WILLIAM HOLMES' METHODOLOGICAL TIP ARCHIVE Last
update: 10-10-2011
Scroll through or select a topic.
Charts
Coding
Computer Files
Data Analysis
Data Entry
Ethics
Findings
Hypotheses
Literature
Review
Measurement
Problem
Formulation
Sampling
Tables
CHARTS
- Three Dimensional charts can distort comparisons
between groups if the apparent volume of the 3D element does not maintain
the same proportional relationship to the other 3D elements as it would
have as a 2D figure.
- A color chart is easier to read if bright colors are
reserved for the categories or information you wish to emphasize or
compare.
- Pie charts work best when you only have a few
categories to compare and no more than one category represents a small
percentage of the cases.
- A bar chart of a categorical or nominal level variable
often looks better as a horizontal chart. A bar chart of an interval or
ratio variable may look better as a vertical chart.
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CODING VARIABLES
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COMPUTER FILES
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DATA ENTRY
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DATA ANALYSIS
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DESIGN
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HYPOTHESES
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LITERATURE REVIEW
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MEASUREMENT
- To tell
if something is a variable, ask yourself if you can name more than one
characteristic, value, or attribute of it that share soomething
in common. For example, rage and annoyance share anger in common; short
and long share length in common.
- Four
principles of good measures are that they should be: 1. unidimensional, 2.
exhaustive of the characteristics measured, 3. possessing mutually
exclusive categories, and 4. have clear definitions.
- When
writing questions for a questionnaire, have each item refer to only one
single thing per question. Otherwise, the response may be ambiguous in
meaning.
- It is
generally better to use a previously established and validated measure
than to develop a new one for yourself
- Ratio
level variables are usually counting variables or quantity measures, how
many or how much. Because they have a natural zero point (none or not
any), they often are "monopolar" (no meaningful opposite) and
only take on positive values.
- When
developing a measure of a concept that has polar opposites, such as love
versus hate, use the same adjectives at each end. It will produce a more
balanced measure.
- Variables
always have more than one characteristic, attribute, or quality to which
they refer. Constants do not.
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PROBLEM FORMULATION
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SAMPLING
TABLES
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