction of testing and treatment

400

Name 3 potential sources of data in qualitative research. 

Individual interviews, focus groups, field notes, text documents, visual media, etc. 

400

This qualitative method uses a codebook for data analysis. 

What is content analysis? 

500

This type of error is also referred to as a "false positive." 

What is a Type I error? 

500

A Pearson correlation coefficient of r = -.75 indicates this type of correlation between two variables. 

What is a strong negative correlation? 

500

Cohen's d, eta-squared, and R-squared are all measures of this. 

What is effect size? 

500

Experimental validity is to quantitative research as this is to qualitative research. 

What is trustworthiness? 
500

Instead of being generalizable, qualitative findings may be this. 

What is transferable? 

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