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Selecting the Right Analyses for Your Data: Quantitative, Qualitative, and Mixed Methods PDF

522 Pages·2016·2.72 MB·English
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ebook THE GUILFORD PRESS Selecting the Right AnAlySeS foR youR DAtA Also Available When to Use What Research Design W. Paul Vogt, Dianne C. Gardner, and Lynne M. Haeffele Selecting the Right Analyses for your Data Quantitative, Qualitative, and Mixed Methods W. Paul Vogt Elaine R. Vogt Dianne C. Gardner Lynne M. Haeffele THE GUILFORD PRESS New York London © 2014 The Guilford Press A Division of Guilford Publications, Inc. 72 Spring Street, New York, NY 10012 www.guilford.com All rights reserved No part of this book may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording, or otherwise, without written permission from the publisher. Printed in the United States of America This book is printed on acid-free paper. Last digit is print number: 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available from the publisher. ISBN: 978-1-4625-1576-9 (paperback) ISBN: 978-1-4625-1602-5 (hardcover) Preface and Acknowledgments Using the right analysis methods leads to more justifiable conclusions and more per- suasive interpretations of your data. Several plausible coding and analysis options exist for any set of data—qualitative, quantitative, or graphic/visual. Helping readers select among those options is our goal in this book. Because the range of choices is broad, so too is the range of topics we have addressed. In addition to the standard division between quantitative and qualitative coding methods and analyses, discussed in spe- cific chapters and sections, we have dealt with graphic data and analyses throughout the book. We have also addressed in virtually every chapter the issues involved in com- bining qualitative, quantitative, and graphic data and techniques in mixed methods approaches. We intentionally cover a very large number of topics and consider this a strength of the book; it enables readers to consider a broad range of options in one place. Analysis choices are usually tied to prior design and sampling decisions. This means that Selecting the Right Analyses for Your Data is naturally tied to topics addressed in our companion volume, When to Use What Research Design, published in 2012. In that book we introduced guidelines for starting along the intricate paths of choices research- ers face as they wend their way through a research project. Completing the steps of a research project—from the initial idea through formulating a research question, choos- ing methods of data collection, and identifying populations and sampling methods to deciding how to code, analyze, and interpret the data thus collected—is an arduous process, but few jobs are as rewarding. We think of the topic—from the research question to the interpretation of evi- dence—as a unified whole. We have dealt with it in two books, rather than in one huge volume, mostly for logistical reasons. The two books are free standing. As in a good marriage, they are distinct but happier as a pair. It has been exciting to bring to frui- tion the two-volume project, and we hope that you too will find it useful and occasion- ally provocative as you select effective methods to collect, code, analyze, and interpret your data. v vi Preface and Acknowledgments To assist you with the selection process, the book uses several organizing tech- niques to help orient readers, which are often called pedagogical features: • Opening chapter previews provide readers with a quick way to find the useful (and often unexpected) topic nuggets in each chapter. • End-of-chapter Summary Tables recap the dos and don’ts and the advantages and disadvantages of the various analytic techniques. • End-of-chapter Suggestions for Further Reading are provided that include detailed summaries of what readers can find in each one and why they might want to read them for greater depth or more technical information. • Chapter 14 concludes the book with aphorisms containing advice on different themes. It is a great pleasure to acknowledge the help we have received along the way. This book would not have been written without the constant support and advice—from the early planning to the final copyediting—of C. Deborah Laughton, Publisher, Meth- odology and Statistics, at The Guilford Press. She also recruited a wonderful group of external reviewers for the manuscript. Their suggestions for improving the book were exceptionally helpful. These external reviewers were initially anonymous, of course, but now we can thank at least some of them by name: Theresa E. DiDonato, Depart- ment of Psychology, Loyola University, Baltimore, Maryland; Marji Erickson Warfield, The Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts; Janet Salmons, Department of Business, School of Business and Tech- nology, Capella University, Minneapolis, Minnesota; Ryan Spohn, School of Crimi- nology and Criminal Justice, University of Nebraska at Omaha, Omaha, Nebraska; Jerrell C. Cassady, Department of Educational Psychology, Ball State University, Mun- cie, I ndiana; and Tracey LaPierre, Department of Sociology, University of Kansas, Law- rence, Kansas. The editorial and production staff at The Guilford Press, especially Anna Nelson, have been wonderful to work with. They have been efficient, professional, and friendly as they turned our rough typescript into a polished work. This book and its companion volume, When to Use What Research Design, were written with colleagues and students in mind. These groups helped in ways too numer- ous to recount, both directly and indirectly. Many of the chapters were field tested in classes on research design and in several courses on data analysis for graduate students at Illinois State University. We are especially grateful to students with whom we worked on dissertation committees as well as in classes. They inspired us to write in ways that are directly useful for the practice of research. We have also had opportunities to learn about research practice from working on several sponsored research projects funded by the U.S. Department of Education, the National Science Foundation, and the Lumina Foundation. Also important has been the extensive program evaluation work we have done under the auspices of the Illinois Board of Higher Education (mostly funded by the U.S. Department of Education). Although we had help from these sources, it remains true, of course, that we alone are responsible for the book’s shortcomings. Abbreviations Used in This Book The following is a list of abbreviations used in this book. If a term and its abbreviation are used only once, they are defined where they are used. ACS American Community Survey A b AIK Akaike information criterion b r ANCOVA analysis of covariance e v ANOVA analysis of variance i A AUC area under the curve t i o BMI body mass index n CAQDAS computer- assisted qualitative data analysis software s CART classification and regression trees CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CFA confirmatory (or common) factor analysis CI confidence interval COMPASSS comparative methods for systematic cross-case analysis CPS Current Population Survey CRA correlation and regression analysis CSND cumulative standard normal distribution DA discriminant analysis d-i-d difference- in- difference DIF differential item functioning DOI digital object identifier vii DV dependent variable E estimate or error or error terms EDA exploratory data analysis EFA exploratory factor analysis ELL English language learner ES effect size ESCI effect- size confidence interval FA factor analysis GDP gross domestic product GIS geographic information systems GLM general (and generalized) linear model GPA grade point average GRE Graduate Record Examination GSS general social survey s n GT grounded theory o i HLM hierarchical linear modeling t A HSD honestly significant difference i v ICC intraclass correlation e r ICPSR Inter- University Consortium for Political and Social Research b b IPEDS integrated postsecondary education data system A IQ intelligence quotient IQR interquartile range IRB institutional review board IRT item response theory I-T information-theoretic analysis IV independent variable IVE instrumental variable estimation JOB Job Outreach Bureau LGCM latent growth curve modeling LOVE left-out variable error LR logit (or logistic) regression LS least squares viii

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