Conducting Meaningful Experiments

40 Steps to Becoming a Scientist
Conducting Meaningful Experiments
March 1994 | 149 pages | Sage US
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ISBN: 9781452254685
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Paperback
ISBN: 9780803955318
Available from January 0001

Description

"There is no doubt that this book will be well received by those who are fortunate enough to come across it. This book will be of use to the growing number of people involved either as purchasers or providers of research. Don't go to work without it!" --Health Services Management Research Journal "I would recommend [this book] to a colleague as a useful companion text for students. I would say that this is an engaging discussion of experimental research for social, behavioral, and health science students. The writing style is fresh and entertaining, and draws the willing reader into thinking through the process of designing and conducting experimental research. It is not a 'cookbook' or a compendium of facts. Rather, it is a pragmatic and thoughtful description intended to help students understand how to design meaningful experiments, and by understanding that, they will also understand how to interpret research they do not conduct themselves." --Katharyn A. May, School of Nursing, Vanderbilt University "This slim but packed volume is written for prospective researchers in the social and health sciences. The writing style is lively, encouraging, upbeat. R. Barker Bausell brings science down to earth without sacrificing respect for rigor and complexity. . . . Recommended for all institutions with undergraduate or graduate research requirements in the social and health sciences." --Choice Tired of research methods books that tell how to perform a research study without any mention of the why behind doing research? Aimed at communicating the excitement and responsibility of the research process, this remarkable volume enables you to evaluate beforehand whether a prospective research study has the potential to either improve the human condition, contribute to theory formation, or explain the etiology of a significant phenomenon rather than to produce just another "publishable" study. By emphasizing how to think about and strategize a research study, R. Barker Bausell shows you the important steps of a scientific study--from the formulation of the problem to the write-up of the results. Replete with illustrative examples drawn from the social, health, and behavioral sciences, this volume is a must for all serious researchers.

Contents

Introduction

Introduction

What You Need (and Don't Need) to Be a Scientist

What You Need (and Don't Need) to Be a Scientist

Laying the Foundation

Laying the Foundation

Formulating a Meaningful Hypothesis

Formulating a Meaningful Hypothesis

Evaluating the Meaningfulness of the Research Hypothesis

Evaluating the Meaningfulness of the Research Hypothesis

Designing an Experiment

Designing an Experiment

Designing Experimental Studies to Achieve Statistical Significance

Designing Experimental Studies to Achieve Statistical Significance

Conducting the Pilot Study(ies)

Conducting the Pilot Study(ies)

Conducting the Actual Study

Conducting the Actual Study

Analyzing and Reporting the Results

Analyzing and Reporting the Results

Description

"There is no doubt that this book will be well received by those who are fortunate enough to come across it. This book will be of use to the growing number of people involved either as purchasers or providers of research. Don't go to work without it!" --Health Services Management Research Journal "I would recommend [this book] to a colleague as a useful companion text for students. I would say that this is an engaging discussion of experimental research for social, behavioral, and health science students. The writing style is fresh and entertaining, and draws the willing reader into thinking through the process of designing and conducting experimental research. It is not a 'cookbook' or a compendium of facts. Rather, it is a pragmatic and thoughtful description intended to help students understand how to design meaningful experiments, and by understanding that, they will also understand how to interpret research they do not conduct themselves." --Katharyn A. May, School of Nursing, Vanderbilt University "This slim but packed volume is written for prospective researchers in the social and health sciences. The writing style is lively, encouraging, upbeat. R. Barker Bausell brings science down to earth without sacrificing respect for rigor and complexity. . . . Recommended for all institutions with undergraduate or graduate research requirements in the social and health sciences." --Choice Tired of research methods books that tell how to perform a research study without any mention of the why behind doing research? Aimed at communicating the excitement and responsibility of the research process, this remarkable volume enables you to evaluate beforehand whether a prospective research study has the potential to either improve the human condition, contribute to theory formation, or explain the etiology of a significant phenomenon rather than to produce just another "publishable" study. By emphasizing how to think about and strategize a research study, R. Barker Bausell shows you the important steps of a scientific study--from the formulation of the problem to the write-up of the results. Replete with illustrative examples drawn from the social, health, and behavioral sciences, this volume is a must for all serious researchers.

Contents

Introduction

Introduction

What You Need (and Don't Need) to Be a Scientist

What You Need (and Don't Need) to Be a Scientist

Laying the Foundation

Laying the Foundation

Formulating a Meaningful Hypothesis

Formulating a Meaningful Hypothesis

Evaluating the Meaningfulness of the Research Hypothesis

Evaluating the Meaningfulness of the Research Hypothesis

Designing an Experiment

Designing an Experiment

Designing Experimental Studies to Achieve Statistical Significance

Designing Experimental Studies to Achieve Statistical Significance

Conducting the Pilot Study(ies)

Conducting the Pilot Study(ies)

Conducting the Actual Study

Conducting the Actual Study

Analyzing and Reporting the Results

Analyzing and Reporting the Results

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Conducting Meaningful Experiments

40 Steps to Becoming a Scientist


March 1994 | 149 pages | Sage US

Format Published Date ISBN Price
Paperback 28/02/2026 9780803955318 $126.00
180 Day Ebook 28/02/2026 9781452254685 $54.00
Lifetime 28/02/2026 9781452254685 $78.00

"There is no doubt that this book will be well received by those who are fortunate enough to come across it. This book will be of use to the growing number of people involved either as purchasers or providers of research. Don't go to work without it!" --Health Services Management Research Journal "I would recommend [this book] to a colleague as a useful companion text for students. I would say that this is an engaging discussion of experimental research for social, behavioral, and health science students. The writing style is fresh and entertaining, and draws the willing reader into thinking through the process of designing and conducting experimental research. It is not a 'cookbook' or a compendium of facts. Rather, it is a pragmatic and thoughtful description intended to help students understand how to design meaningful experiments, and by understanding that, they will also understand how to interpret research they do not conduct themselves." --Katharyn A. May, School of Nursing, Vanderbilt University "This slim but packed volume is written for prospective researchers in the social and health sciences. The writing style is lively, encouraging, upbeat. R. Barker Bausell brings science down to earth without sacrificing respect for rigor and complexity. . . . Recommended for all institutions with undergraduate or graduate research requirements in the social and health sciences." --Choice Tired of research methods books that tell how to perform a research study without any mention of the why behind doing research? Aimed at communicating the excitement and responsibility of the research process, this remarkable volume enables you to evaluate beforehand whether a prospective research study has the potential to either improve the human condition, contribute to theory formation, or explain the etiology of a significant phenomenon rather than to produce just another "publishable" study. By emphasizing how to think about and strategize a research study, R. Barker Bausell shows you the important steps of a scientific study--from the formulation of the problem to the write-up of the results. Replete with illustrative examples drawn from the social, health, and behavioral sciences, this volume is a must for all serious researchers.

Table Of Contents:

  • Introduction
  • What You Need (and Don't Need) to Be a Scientist
  • Laying the Foundation
  • Formulating a Meaningful Hypothesis
  • Evaluating the Meaningfulness of the Research Hypothesis
  • Designing an Experiment
  • Designing Experimental Studies to Achieve Statistical Significance
  • Conducting the Pilot Study(ies)
  • Conducting the Actual Study
  • Analyzing and Reporting the Results

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