MSW 550 Quiz 2

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Validity

"Measure is accurate" - The ability of a test to measure what it is intended to measure

Reliability

"Measure is consistent" - yields same result each time - not same as being accurate

Sources of SW research questions:

- Info needed to solve social welfare problems - Info needed for practice, policy or planning decisions - Curiosity and personal interests

Research questions need to be

- Narrow and specific - Answerable by observable evidence -Relevant to social welfare policy/practice

Literature reviews help researchers to:

- Select a research question - Identify obstacles with topic, and how others overcame those - Decide which type of research best builds on current knowledge

Three choices for operationally defining variables in social work:

- Self-report - Direct observation - Examination of available records

Levels of Measurement: Interval

- attributes on a continuum with equal distances between points - NO absolute zero Ex. range of IQ between 100 and 110 is same as 120 and 130. Nobody has zero IQ.

Levels of Measurement: Ratio

- attributes on a continuum with equal distances between points - has true/absolute zero Ex: time, distance, time spent watching TV, number of words per story

Conceptualization in qualitative inquiry

- frequently not operationalized in advance - observations help us understand new phenomenon or build deeper understanding of known one

To ensure your question is sensitive to needs, lifestyles, and concerns of study population:

- review current literature - consult leaders in the community - consult relevant service agencies

Variables

A concept being investigated, characterized by different attributes or categories (ex. Gender, SES, ethnicity, age)

Moderating variable can also be

An alternative explanation for relationship observed between IV and DV

inter-rater reliability

Consistency of scoring by two or more raters using the same item, scale, or instrument

systematic error

Consistent, directional error in measurement due to: - investigator bias (esp. Leading questions) - subject "acquiescence response set" (all yes or all no answers, regardless of truth) -subject "social desirability bias" (answers in ways that present self/group in positive light)

IV and DV relationship changes at different levels of a variable

Curvilinear relationship

random error

Error that is due to chance and is not standardized. Decreases precision.

spurious relationship

False association between two variables that is actually due to the effect of some third variable

test-retest reliability

Found by comparing a test taker's scores on the same test taken on separate occasions

Operationalization

How variables are defined and measured

Criteria to select an existing scale:

Length Difficulty Reliability Validity

criteria-related validity (3 types)

Measures against a known. - Concurrent: degree to which a measure correlates with a known measure of the same concept (ACT scores and GPA) - Predictive: degree to which a measure accurately predicts an outcome compared to known indicator (GPA predicts success better than ACT) - Known groups: degree to which measure differentiates between groups known to differ (KKK vs. social worker scores on racism measure)

face validity

Measures whether a test looks like it tests what it is supposed to test. - does NOT mean it *accurately* tests for the concept

mediating variable

Mechanism by which IV affects DV

concept

Mental image that symbolizes an idea, object, event, behavior or person

Levels of Measurement: Nominal

NAMES, LABELS, CATEGORIES Cannot be arranged in an order (e.g., eye colors)

As the IV increases or decreases, the DV changes in the OPPOSITE direction (ex: IV increases, DV decreases).

Negative relationship

Levels of Measurement

Nominal, Ordinal, Interval, Ratio (NOIR)

Qualitative Validity

Obtaining impressions, patterns or trends of the experience or topic under investigation. Good because no quantitative measure is 100% accurate

Error in existing records reviews

Over/under reporting in original records/notes (ex. Because practitioner wants to look good on paper)

As IV increases or decreases, the DV changes in the SAME direction (ex. IV increases, DV increases)

Positive relationship

Conceptualization

Process of identifying, selecting and providing theoretical rationale for a chosen topic of study

Levels of Measurement: Ordinal

Ranks objects by degree (eg. non smoker, 1/2 pack/day, 1 pack/week, etc) - Distance between categories is not equal - no absolute zero

Considerations for feasibility of a topic:

Scope, time required, cost, ethical considerations, cooperation of others

Hypothesis

Testable statement about how changes in one variable are expected to change another variable

Independent Variable (IV)

The "cause" - variable that is manipulated

Dependent Variable (DV)

The "effect" - variable being measured, explained, caused

construct validity

The degree to which the content of a test is representative of the domain it's supposed to cover. Convergent: two depression tests yield same result Divergent: depression and anxiety tests yield different results

Control Variable (CV)

Variables held constant during an experiment

Error in self-report measures

Vulnerable to social desirability bias and outright deception

Error in observation

Vulnerable to: - Data values recorded incorrectly due to observer bias - Subject modifying their behavior according to social desirability bias

moderating variable

influences the direction or strength of the relationship between IV and DV

content validity

the *extent* to which a test samples the concept of interest Ex: high validity = depression test asks about behavioral, emotional and physical health

Triangulation

the use of multiple measures to determine validity of data. Ex: 3 different depression instruments yield same results

inter-item reliability

assesses the degree of consistency among the items on a given scale/measure


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