Thursday, April 25, 2024
06:51 PM (GMT +5)

Go Back   CSS Forums > Punjab Public Service Commission > PCS / PMS

PCS / PMS Information about PCS / PMS

Reply Share Thread: Submit Thread to Facebook Facebook     Submit Thread to Twitter Twitter     Submit Thread to Google+ Google+    
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread
  #11  
Old Friday, November 09, 2012
Faiza Dar's Avatar
Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2012
Posts: 55
Thanks: 76
Thanked 95 Times in 41 Posts
Faiza Dar will become famous soon enough
Default

asif bhai do u know when the exams for the posts of subject specialist and head master are going to be held????/
and what is the syllabus for the exam of headmaster?????
__________________
Kon Kaisa hai yehi fikr rahi tmam umar...
Khud kaisi hon kabhi bhool kr b na socha
Reply With Quote
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Faiza Dar For This Useful Post:
ASIF JAN (Friday, November 09, 2012), oxon (Wednesday, November 28, 2012)
  #12  
Old Friday, November 09, 2012
ASIF JAN's Avatar
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 17
Thanks: 1
Thanked 55 Times in 27 Posts
ASIF JAN is on a distinguished road
Default

no chances before December.. wait.. for preparation of headmistress the best book is carvan and principle of teaching by sundas publisher. the syllabus for the exam of headmaster principle of teaching and b.ed course.exam is expected after minimum 40 days..

Main Topic for headmaster exam


Teaching Techniques and Methodology
Classroom Management and Discipline
Testing and Evaluation
Educational Planning and Management
Curriculum Planning & Instructional Technology
Education Psychology and Student’s Learning
Research Techniques & Report Writing
Development of Education in Pakistan
Reply With Quote
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to ASIF JAN For This Useful Post:
Aliya Sial (Monday, February 11, 2013), Faiza Dar (Sunday, November 11, 2012)
  #13  
Old Friday, November 16, 2012
ASIF JAN's Avatar
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 17
Thanks: 1
Thanked 55 Times in 27 Posts
ASIF JAN is on a distinguished road
Default

Educational research MCQs

Experimental Research

1. Analysis of covariance is:
a. A statistical technique that can be used to help equate groups on specific variables
b. A statistical technique that can be used to control sequencing effects
c. A statistical technique that substitutes for random assignment to groups
d. Adjusts scores on the independent variable to control for extraneous variables

2. To determine whether noise affects the ability to solve math problems, a researcher has one group solve math problems in a quiet room and another group solve math problems in a noisy room. The group solving problems in the noisy room completes 15 problems in one hour and the group solving problems in the quiet room completes 22 problems in one hour. In this experiment, the independent variable is ____________ and the dependent variable is _____________.
a. The number of problems solves; the difficulty of the problems
b. The number of problems solved; the noise level in the room
c. The noise level in the room; the number of problems solved
d. The noise level in the room; the difficulty of the problems

3. The posttest-only design with nonequivalent groups is likely to control for which of the following threats to internal validity:
a. History
b. Differential selection
c. Additive and interactive effects
d. Differential attrition

4. When all participants receive all treatment conditions, the study is susceptible to:
a. Order effects
b. Carryover effects
c. Analysis of covariance
d. a and b

5. A researcher is interested in the effects of a preschool program on later school performance. Because she is concerned that socio-economic-status (SES) is a potential extraneous variable in her study, she picks children to study who are only from low SES homes. The control technique she used in this study was:
a. Matching
b. Random assignment
c. Holding the extraneous variable constant
d. Statistically controlling the extraneous variable

6. Which of the following terms best describes an interaction effect?
a. The effect of one independent variable (on a DV) depends on the level of another independent
variable
b. Eliminating any differential influence of extraneous variables
c. Sequencing effect that occurs from the order in which the treatment conditions are
administered
d. The effect of one independent variable on the dependent variable

7. Which of the following terms refers to a statistical method that can be used to statistically equate groups on a pretest or some other variable?
a. Experimental control
b. Differential influence
c. Matching
d. Analysis of covariance

8. Which of the following is not a way to manipulate an independent variable?
a. Presence technique
b. Amount technique
c. Type technique
d. Random technique

9. Which of the following designs permits a comparison of pretest scores to determine the initial equivalence of groups on the pretest before the treatment variable is introduced into the research setting.
a. One-group pretest-posttest design
b. Pretest-posttest control group design
c. Posttest-only design with nonequivalent groups
d. Both b and c

10. Counterbalancing is _________.
a. Usually based on random selection of participants
b. Only used when one pretest variable needs to be controlled
c. Chosen to control for such things as order and carryover effects*
d. All of the above

11. The group that receives the experimental treatment condition is the _____.
a. Experimental group
b. Control group
c. Participant group
d. Independent group

12. Which of the following control techniques available to the researcher controls for both known and unknown variables?
a. Building the extraneous variable into the design
b. Matching
c. Random assignment
d. Analysis of covariance

13. The group that does not receive the experimental treatment condition is the ________.
a. Experimental group
b. Control group
c. Treatment group
d. Independent group

14. There are a number of ways in which confounding extraneous variables can be controlled. Which control technique is considered to be the best?
a. Random assignment
b. Matching
c. Counterbalancing
d. None of the above

15. Which of the following could be used for randomly assigning participants to groups in an experimental study?
a. Split-half (e.g., first half versus second half of a school directory)
b. Even versus odd numbers
c. Use a list of random numbers or a computer randomization program
d. Let the researcher decide which group will be the best

16. Which term is not a related to counterbalancing?
a. Carryover effect
b. Order effect
c. Sequencing effects
d. Matching

17. A cell is a combination of two or more ____ in a factorial design.
a. Research designs
b. Research measurements
c. Dependent variables
d. Independent variables

18. Which of the following designs does an excellent job of controlling for rival hypotheses that threaten the internal validity of an experiment?
a. Posttest-only design with nonequivalent groups
b. Posttest-only control-group design
c. Pretest-posttest control-group design
d. Both b and c are excellent designs

19. Manipulating the independent variable by varying the type on the independent variable that is presented to the different comparison groups is known as _____.
a. Amount technique
b. Absence technique
c. Type technique
d. Presence technique

20. Which of the following terms is a sequencing effect that occurs from the order in which the treatment conditions are administered?
a. Carry-over effect
b. Order effect
c. Sequencing effects
d. None of the above

21. When manipulating the independent variable in an educational experiment, which of the following describes this method?
a. An independent variable is manipulated using the presence or absence technique
b. The researchers varies the amount of the independent variable that is administered
c. The researcher varies the type of the independent variable
d. All of the above are possible

22. Which method of controlling confounding extraneous variables takes precedence over all other methods?
a. Matching individual participants
b. Holding extraneous variables
c. Building the extraneous variable into the research design
d. Counterbalancing
e. Randomly assign research participants to the groups

23. In an experimental research study, the primary goal is to isolate and identify the effect produced by the ____.
a. Dependent variable
b. Extraneous variable
c. Independent variable
d. Confounding variable

24. This type of design is one where all participants participate in all experimental treatment conditions.
a. Factorial design
b. Repeated measures design
c. Replicated design
d. Pretest-posttest control-group design

25. A factorial design is one in which ____.
a. Only one independent variable is studied to determine its effect on the dependent variable
b. Only two independent variables are simultaneously studied to determine their independent
and interactive effects on the dependent variable
c. Two or more independent variables are simultaneously studied to determine their independent
and interactive effects on the dependent variable
d. Two dependent variables are studied to determine their interactive effects

26. The design in which one group of research participants is administered a treatment and is then compared, on the dependent variable, with another group of research participants who did not receive the experimental treatment is ____.
a. One-group posttest-only design
b. One-group pretest-posttest design
c. Posttest-only design with nonequivalent groups
d. time series design

27. _____ refers to the influence of a single independent variable.
a. Interaction effect
b. Reactive effect
c. Main effect
d. Proactive effect

28. A sequencing effect that occurs when performance in one treatment condition is influenced by participation in a prior treatment condition is known as ____.
a. Counterbalancing effect
b. Carryover effect
c. Treatment effect
d. Order effect

29. Which of the following is possible in a factorial design with two independent variables?
a. There is only one main effect present
b. There are two main effects present
c. There are two main effects and an interaction effect present
d. All of the above are possible

30. Which of the following is a factorial design where different participants are randomly assigned to the levels of one independent variable but participants take all levels on another independent variable?
a. One-group pretest-posttest
b. Pretest-posttest control-group design
c. Factorial design
d. Factorial design based on a mixed model

Answers:
1. a
2. c
3. a
4. d
5. c
6. a
7. d
8. d
9. b
10. c
11. a
12. c
13. b
14. a
15. c
16. d
17. d
18. d
19. c
20. b
21. d
22. e
23. c
24. b
25. c
26. c
27. c
28. b
29. d
30. d

Data Analysis in Qualitative Research

1. A researcher does a study of students' phenomenological feelings about problem solving. One of her categories of codes involves positive affect. Two subcategories of that category of positive affect are smiles when solves the problem, and shouts hooray when finished. The relation between these subcategories and the overall category of positive affect is:
a. Spatial
b. Sequence
c. Strict inclusion
d. Function

2. In looking at the relationships between coding categories, the relation, "X is a place in Y; X is part of Y" in Spradley's taxonomy of semantic relations is labeled:
a. Spatial
b. Rationale
c. Means-end
d. Strict inclusion

3. In looking at the relationships between coding categories, the relation X is a kind of Y in Spradley's taxonomy of semantic relations is labeled:
a. Spatial
b. Rationale
c. Means-end
d. Strict inclusion

4. A researcher is doing a study of peer groups in middle school. She interviews 5 girls and 5 boys. She is doing a grounded theory study; hence, she decides to generate her codes as she scans through her transcriptions of her data. These codes are labeled:
a. A priori codes
b. Post hoc codes
c. Inductive codes
d. Master list codes

5. Sarah is a qualitative researcher studying how children and parents interact in Head Start Centers. As she examines her data (videotapes and transcripts), she jots down notes concerning the interactions, generating hypotheses, suggesting relationships among categories of information she is examining and so on. This process of jotting notes as she examines the data is called:
a. Memoing
b. Transcription
c. Facesheet coding
d. Drawing diagrams


6. Qualitative data analysis is still a relatively new and rapidly developing branch of research methodology.
a. True
b. False

7. The process of marking segments of data with symbols, descriptive words, or category names is known as _______.
a. Concurring
b. Coding
c. Coloring
d. Segmenting

8. What is the cyclical process of collecting and analyzing data during a single research study called?
a. Interim analysis
b. Inter analysis
c. Inter-item analysis
d. Constant analysis

9. What is the recording of reflective notes about what you are learning from your data during data analysis called?
a. Coding
b. Segmenting
c. Memoing
d. Reflecting

10. Which of the following is one of Spradley’s types of relationships?
a. Strict inclusion
b. Sequence
c. Cause-effect
d. All of the above

11. Which of the following is not one of Spradley’s types of relationships?
a. Strict inclusion
b. Sequence
c. Cause-effect
d. Correlational

12. Codes that apply to a complete document or case are called ________.
a. Cover codes
b. False sheet codes
c. Factual codes
d. Facesheet codes

13. A classification system generally used in the social sciences that breaks something down into different types or levels is called a ________.
a. Diagram
b. Flow chart
c. Hierarchical category system
d. Category

14. When you have high consistency among different coders about the appropriate codes for a set of data, you have ____.
a. High intercoder reliability
b. High intracoder reliability

15. Codes developed before examining the current data being coded are called ______.
a. Co-occuring codes
b. Inductive codes
c. A priori codes
d. Facesheet codes

16. The process of quantifying data is referred to as _________.
a. Typology
b. Diagramming
c. Enumeration
d. Coding

17. Which of the following refers to the cyclical process of collecting and analyzing data during a single research study?
a. Memoing
b. Segmenting
c. Coding
d. Interim analysis

18. An advantage of using computer programs for qualitative data is that they _______.
a. Can reduce time required to analyze data (i.e., after the data are transcribed)
b. Help in storing and organizing data
c. Make many procedures available that are rarely done by hand due to time constraints
d. All of the above

19. _________ are codes that are developed during the process of coding.
a. Inductive codes
b. A priori codes
c. Co-occurring codes
d. Facesheet codes

20. Boolean operators are words that are used to create logical combinations.
a. True
b. False

21. __________ are the basic building blocks of qualitative data.
a. Categories
b. Units
c. Individuals
d. None of the above

22. When a segment of textual data has overlapping codes, this is called a(n) __________.
a. Inductive code
b. Co-occurring codes
c. Priori code
d. Facesheet code

23. This is the process of transforming qualitative research data from written interviews or field notes into typed text.
a. Segmenting
b. Coding
c. Transcription
d. Memoing

24. Network diagrams show only direct links between variables or events over time.
a. True
b. False

25. A challenge of qualitative data analysis is that it often includes data that are unwieldy and complex; it is a major challenge to make sense of the large pool of data.
a. True
b. False

Answers:
1. c
2. a
3. d
4. c
5. a
6. a
7. b
8. a
9. c
10. d
11. d
12. d
13. c
14. a
15. c
16. c
17. d
18. d
19. a
20. a
21. a
22. b
23. c
24. b
25. a

Developing Research Questions and Proposal Preperation

1. A good qualitative problem statement:
a. Defines the independent and dependent variables
b. Conveys a sense of emerging design
c. Specifies a research hypothesis to be tested
d. Specifies the relationship between variables that the researcher expects to find

2. The “tool” function of theory is to:
a. Summarize existing knowledge
b. Summarize existing hypotheses
c. Suggest new relationships and make new predictions
d. Suggest new theories

3. The statement of purpose in a research study should:
a. Identify the design of the study
b. Identify the intent or objective of the study
c. Specify the type of people to be used in the study
d. Describe the study

4. Why is the statement “What are the effects of extracurricular activities on cognitive development of school age children” not a good statement of a quantitative research question?
a. Because there is no connection between extracurricular activities and cognitive
development
b. Because there are not enough school age children engaged in extracurricular activities
to conduct the study
c. Because the study would be too difficult to do given all the different extracurricular
activities
d. Because the statement was not specific enough to provide an understanding of the
variables being investigated

5. A qualitative research question:
a. Asks a question about some process, or phenomenon to be explored
b. Is generally an open-ended question
c. both a and b are correct
d. None of the above

6. According to the text, which of the following orders is the recommended in the flowchart of the development of a research idea?
a. Research topic, research problem, research purpose, research question, hypothesis
b. Research topic, research purpose, research problem, research question, hypothesis
c. Research topic, research problem, research purpose, research question, hypothesis
d. Research topic, hypothesis, research problem, research question, research purpose

7. It is essential that you evaluate the quality of internet resources because information obtained via the internet ranges from very poor to very good.
a. True
b. False

8. One step that is not included in planning a research study is:
a. Identifying a researchable problem
b. A review of current research
c. Statement of the research question
d. Conducting a meta-analysis of the research
e. Developing a research plan

9. Sources of researchable problems can include:
a. Researchers’ own experiences as educators
b. Practical issues that require solutions
c. Theory and past research
d. All of the above

10. A key characteristic of past research that guides researchers in new research questions is that:
a. Extensive research conclusively and definitively answers research questions
b. Studies typically generate more research questions than they answer

11. Which of the following is a function of theory?
a. Integrating and summarizing current knowledge
b. Making predictions
c. Explaining phenomena
d. All of the above are important functions of theory

12. A review of the literature prior to formulating research questions allows the researcher to do which of the following?
a. To become familiar with prior research on the phenomenon of interest
b. To identify potential methodological problems in the research area
c. To develop a list of pertinent problems relative to the phenomenon of interest
d. All of the above

13. Sometimes a comprehensive review of the literature prior to data collection is not recommended by grounded theorists.
a. True
b. False

14. What kind of ideas can’t be empirically researched?
a. Effectiveness of different methods of instruction
b. Description of educational practices
c. Issues of values and morality such as the correctness of having prayer in schools
d. Factors helpful in predicting future drug use

15. Which of the following is not a database containing information to be used during the literature review?
a. ERIC
b. PsychINFO
c. SocioFILE
d. all of the above are potentially useful data bases

16. Computer database searches can be done:
a. With a computer with CD-ROM drive
b. At the library
c. Online
d. All of the above

17. The feasibility of a research study should be considered in light of:
a. Cost and time required to conduct the study
b. Skills required of the researcher
c. Potential ethical concerns
d. All of the above

18. A formal statement of the research question or “purpose of research study” generally ______.
a. Is made prior to the literature review
b. Is made after the literature review
c. Will help guide the research process
d. All of the above
e. b and c

19. Is the following qualitative research purpose statement “well stated” or “poorly stated”? “The focus of the present study was to explore distressing and nurturing encounters of patients with caregivers and to ascertain the meanings that are engendered by such encounters. The study was conducted on one of the surgical units and the obstetrical/gynecological unit of a 374-bed community hospital.”
a. It is a well stated
b. It is poorly stated

20. Which of the following quantitative research questions is superior?
a. “What is the effect of participation in various extracurricular activities on academic performance?”
b. “What effect does playing high school football have on students’ overall grade point average during the football season?”

21. A statement of the quantitative research question should:
a. Extend the statement of purpose by specifying exactly the question(s) the researcher will
address
b. Help the research in selecting appropriate participants, research methods, measures, and
materials
c. Specify the variables of interest
d. All of the above

22. The research participants are described in detail in which section of the research plan?
a. Introduction
b. Method
c. Data analysis
d. Discussion

23. Research hypotheses are ______.
a. Formulated prior to a review of the literature
b. Statements of predicted relationships between variables
c. Stated such that they can be confirmed or refuted
d. b and c

24. Hypotheses in qualitative research studies usually _____.
a. Are very specific and stated prior to beginning the study
b. Are often generated as the data are collected, interpreted, and analyzed
c. Are never used
d. Are always stated after the research study has been completed

25. A research plan _____.
a. Should be detailed
b. Should be given to others for review and comments
c. Sets out the rationale for a research study
d. All of the above

26. The Method section of the research plan typically specifies
a. The research participants
b. The results of prior studies that address the phenomena of interest
c. The apparatus, instruments, and materials for the research study
d. The planned research procedures
e. a, c and d

27. The Introduction section of the research plan
a. Gives an overview of prior relevant studies
b. Contains a statement of the purpose of the study
c. Concludes with a statement of the research questions and, for quantitative research, it includes
the research hypothesis
d. All of the above

28. According to your text, which of the following is not a source of research ideas?
a. Everyday life
b. Practical issues
c. Past research
d. Theory
e. All of the above ARE sources of research ideas

Answers:
1. b
2. c
3. b
4. d
5. c
6. a
7. a
8. d
9. d
10. b
11. d
12. d
13. a
14. c
15. d
16. d
17. d
18. e
19. a
20. b
21. d
22. b
23. d
24. b
25. d
26. e
27. d
28. e

Historical Research

1. A researcher was interested in studying why the “new math” of the 1960s failed. She interviews several teachers who used the new math during the 1960s. These teachers are considered:
a. Primary sources
b. Secondary Sources
c. External critics
d. Internal critics

2. The process of dealing with concerns over the authenticity of a source is referred to as:
a. Sourcing
b. Internal criticism
c. Secondary criticism
d. External criticism

3. A researcher studying the history of medical education finds a manuscript that purports to be from the 14th century. Before he uses the source, he goes to three other experts who help him identify whether the manuscript is authentic or not. His authentification of the object is referred to as:
a. Positive criticism
b. Internal criticism
c. Secondary criticism
d. External criticism

4. A historical researcher studying the implementation of the “new math” during the 1960s uses as a source a text written on the subject by a critic who was a mathematics teacher during that time period. As she examines the document, she discovers that the data that the individual based his or her conclusions on was falsified. Hence, the conclusions drawn were erroneous. Her analysis of the document to check its accuracy is referred to as:
a. Positive criticism
b. Internal criticism
c. External criticism
d. Secondary criticism

5. A researcher is interested in studying approaches to teaching writing in schools during the 1800s. She discovers a grammar book, but there is no author or copyright date in the book. She examines the typeface in the book as well as the writing style. After investigating further, she finds a reference to the book from a teacher’s diary from the 1800s. The diary also mentions an author’s name. After further searching around she is able to identify the author of the book. The investigator was engaged in what process?
a. Sourcing
b. Positive criticism
c. Presentism
d. Axial coding

6. Historical research is conducted for which of the following reasons?
a. To identify the relationship that the past has to the present
b. To evaluate and record accomplishments of individuals or entities
c. To enhance understanding of the culture in which we live
d. To uncover the unknown
e. All of the above

7. Historical research is interpretative.
a. True
b. False

8. The following is a step in the process of historical research?
a. Preparing a report or narrative exposition
b. Identifying a research topic and formulation of the research problem or question
c. Data synthesis
d. Data collection and/or literature review
e. All of the above

9. Oral histories can be based on ______.
a. Interviews with people
b. Stories and tales
c. Songs
d. All of the above

10. In historical research, a primary source _________.
a. Consists of first hand accounts by witnesses to events
b. Can consist of sources that include original maps, diaries, transcripts of the minutes of a
meeting, and photographs
c. Both a and b

11. In historical research secondary sources are _________.
a. Generally considered more useful that primary sources
b. Generally considered less useful than primary sources

12. In evaluating historical research sources, external criticism ________.
a. Can involve the use of carbon dating and handwriting experts
b. Helps determine the validity, trustworthiness or authenticity of a source
c. Can involve use of historical linguists’ knowledgeable with the writing style of the period
d. All of the above

13. Contextualization refers to the process of identifying when and where an event took place.
a. True
b. False

14. The process of determining the reliability or accuracy of the information contained in the sources collected is known as ______.
a. External criticism
b. Internal criticism
c. Vagueness
d. Presentism

15. Presentism in historical sources ________.
a. Is the presence of the author in a historical source
b. Is a first-hand accounts of events
c. Is the assumption that the present-day connotations of terms also existed in the past
d. Is the assumption that the past influences the present

16. “Comparing document to each other to determine whether they provide the same information or reach the same conclusion” is known as ________.
a. Contextualization
b. Sourcing
c. Corroboration
d. Negative criticism

17. The “identification of when and where an event took place” is known as _____.
a. Contextualization
b. Sourcing
c. Corroboration
d. Negative criticism

18. Three heuristics suggested by Wineburg (1991) for evaluating documents are:
a. Corroboration, sourcing, and contextualization
b. Sourcing, internal criticism, and external criticism
c. Corroboration, internal criticism and external criticism
d. Contextualization, corroboration and presentism

19. In historical research, data synthesis usually does not include ______.
a. Defining and interpreting key words, phrases and terms
b. Chronologically ordering events
c. Differentiating between how people should behave and how they did behave
d. Inferring causation based on simple correlation
e. Maintaining a distinction between intent and consequences

20. When writing their narratives, many historical researchers prefer to use _____.
a. The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (1994)
b. The Chicago Manual of Style
c. The Historical Manual of Style
d. The Historian’s Manual of Style

Answers:
1. a
2. d
3. d
4. b
5. a
6. e
7. a
8. e
9. d
10. c
11. b
12. d
13. a
14. b
15. c
16. c
17. a
18. a
19. d
20. b

Methods of Data Collection

1. According to your text, how many points should a rating scale have?
a. Five
b. Four
c. Ten
d. Somewhere from 4 to 11 points

2. What is the problem(s) with this set of response categories to the question “What is your current age?”
1-5
5-10
10-20
20-30
30-40
a. The categories are not mutually exclusive
b. The categories are not exhaustive
c. Both a and b are problems
d. There is no problem with the above set of response categories

3. You should mix methods in a way that provides complementary strengths and nonoverlapping weaknesses. This is known as the fundamental principle of mixed research.
a. True
b. False

4. According to the text, questionnaires can address events and characteristics taking place when?
a. In the past (retrospective questions)
b. In the present (current time questions)
c. In the future (prospective questions)
d. All of the above

5. Which of the following are principles of questionnaire construction?
a. Consider using multiple methods when measuring abstract constructs
b. Use multiple items to measure abstract constructs
c. Avoid double-barreled questions
d. All of the above
e. Only b and c

6. Which of these is not a method of data collection.
a. Questionnaires
b. Interviews
c. Experiments
d. Observations

7. Secondary/existing data may include which of the following?
a. Official documents
b. Personal documents
c. Archived research data
d. All of the above

8. An item that directs participants to different follow-up questions depending on their response is called a ____________.
a. Response set
b. Probe
c. Semantic differential
d. Contingency question

9. Which of the following terms best describes data that were originally collected at an earlier time by a different person for a different purpose?
a. Primary data
b. Secondary data
c. Experimental data
d. Field notes

10. Researchers use both open-ended and closed-ended questions to collect data. Which of the following statements is true?
a. Open-ended questions directly provide quantitative data based on the researcher’s predetermined response categories
b. Closed-ended questions provide quantitative data in the participant’s own words
c. Open-ended questions provide qualitative data in the participant’s own words
d. Closed-ended questions directly provide qualitative data in the participants’ own words

11. Open-ended questions provide primarily ______ data.
a. Confirmatory data
b. Qualitative data
c. Predictive data
d. None of the above

12. Which of the following is true concerning observation?
a. It takes less time than self-report approaches
b. It costs less money than self-report approaches
c. It is often not possible to determine exactly why the people behave as they do
d. All of the above

13. Qualitative observation is usually done for exploratory purposes; it is also called ___________ observation.
a. Structured
b. Naturalistic
c. Complete
d. Probed

14. As discussed in chapter 6, when constructing a questionnaire it is important to do each of the following except ______.
a. Use "leading" or "loaded" questions
b. Use natural language
c. Understand your research participants
d. Pilot your test questionnaire

15. Another name for a Likert Scale is a(n):
a. Interview protocol
b. Event sampling
c. Summated rating scale
d. Ranking

16. Which of the following is not one of the six major methods of data collection that are used by educational researchers?
a. Observation
b. Interviews
c. Questionnaires
d. Checklists

17. The type of interview in which the specific topics are decided in advance but the sequence and wording can be modified during the interview is called:
a. The interview guide approach
b. The informal conversational interview
c. A closed quantitative interview
d. The standardized open-ended interview

18. Which one of the following in not a major method of data collection:
a. Questionnaires
b. Interviews
c. Secondary data
d. Focus groups
e. All of the above are methods of data collection

19. A question during an interview such as “Why do you feel that way?” is known as a:
a. Probe
b. Filter question
c. Response
d. Pilot

20. A census taker often collects data through which of the following?
a. Standardized tests
b. Interviews
c. Secondary data
d. Observations

21. The researcher has secretly placed him or herself (as a member) in the group that is being studied. This researcher may be which of the following?
a. A complete participant
b. An observer-as-participant
c. A participant-as-observer
d. None of the above

22. Which of the following is not a major method of data collection?
a. Questionnaires
b. Focus groups
c. Correlational method
d. Secondary data

23. Which type of interview allows the questions to emerge from the immediate context or course of things?
a. Interview guide approach
b. Informal conversational interview
c. Closed quantitative interview
d. Standardized open-ended interview

24. When conducting an interview, asking "Anything else?, What do you mean?, Why do you feel that way?," etc, are all forms of:
a. Contingency questions
b. Probes
c. Protocols
d. Response categories

25. When constructing a questionnaire, there are 15 principles to which you should adhere. Which of the following is not one of those principles?
a. Do not use "leading" or "loaded" questions
b. Avoid double-barreled questions
c. Avoid double negatives
d. Avoid using multiple items to measure a single construct

Answers:
1. d
2. c
3. a
4. d
5. d
6. c
7. d
8. d
9. b
10. c
11. b
12. c
13. b
14. a
15. c
16. d
17. a
18. e
19. a
20. b
21. a
22. c
23. b
24. b
25. d


Qualitative Research


1. Which of the following is characteristic of qualitative research?
a. Generalization to the population
b. Random sampling
c. Unique case orientation
d. Standardized tests and measures

2. Phenomenology has its disciplinary origins in:
a. Philosophy
b. Anthropology
c. Sociology
d. Many disciplines

3. The primary data analysis approach in ethnography is:
a. Open, axial, and selective coding
b. Holistic description and search for cultural themes
c. Cross-case analysis
d. Identifying essences of a phenomenon

4. The term used to describe suspending preconceptions and learned feelings about a phenomenon is called:
a. Axial coding
b. Design flexibility
c. Bracketing
d. Ethnography

5. A researcher studies how students who flunk out of high school experienced high
school. She found that it was common for such students to report that they felt like they had little control of their destiny. Her report that this lack of control was an invariant part of the students’ experiences suggests that lack of control is _______ of the “flunking out” experience.
a. A narrative
b. A grounded theory
c. An essence
d. A probabilistic cause

6. The specific cultural conventions or statements that people who share a culture hold to be true or false are called ______.
a. Shared attitudes
b. Shared beliefs
c. Shared values
d. Norms

7. The written and unwritten rules that specify appropriate group behavior are called _____.
a. Shared attitudes
b. Shared beliefs
c. Shared values
d. Norms

8. Which of the following is not an advantage of studying multiple cases?
a. Multiple cases can be compared for similarities and differences
b. Multiple cases can more effectively test a theory than a single case
c. Generalizations about population are usually better when based on multiple cases.
d. Cost is lower and depth of analysis is easier when you study multiple cases in a
single research study

9. _____ are the standards of a culture about what is good or bad or desirable or undesirable.
a. Shared attitudes
b. Shared beliefs
c. Shared values
d. Norms

10. _________ is the study of human consciousness and individuals’ experience of some phenomenon.
a. Phenomenology
b. Ethnography
c. Grounded theory
d. Case study research

11. Which of the following is a characteristic of qualitative research?
a. Design flexibility
b. Inductive analysis
c. Context sensitivity
d. All of the above

12. ________ is a general methodology for developing theory that is based on data systematically gathered and analyzed.
a. Theory confirmation
b. Grounded theory
c. Theory deduction
d. All of the above

13. The final stage in grounded theory data analysis is called ___________.
a. Axial coding
b. Theoretical saturation
c. Constant comparative method
d. Selective coding

14. Which major characteristic of qualitative research refers to studying real world situations as they unfold naturally?
a. Holistic perspective
b. Naturalistic inquiry
c. Dynamic systems
d. Inductive analysis

15. In which qualitative research approach is the primary goal to gain access to individuals’ inner worlds of experience?
a. Phenomenology
b. Ethnography
c. Grounded theory
d. Case study

16. The type of qualitative research that describes the culture of a group of people is called ____.
a. Phenomenology
b. Grounded theory
c. Ethnography
d. Case study

17. The grounded theorist is finished analyzing data when theoretical saturation occurs.
a. True
b. False

18. In which of the following case study designs does the researcher focus her primary interest on understanding something more general than the particular case?
a. Intrinsic case study
b. Instrumental case study
c. Collective case study
d. It could be b or c

19. Which of the following phrases best describes "ethnocentrism"?
a. Special words or terms used by the people in a group
b. An external, social scientific view of reality
c. The study of the cultural past of a group of people
d. Judging people from a different culture according to the standards of your own culture

20. Which of the following is usually not a characteristic of qualitative research?
a. Design flexibility
b. Dynamic systems
c. Naturalistic inquiry
d. Deductive design

21. Which of the following involves the studying of multiple cases in one research study?
a. Intrinsic case study
b. Single case study
c. Instrumental case study
d. Collective case study

22. Which of the following does not apply to qualitative research?
a. Data are often words and pictures
b. Uses the inductive scientific method
c. Ends with a statistical report
d. Involves direct and personal contact with participants

23. The difference between ethnographic research and other types of qualitative research is that ethnographers specifically use the concept of “culture” to help understand the results.
a. True
b. False

24. What term refers to the insider's perspective?
A. Ethnocentrism
B. Emic perspective
C. Etic perspective
D. Holism

25. In data analysis of the grounded theory approach, the step which focuses on the main idea, developing the story line, and finalizing the theory is called ________.
a. Open coding
b. Axial coding
c. Selective coding
d. Theoretical saturation

26. Which of the following is not one of the 4 major approaches to qualitative research.
a. Ethnography
b. Phenomenology
c. Case study
d. Grounded theory
e. Nonexperimental

27. In "phenomenology," a well written report will be highly descriptive of the participants’ experiences and will often elicit in the reader a feeling that they feel as though they are experiencing the phenomenon themselves. This experience is called _____.
a. A phenomenal experience
b. A vicarious experience
c. A significant experience
d. A dream

28. You want to study a Native American group in New Mexico for a six month period to learn all you can about them so you can write a book about that particular tribe. You want the book to be accurate and authentic as well as informative and inspiring. What type of research will you likely be conducting when you get to New Mexico?
a. Ethnography
b. Phenomenology
c. Grounded theory
d. Collective case study

29. The emic perspective refers to an external, social scientific view of reality.
a. True
b. False

30. _________ is used to describe cultural scenes or the cultural characteristics of a group of people.
a. Phenomenology
b. Ethnography
c. Grounded theory
d. Instrumental case study

31. Terms such as “geeks,” “book worms,” “preps,” are known as _____ terms.
a. Emic
b. Etic

32. When a researcher identifies so completely with the group being studied that he or she can no longer remain objective you have what is called _________.
a. Culture shock
b. Going native
c. Regression
d. Cultural relativism

Answers:
1. c
2. a
3. b
4. c
5. c
6. b
7. d
8. d
9. c
10. a
11. d
12. b
13. d
14. b
15. a
16. c
17. a
18. d
19. d
20. d
21. d
22. c
23. a
24. b
25. c
26. e
27. b
28. a
29. b
30. b
31. a
32. b

Quantitative, Qualitative, and Mixed Research


1. Which research paradigm is based on the pragmatic view of reality?
a. quantitative research
b. qualitative research
c. mixed research
d. none of the above

2. Which research paradigm is least concerned about generalizing its findings?
a. quantitative research
b. qualitative research
c. mixed research
d. none of the above

3. Which of the following best describes quantitative research?
a. the collection of nonnumerical data
b. an attempt to confirm the researcher’s hypotheses
c. research that is exploratory
d. research that attempts to generate a new theory

4. A condition or characteristic that can take on different values or categories is called ___.
a. a constant
b. a variable
c. a cause-and-effect relationship
d. a descriptive relationship

5. A variable that is presumed to cause a change in another variable is called a(n):
a. categorical variable
b. dependent variable
c. independent variable
d. intervening variable

6. All of the following are common characteristics of experimental research except:
a. it relies primarily on the collection of numerical data
b. it can produce important knowledge about cause and effect
c. it uses the deductive scientific method
d. it rarely is conducted in a controlled setting or environment

7. Qualitative research is often exploratory and has all of the following characteristics except:
a. it is typically used when a great deal is already known about the topic of interest
b. it relies on the collection of nonnumerical data such as words and pictures
c. it is used to generate hypotheses and develop theory about phenomena in the world
d. it uses the inductive scientific method

8. Which type of research provides the strongest evidence about the existence of cause-and-effect relationships?
a. nonexperimental Research
b. experimental Research

9. What is the key defining characteristic of experimental research?
a. extraneous variables are never present
b. a positive correlation usually exists
c. a negative correlation usually exists
d. manipulation of the independent variable

10. In _____, random assignment to groups is never possible and the researcher cannot manipulate the independent variable.
a. basic research
b. quantitative research
c. experimental research
d. causal-comparative and correlational research

11. What is the defining characteristic of experimental research?
a. resistance to manipulation
b. manipulation of the independent variable
c. the use of open-ended questions
d. focuses only on local problems

12.. A positive correlation is present when _______.
a. two variables move in opposite directions.
b. two variables move in the same direction.
c. one variable goes up and one goes down
d. several variables never change.

13. Research in which the researcher uses the qualitative paradigm for one phase and the quantitative paradigm for another phase is known as ______.
a. action research
b. basic research
c. quantitative research
d. mixed method research
e. mixed model research

14. Research in which the researcher uses both qualitative and quantitative research within a stage or across two of the stages in the research process is known as ______.
a. action research
b. basic research
c. quantitative research
d. mixed method research
e. mixed model research

15.. Research that is done to understand an event from the past is known as _____?
a. experimental research
b. historical research
c. replication
d. archival research

16. ______ research occurs when the researcher manipulates the independent variable.
a. causal-comparative research
b. experimental research
c. ethnography
d. correlational research

17.. Which of the following includes examples of quantitative variables?
a. age, temperature, income, height
b. grade point average, anxiety level, reading performance
c. gender, religion, ethnic group
d. both a and b

18.. What is the opposite of a variable?
a. a constant
b. an extraneous variable
c. a dependent variable
d. a data set

19. Which of the following is the type of nonexperimental research in which the primary independent variable of interest is categorical?
a. causal-comparative research
b. experimental research
c. qualitative research
d. mixed research

20. Which of the following can best be described as a categorical variable?
a. age
b. annual income
c. grade point average
d. religion

21. In research, something that does not "vary" is called a ___________.
a. variable
b. method
c. constant
d. control group

22. When interpreting a correlation coefficient expressing the relationship between two variables, it is very important to avoid _______.
a. checking the strength of relationship
b. jumping to the conclusion of causality
c. checking the direction of the relationship
d. expressing a relationship with a correlation coefficient

23. A researcher studies achievement by children in poorly funded elementary schools. She develops a model that posits parent involvement as an important variable. She believes that parent involvement has an impact on children by increasing their motivation to do school work. Thus, in her model, greater parent involvement leads to higher student motivation, which in turn creates higher student achievement. Student motivation is what kind of variable in this study?
a. Manipulated variable
b. Extraneous variable
c. Confounding variable
d. Mediating or intervening variable

24. The strongest evidence for causality comes from which of the following research methods?
a. Experimental
b. Causal-comparative
c. Correlational
d. Ethnography

25. Which correlation is the strongest?
a. +.10
b. -.95
c. +.90
d. -1.00

26. The correlation between intelligence test scores and grades is:
a. Positive
b. Negative
c. Perfect
d. They are not correlated

Answers:
1. c
2. b
3. b
4. b
5. c
6. d
7. a
8. b
9. d
10. d
11. b
12. b
13. d
14. e
15. b
16. b
17. d
18. a
19. a
20. d
21. c
22. b
23. d
24. a
25. d
26. a

Research Ethics



1. Ethics is the set of principles and guidelines that help us to uphold the things we value.
a. True
b. False

2. Which of the following is necessary in obtaining informed consent?
a. A description of the statistical analyses that will be carried out
b. A description of the purpose of the research
c. A description of the reliability and validity of test instruments
d. A list of publications that the researcher has had in the last ten years

3. Which of the following need(s) to be obtained when doing research with children?
a. Informed consent from the parent or guardian
b. Assent from the child if he or she is capable
c. Informed consent from the child
d. Both a and b

4. Which of the following is true about the use of deception in research?
a. It should never be used
b. It can be used anytime
c. If there is deception in a study, the participants may need to be debriefed
d. The use of deception must be outweighed by other benefits of the study
e. Both c and d are true

5. Which of the following generally cannot be done in qualitative studies conducted in the field?
a. Getting informed consent
b. Keeping participants from physical harm
c. Maintaining consent forms
d. Having full anonymity rather than just confidentiality

6. What is the primary approach that is used by the IRB to assess the ethical acceptability of a research study?
a. Utilitarianism
b. Deontology
c. Ethical skepticism
d. Comparativeism

7. Which of the following approaches says that ethical issues should be judged on the basis of some universal code?
a. Deontological
b. Ethical skepticism
c. Utilitarianism

8 Which of the following is not an ethical guideline for conducting research with humans?
a. Getting informed consent of the participant
b. Telling participants they must continue until the study has been completed
c. Keeping participants’ identity anonymous
d. Telling participants they are free to withdraw at any time

9. Which of the three ethics approaches says research ethics should be a matter of the individual's conscience?
a. Deontological approach
b. Ethical skepticism
c. Utilitarianism
d. Ontological skepticism

10. ________ means that the participant's identity, although known to the researcher, is not revealed to anyone outside of the researcher and his or her staff.
a. Anonymity
b. Confidentiality

11. Which of the following is not true?
a. Misrepresenting and creating fraudulent data is dishonest
b. Misrepresenting data is very easy to detect
c. Misrepresenting data can be difficult to detect
d. Breaking confidentiality is not a problem

12. Ideally, the research participant's identity is not known to the researcher. This is called:
a. Anonymity
b. Confidentiality
c. Deception
d. Desensitizing

13. Which of the following approaches taken by people to resolve ethical issues is the primary approach used by the federal government and most professional organizations?
a. Deontological approach
b. Ethical skepticism
c. Utilitarianism
d. None of the above

14. What is it called when the participants are not revealed to any one but researcher and staff?
a. Confidentiality
b. Anonymity
c. Ethics
d. Discretion

15. Research participants must give what before they can participate in a study?
a. Guidelines
b. A commitment
c. Informed consent
d. Private information

16. There are three basic approaches that people tend to adopt when considering ethical issues in research. Which one of the following is not one of the approaches?
a. Ethical skepticism
b. Deontology
c. Ontology
d. Utilitarianism

17. Identify the term that refers to a poststudy interview in which all aspects of the study are revealed, reasons for the use of deception are given, and the participants’ questions are answered?
a. Desensitizing
b. Debriefing
c. Dehoaxing
d. Deploying

18. A set of principles to guide and assist researchers in deciding which goals are most important and in reconciling conflicting values when conducting research is called ____.
a. Research ethics
b. Deontological approach
c. Utilitarianism
d. None of the above

19. IRB is an acronym for which of the following?
a. Internal Review Board
b. Institutional Rating Board
c. Institutional Review Board
d. Internal Request Board

20. When it is necessary to engage in a good amount of deception to conduct a scientifically valid study, what procedure(s) should a researcher consider following?
a. Debriefing
b. Dehoaxing
c. Desensitizing
d. All of the above should be considered

21. The act of publishing the same data and results in more than one journal or publication refers to which of the following professional issues:
a. Partial publication
b. Duplicate publication
c. Deception
d. Full publication

22. Concerning "authorship" in educational research, intellectual ownership is predominantly a function of:
a. Effort expended
b. Creative contribution
c. Professional position
d. Level of higher education

23. Which term refers to publishing several articles from the data collected in one large study?
a. Duplicate publication
b. Partial publication
c. Triplicate publication
d. None of these

24. Which of the following is a right of each participant according to the AERA?
a. Deception
b. Utilitarianism
c. Freedom to withdraw
d. Participants have no rights

Answers:
1. a
2. b
3. d
4. e
5. d
6. a
7. a
8. b
9. b
10. b
11. b
12. a
13. c
14. a
15. c
16. c
17. b
18. a
19. c
20. d
21. b
22. b
23. b
24. c

Sampling


1. When each member of a population has an equally likely chance of being selected, this is called:
a. A nonrandom sampling method
b. A quota sample
c. A snowball sample
d. An Equal probability selection method

2. Which of the following techniques yields a simple random sample?
a. Choosing volunteers from an introductory psychology class to participate
b. Listing the individuals by ethnic group and choosing a proportion from within
each ethnic group at random.
c. Numbering all the elements of a sampling frame and then using a random number
table to pick cases from the table.
d. Randomly selecting schools, and then sampling everyone within the school.

3. Which of the following is not true about stratified random sampling?
a. It involves a random selection process from identified subgroups
b. Proportions of groups in the sample must always match their population proportions
c. Disproportional stratified random sampling is especially helpful for getting large enough
subgroup samples when subgroup comparisons are to be done
d. Proportional stratified random sampling yields a representative sample

4. Which of the following statements are true?
a. The larger the sample size, the greater the sampling error
b. The more categories or breakdowns you want to make in your data analysis, the larger
the sample needed
c. The fewer categories or breakdowns you want to make in your data analysis, the larger
the sample needed
d. As sample size decreases, so does the size of the confidence interval

5. Which of the following formulae is used to determine how many people to include in the original sampling?
a. Desired sample size/Desired sample size + 1
b. Proportion likely to respond/desired sample size
c. Proportion likely to respond/population size
d. Desired sample size/Proportion likely to respond

6. Which of the following sampling techniques is an equal probability selection method (i.e., EPSEM) in which every individual in the population has an equal chance of being selected?
a. Simple random sampling
b. Systematic sampling
c. Proportional stratified sampling
d. Cluster sampling using the PPS technique
e. All of the above are EPSEM

7. Which of the following is not a form of nonrandom sampling?
a. Snowball sampling
b. Convenience sampling
c. Quota sampling
d. Purposive sampling
e. They are all forms of nonrandom sampling

8. Which of the following will give a more “accurate” representation of the population from which a sample has been taken?
a. A large sample based on the convenience sampling technique
b. A small sample based on simple random sampling
c. A large sample based on simple random sampling
d. A small cluster sample

9. Sampling in qualitative research is similar to which type of sampling in quantitative research?
a. Simple random sampling
b. Systematic sampling
c. Quota sampling
d. Purposive sampling

10. Which of the following would generally require the largest sample size?
a. Cluster sampling
b. Simple random sampling
c. Systematic sampling
d. Proportional stratified sampling

11. How often does the Census Bureau take a complete population count?
a. Every year
b. Every five years
c. Every ten years
d. Twice a year

12. People who are available, volunteer, or can be easily recruited are used in the sampling method called ______.
a. Simple random sampling
b. Cluster sampling
c. Systematic sampling
d. Convenience sampling

13. Which of the following types of sampling involves the researcher determining the appropriate sample sizes for the groups identified as important, and then taking convenience samples from those groups?
a. Proportional stratified sampling
b. Quota sampling
c. One-stage cluster sampling
d. Two-stage cluster sampling

14. A type of sampling used in qualitative research that involves selecting cases that disconfirm the researcher's expectations and generalizations is referred to as _______________.
a. Extreme case sampling
b. Typical-case sampling
c. Critical-case sampling
d. Negative-case sampling

15. Using Figure 6.6 (pg. 178), how many participants will you need for a research study with a population of 120,000?
a. 242
b. 331
c. 377
d. 384

16. In which of the following nonrandom sampling techniques does the researcher ask the research participants to identify other potential research participants?
a. Snowball
b. Convenience
c. Purposive
d. Quota

17. Which of the following is the most efficient random sampling technique discussed in your chapter?
a. Simple random sampling
b. Proportional stratified sampling
c. Cluster random sampling
d. Systematic sampling

18. If we took the 500 people attending a school in New York City, divided them by gender, and then took a random sample of the males and a random sampling of the females, the variable on which we would divide the population is called the _____.
a. Independent variable
b. Dependent variable
c. Stratification variable
d. Sampling variable

19. A number calculated with complete population data and quantifies a characteristic of the population is called which of the following?
a. A datum
b. A statistic
c. A parameter
d. A population

20. The type of sampling in which each member of the population selected for the sample is returned to the population before the next member is selected is called _________.
a. Sampling without replacement
b. Sampling with replacement
c. Simple random sampling
d. Systematic sampling

21. Which of the following is not a type of nonrandom sampling?
a. Cluster sampling
b. Convenience sampling
c. Quota sampling
d. Purposive sampling
e. They are all type of nonrandom sampling

22. Which of the following would usually require the smallest sample size because of its efficiency?
a. One stage cluster sampling
b. Simple random sampling
c. Two stage cluster sampling
d. Quota sampling

23. A technique used when selecting clusters of different sizes is called _____.
a. Cluster sampling
b. One-stage sampling
c. Two-stage sampling
d. Probability proportional to size or PPS

24. The process of drawing a sample from a population is known as _________.
a. Sampling
b. Census
c. Survey research
d. None of the above

25. It is recommended to use the whole population rather than a sample when the population size is of what size?
a. 500 or less
b. 100 or less
c. 1000 or less
d. you should always use a sample

26. Which of the following is not an example of a nonrandom sampling technique?
a. Purposive
b. Quota
c. Convenience
d. Cluster

27. Which of the following sampling methods is the best way to select a group of people for a study if you are interested in making statements about the larger population?
a. Convenience sampling
b. Quota sampling
c. Purposive sampling
d. Random sampling

28. ___________ is a set of elements taken from a larger population according to certain rules.
a. Sample
b. Population
c. Statistic
d. Element

29. Determining the sample interval (represented by k), randomly selecting a number between 1 and k, and including each kth element in your sample are the steps for which form of sampling?
a. Simple Random Sampling
b. Stratified Random Sampling
c. Systematic Sampling
d. Cluster sampling

30. The nonrandom sampling type that involves selecting a convenience sample from a population with a specific set of characteristics for your research study is called _____.
a. Convenience sampling
b. Quota sampling
c. Purposive sampling
d. Snowball sampling

Answers:
1. d
2. c
3. b
4. b
5. d
6. e
7. e
8. c
9. d
10. a
11. c
12. d
13. b
14. d
15. d
16. a
17. b
18. c
19. c
20. b
21. a
22. b
23. d
24. a
25. b
26. d
27. d
28. a
29. c
30. c

Standardized Measurement and Assessment


1. Which of the following is not an assumption underlying testing and measurement?
a. Various approaches to measuring aspects of the same thing can be useful
b. Error is rarely present in the measurement process
c. Present-day behavior predicts future behavior
d. Testing and assessment benefit society

2. Systematic error is associated with:
a. Reliability
b. Validity

3. Which of the following is a type of criterion–related validity evidence?
a. Concurrent evidence
b. Predictive evidence
c. Internal consistency
d. Both a and b are correct answers

4. If a test measures a single construct then:
a. The items should correlate with the total score
b. The items should not correlate with the total score
c. The test should not correlate with other measures of the same construct
d. There must be a reliable alternative form.

5. Professor X develops a test of emotional intelligence. Which of the following represent convergent and discriminant evidence?
a. The test correlates highly with another test of emotional intelligence and is
uncorrelated with self-efficacy
b. The test correlates with highly with another test of emotional intelligence and is
highly correlated with self-efficacy
c. The test does not correlate with another test of emotional intelligence, but does
correlate with self-efficacy
d. The test does not correlate with other tests of emotional intelligence nor with self-
efficacy

6. An ordinal scale is used to rank order people, objects, or characteristics.
a. True
b. False

7. Which scale is the simplest form of measurement?
a. Nominal
b. Ordinal
c. Interval
d. Ratio

8. ______ tests focus on information acquired through the informal learning that goes on in life.
a. Personality
b. Achievement
c. Aptitude
d. Intelligence

9. Let’s say that a test accurately indicates participants’ scores on a future criterion (e.g., the PSAT is used to indicate high-school GPA scores). This test would clearly have which of the following?
a. Face validity
b. Concurrent validity
c. Predictive validity
d. Content validity

10. If a baseball coach calculates batting averages, what scale would be used?
a. Interval scale
b. Ratio scale
c. Nominal scale
d. Ordinal scale

11. According to the text, most of the outcome/dependent variable characteristics and attributes measured in educational research probably exist at the ______________ level of measurement.
a. Nominal
b. Ordinal
c. Interval
d. Ratio

12. Which of the following is most clearly an example of a psychological trait?
a. Anxiety enduring for months or years
b. Anxiety over just seeing a spider
c. Shyness when meeting a stranger for the first time
d. Depression caused by the loss of a ball game

13. All of the following are examples of Intelligence Tests except _________:
a. Wechsler Scales
b. Stanford-Binet
c. Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory(MMPI)
d. Slosson

14. Reliability is most simply known as which of the following?
a. Consistency or stability
b. Appropriateness of interpretations on the basis of test scores
c. Ways in which people are the same
d. A rank order of participants on some characteristic

15. An ordinal scale is:
a. The simplest form of measurement
b. A rank-order scale of measurement
c. A scale with equal intervals between adjacent numbers
d. A scale with an absolute zero point
e. A categorical scale

16. Which of the following is not a type of reliability?
a. Test-retest
b. Split-half
c. Content
d. Internal consistency

17. Which of the following statements accurately describes test-retest reliability?
a. Measure of consistency of test scores over time
b. Measure of consistency of scores obtained from two equivalent halves of the same test
c. Measure of consistency with which a test measures a single construct or concept
d. Measure of degree of agreement between two or more scorers, judges, or raters

18. Which of the following types of reliability refers to the consistency of test scores over time?
a. Equivalent forms reliability
b. Split-half reliability
c. Test-retest reliability
d. Inter-scorer reliability

19. Identify the following term that most closely refers to a judgement of the extent to which scores from a test can be used to infer, or predict, the examinees' performance in some activity:
a. Content reliability
b. Face validity
c. Criterion-related validity
d. Inference validity

20. Which of the following is the correct order of Stevens’ four levels of measurement?
a. Ordinal, nominal, ratio, interval
b. Nominal, ordinal, interval, ratio
c. Interval, nominal, ordinal, ratio
d. Ratio, interval, nominal, ordinal

21. Which is the process of gathering evidence supporting inferences based test scores?
a. Validation
b. Validity
c. Reliability
d. Prediction

22. When evaluating tests and assessments, “reliability” refers to asking ourselves which of the following questions?
a. Does it measure what it is supposed to measure?
b. Are there ways to avoid subjective judgments when measuring something?
c. Does it give consistent results?
d. Does it measure multiple constructs?

23. Validity of a test designed to measure a construct such as self-esteem is best described by which of the following?
a. Scores from the test correlate highly with most intelligence tests
b. Scores from the test correlate highly with most tests of different constructs
c. Scores from the test are not correlated with anything
d. Scores from the test have a relatively strong and positive correlation with other tests of the
same construct (i.e., with other measures of self-esteem) but much lower correlations
with tests of different constructs

24. Which type of reliability refers to the consistency of a group of individuals' scores on two equivalent forms of a test designed to measure the same characteristic?
a. Split-half
b. Test-retest
c. Split-forms
d. Equivalent forms

25. Achievement tests are designed to measure the degree of learning that has taken place after a person has been exposed to a specific learning experience.
a. True
b. False

26. _________ refers to how well the particular sample of behaviors used to measure a characteristic reflects the entire domain of behaviors that constitutes that characteristic.
a. Construct validity evidence
b. Criterion-related validity evidence
c. Content validity evidence
d. Face validity evidence

Answers:
1. b
2. b
3. d
4. a
5. a
6. a
7. a
8. c
9. c
10. b
11. b
12. a
13. c
14. a
15. b
16. c
17. a
18. c
19. c
20. b
21. a
22. c
23. d
24. d
25. a
26. c

Validity of Research Results


1. When a extraneous variable systematically varies with the independent variable and influences the dependent variable, it is called:
a. Another dependent variable
b. A confounding variable
c. A moderating variable
d. An unreliable variable

2. Which of the following statements is true?
a. A statistical relationship is sufficient evidence to infer causality
b. Temporal order of the cause and effect is not important in inferring causality
c. A statistical relation of X and Y is insufficient evidence for inferring causality
d. Temporal order of cause and effect variables and statistical relation are all that are
needed to infer causality

3. A school district examines a program that uses mentors to help very poor readers improve their reading performance. The children in the program are at the 4th percentile at pretest. At posttest they are around the 20th percentile. While it is possible that the program made the difference, another reason for the change in scores could be:
a. History
b. Regression artifact
c. Multiple-treatment interference
d. Differential selection

4. A group of researchers do a study where children from particular classrooms are assigned to treatment or control conditions. After the study, the researcher finds out that the students in the control group are higher achievers than those in the experimental group. He found no treatment effect. The failure to find an effect may be due to:
a. A treatment effect
b. A testing effect
c. A differential selection effect
d. A maturation effect
5. A researcher examines a program looking at the effects of mentoring on poor readers' reading achievement. He looks at two different schools. One serves as the control and the other the experimental group. Both schools had reading achievement that was around the 50th percentile. During the time that the mentoring program is in place in the experimental group, a statewide reading initiative is started in randomly selected schools. The experimental, but not the control school is involved in the initiative. At the end of the year, the experimental group does better than the control. From the information presented above, a likely threat to the internal validity of the study is:
a. Selection by mortality interaction
b. Mortality
c. Selection-history effect
d. Selection-maturation effect

6. Which type of validity refers to the degree to which you can infer that the relationship between two variables is causal?
a. Internal validity
b. Population validity
c. Ecological validity
d. Statistical conclusion validity

7. Which type of validity refers to the ability to infer that the independent and dependent variables are related ant that the measured strength of the relationship is accurate?
a. Internal validity
b. Population validity
c. Ecological validity
d. Statistical conclusion validity

8. An extraneous variable that systematically varies with the independent variable and also influences the dependent variable is known as a _______________.
a Confounding variable
b. Third variable
c. Second variable
d. Both a and b are correct

9. The use of multiple observers to allow cross-checking of observations to make sure that the investigators agree with what took place is known as _______.
a. Interpretive validity
b. Researcher bias
c. Multiple operationalism
d. Investigator triangulation

10. _____________ is the lowest inference descriptor of all because it uses the participant’s own words.
a. Participant feedback
b. A verbatim
c. Data triangulation
d. Investigator triangulation

11. ___________ refers to physical or mental changes that may occur within individuals over time, such as aging, learning, boredom, hunger, and fatigue.
a. Instrumentation
b. History
c. Maturation
d. Testing

12. What type of validity refers to the extent to which the results of a study can be generalized across time?
a. Ecological validity
b. External validity
c. Internal validity
d. Temporal validity

13. Which of the following best describes interpretive validity?
a. Factual accuracy of an account as reported by the researcher
b. Accurately portraying the meanings given by the participants to what is being studied
c. Degree to which a theoretical explanation fits the data
d. Ability to generalize the study results across settings

14. Which of the following terms is a strategy where the researcher actively engages in critical self-reflection about his or her potential biases and predispositions.
a. Experimenter effect
b. Reactivity
c. Investigator triangulation
d. Reflexivity

15. Which of the following is not considered one of the criteria for inferring causality?
a. Evidence that the independent and dependent variables are related
b. Evidence that the relationship between the variables being investigated is not due to a
confounding extraneous variable
c. Evidence that changes in variable A occur before changes in variable B
d. The temporal ordering of the variables being investigated does not matter because a
relationship is all that is really needed

16. The use of multiple data sources to help understand a phenomenon is one strategy that is used to promote qualitative research validity. Which of the following terms describes this strategy?
a. Data matching
b. Pattern matching
c. Data triangulation
d. Data feedback

17. What may happen when different comparison groups experience a different history event?
a. History effect
b. Selection-history effect
c. Selection effect
d. Group effect

18. What is another term that refers to a confounding extraneous variable?
a. Last variable
b. First variable
c. Third variable
d. Fourth variable

19. Which of the following refers to any systematic change that occurs over time in the way in which the dependent variable is assessed?
a. Instrumentation
b. Maturation
c. Testing
d. Selection

20. Which of the following terms describes the ability to generalize from the sample of individuals on which a study was conducted to the larger target population of individuals and across different subpopulations within the larger target population?
a. External validity
b. Population validity
c. Ecological validity
d. Temporal validity

21. Which of the following is not a strategy used to promote qualitative research validity?
a. Peer review
b. Theory triangulation
c. Extended fieldwork
d. Random assignment

22. The use of several measures of a construct is called:
a. Multiple operationalism
b. Multiple construct measurement
c. Operationalism
d. Methods triangulation

23. A physical or mental change that occurs in participants over time that affects their performance on the dependent variable is called ________.
a. Instrumentation
b. Maturation
c. Regression
d. None of above

24. Attrition generally occurs in research where ____.
a. You do demographic research
b. The study fails
c. Some participants do not complete the study
d. The study is very brief

25. Differential attrition occurs when the people dropping out from one group are different from the others in their group or from the people in the comparison group.
a. True
b. False

26. Internal validity refers to which of the following?
a. The ability to infer that a casual relationship exists between 2 variables
b. The extent to which study results can be generalized to and across populations of persons,
settings, and times
c. The use of effective measurement instruments in the study
d. The ability to generalize the study results to individuals not included in the study

27. Which strategy used to promote qualitative research validity uses multiple research methods to study a phenomenon?
a. Data triangulation
b. Methods triangulation
c. Theory triangulation
d. Member checking

28. Which type of validity refers to the factual accuracy of an account as reported by the researcher?
a. Ecological validity
b. Temporal validity
c. Descriptive validity
d. None of the above

29. Which of the following in not one of the key threats to internal validity?
a. Maturation
b. Instrumentation
c. Temporal change
d. History

30. This type of validity refers to the ability to generalize the results of a study across settings.
a. Temporal validity
b. Internal validity
c. Ecological validity
d. External validity

31. Which is not a direct threat to the internal validity of a research design?
a. History
b. Testing
c. Sampling error
d. Differential selection

32. Alteration in performance due to being aware that one is participating in a study is known as ______.
a. Operationalism
b. Reactivity
c. Temporal validity
d. Mortality

33. The idea that the more times a research finding is shown with different sets of people, the more confidence we can place in the finding and in generalizing beyond the original participants is known as ___________.
a. Naturalistic generalization
b. Methods generalization
c. Data triangulation
d. Replication logic

Answers:
1. b
2. c
3. b
4. c
5. c
6. a
7. d
8. d
9. d
10. b
11. c
12. d
13. b
14. d
15. d
16. c
17. b
18. c
19. a
20. b
21. d
22. a
23. b
24. c
25. a
26. a
27. b
28. c
29. c
30. c
31. c
32. b
33. d

Last edited by Amna; Friday, November 16, 2012 at 10:45 AM.
Reply With Quote
The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to ASIF JAN For This Useful Post:
Aliya Sial (Monday, February 11, 2013), Faiza Dar (Thursday, November 22, 2012), MUZAFFAR MAHMOOD (Wednesday, February 13, 2013)
  #14  
Old Friday, November 16, 2012
Junior Member
Qualifier: Awarded to those Members who cleared css written examination - Issue reason: CE 2011 - Roll no 3829
 
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Lahore
Posts: 14
Thanks: 4
Thanked 17 Times in 8 Posts
Hafiz Muhammad Khurshid is on a distinguished road
Default source

wt is source of all these MCQs
Reply With Quote
  #15  
Old Sunday, December 02, 2012
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Lahore,,,Pakistan
Posts: 4
Thanks: 22
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
ishtabah is on a distinguished road
Default

Is there any update about test date?????
Reply With Quote
  #16  
Old Sunday, December 02, 2012
ASIF JAN's Avatar
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 17
Thanks: 1
Thanked 55 Times in 27 Posts
ASIF JAN is on a distinguished road
Default

expected in jan 2013.
Reply With Quote
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to ASIF JAN For This Useful Post:
ishtabah (Monday, December 03, 2012), MUZAFFAR MAHMOOD (Wednesday, February 13, 2013)
  #17  
Old Monday, December 03, 2012
ASIF JAN's Avatar
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 17
Thanks: 1
Thanked 55 Times in 27 Posts
ASIF JAN is on a distinguished road
Default

EDUCATION RELATED ABBREVIATIONS



AKU Aga Khan University
MTDF Medium Term Development Framework
B. Ed.Bachelor of Education
NAVTEC National Vocational & Technical Education Commission
B. Sc. Bachelor of Science
NCHD National Commission for Human Development
B. A. Bachelor of Arts
NEAS National Education Assessment System
Dip.Ed Diploma in Education
NEC National Education Census
DEO District Education Officer
NEF National Education Foundation
DPI Director of Public Instructions
NEMIS National Education Management Information System
ECE Early Childhood Education
NEP
National Education Policy
EDO
Executive District Officer
NEPR
National Education Policy Review
EFA
Education for All
NER
Net Enrolment Ratio
EMIS
Educational Management and
Information System
NFBE Non Formal Basic Education
EOY
End of Year
NFE Non- Formal Education
FATA
Federally Administered Tribal
Areas
NQF National Qualifications Framework
FMIS
Financial Management Information
System
NWFP North West Frontier Province
FTI
Fast Track Initiative
OECD Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development
GCI
Global Competitive Index
P&P
Policy and Planning (Wing)
GDP
Gross Domestic Product
PEACE
Provincial Education Assessment Centre
GER
Gross Enrolment Ratio
PEC
Pakistan Engineering Council
GMR
Global Monitoring Report
Ph. D.
Doctor of Philosophy
GoP Government of Pakistan
PISA
Programme for International Student
Assessment
GPI Gender Parity Index
PM&DC
Pakistan Medical and Dental Council
HDI
Human Development Index
PMIS
Personnel Management Information
System
HDR Human Development Report
PPP Public Private Partnerships
HEC
Higher Education Commission
PTA
Parent Teachers Association
HIV/A
IDs
Human Immunodeficiency
Virus/Acquired Immune
Deficiency Syndrome
PTR
Pupil-Teacher Ratio
HRD
Human Resource Development R&D Research and Development
ICT
Islamabad Capital Territory
SIP School Improvement Plan
ICTs
Information Communication
Technologies
SMC School Management Committee
IED Institute for Educational
Development (AKU)
STEPS Students, Teachers, Educationists, Parents
and Society
IPEMC
Inter-Provincial Education
Ministers' Conference
TIMSS Trends in International Mathematics and
Science Study
LGOs
Local Government Ordinances
TVE Technical & Vocational Education
LSBE
Life Skills-Based Education
UN United Nations
MDA
Mid-Decade assessment
UNDP United Nations Development Program
MDGs
Millennium Development Goals
UNESCO United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization
MoE
Ministry of Education
UPE
Universal Primary Education
MoSW
&SE
Ministry of Social Welfare and
Special Education
USAID
United States Agency for International
Development
MSP Minimum Standard of Provision
WB World Bank
Reply With Quote
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to ASIF JAN For This Useful Post:
kalo (Monday, December 17, 2012), MUZAFFAR MAHMOOD (Wednesday, February 13, 2013)
  #18  
Old Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 37
Thanks: 13
Thanked 7 Times in 6 Posts
Matee ur Rehman is on a distinguished road
Default

the name of the book is Qualify M.ed vol II by Majeed publishers ,it can be benificial for Headmistress
Reply With Quote
  #19  
Old Friday, June 28, 2013
bluesky's Avatar
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: France
Posts: 48
Thanks: 28
Thanked 25 Times in 15 Posts
bluesky is on a distinguished road
Default

thank you Asif bhai for the useful notes.
Can i add more information in this thread which i have read currently?
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Psychological Test 2006 engle Psychological Tests 5 Saturday, October 24, 2020 02:24 AM
Questions of International Relations Last Island International Relations 9 Thursday, August 20, 2020 08:35 PM
plz comment upon my experience of psychological test of ISI nabila tanvir Psychological Tests 4 Thursday, September 10, 2009 12:03 AM


CSS Forum on Facebook Follow CSS Forum on Twitter

Disclaimer: All messages made available as part of this discussion group (including any bulletin boards and chat rooms) and any opinions, advice, statements or other information contained in any messages posted or transmitted by any third party are the responsibility of the author of that message and not of CSSForum.com.pk (unless CSSForum.com.pk is specifically identified as the author of the message). The fact that a particular message is posted on or transmitted using this web site does not mean that CSSForum has endorsed that message in any way or verified the accuracy, completeness or usefulness of any message. We encourage visitors to the forum to report any objectionable message in site feedback. This forum is not monitored 24/7.

Sponsors: ArgusVision   vBulletin, Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.