INTRODUCTION TO BEHAVIORAL STATISTICS
JOURNAL ARTICLE EVALUATION OF STATISTICS OUTLINE.
PUT THE COURSE NUMBER (EDP667), SEMESTER (FALL, 2005) AND CAMPUS (OXFORD)
ON A SEPARATE COVER SHEET. PUT YOUR NAME ON THE BOTTOM LEFT PORTION
OF THIS COVER SHEET. THE FOLLOWING WOULD BE AN EXAMPLE OF A PROPER COVER
SHEET:
FALL, 2005
OXFORD CAMPUS
EVALUATION I: T-TEST - EITHER INDEPENDENT SAMPLE OR REPEATED MEASURES.
OR
ANALYSIS OF VARIANCE OR CORRELATION.
LAWRENCE W. SHERMAN
FOLLOWING THE XEROX COPY OF THE ARTICLE SHOULD BE YOUR EVALUATION
OF THE ARTICLE. TYPE IT UP IN APA STYLE USING DOUBLE SPACING THROUGHOUT.
YOUR EVALUATION SHOULD ADDRESS THE FOLLOWING OUTLINED ISSUES:
JOURNAL ARTICLE EVALUATION OUTLINE
TITLE:
AUTHOR(S):
JOURNAL:
DATE:
VOLUME:
PAGES:
A. INTRODUCTION
1. DOES THE TITLE OF THE RESEARCH ARTICLE GIVE ANY INDICATION OF THE TYPE OF STUDY BEING REPORTED: IE., DESCRIPTIVE, CORRELATIONAL, OR CAUSAL - COMPARATIVE.
2. WERE THE INDEPENDENT AND DEPENDENT VARIABLES MENTIONED IN THE TITLE?
3. IN WHAT PART OF THE ARTICLE DID YOU FIND WHAT KIND OF STATISTICAL TOOLS
WERE BEING USED?
B. ANALYZING THE VARIABLES.
1. WHAT IS (ARE) THE INDEPENDENT VARIABLES(S). BE SPECIFIC!
C. HYPOTHESES.
1. WERE THE HYPOTHESES CLEAR AND UNDERSTANDABLE?
2. FOR EACH HYPOTHESIS ANSWER THE FOLLOWING:
a. IS IT SIMPLY AN "ALTERNATIVE"
HYPOTHESIS WITH NO DIRECTIONALITY IMPLIED?
b. IS IT DIRECTIONAL?
3. IF THE AUTHORS DID NOT PROVIDE HYPOTHESES, TRY TO "CREATIVELY" GENERATE
WHAT YOU THINK THEY SHOULD HAVE BEEN. DO THIS IN BOTH "NON-DIRECTIONAL" AND
"DIRECTIONAL" ALTERNATIVE FORMS.
4. ATTEMPT TO STATE THE NULL HYPOTHESIS FOR EACH ALTERNATIVE HYPOTHESIS.
a. SYMBOLICALLY REPRESENT THE NULL HYPOTHESIS.
5. DID THE AUTHORS SPECIFY A SPECIFIC ALPHA RISK LEVEL FOR REJECTING
THE NULL HYPOTHESIS? IF SO, WHAT WAS IT? IF THEY DID NOT SPECIFY THE ALPHA
RISK LEVEL, WHAT DO YOU THINK IT MUST HAVE BEEN?
D. SAMPLE.
1. DO YOU BELIEVE THAT THE SAMPLE WAS LARGE ENOUGH?
1. ARE APPROPRIATE STATISTICAL TOOLS USED?
3. WERE GRAPHIC CHARTS USED?
a. IF SO, WERE THEY HELPFUL IN SHOWING THE RESULTS.
b. IF GRAPHIC CHARTS WERE NOT USED, TRY TO CONSTRUCT THEM FROM THE REPORTED DATA: IE., SKETCH OUT A BAR GRAPH, HISTOGRAM, OR FREQUENCY POLYGON.
4. DOES THE INVESTIGATOR RELATE THE RESULTS TO THE HYPOTHESES?
5. DOES THE INVESTIGATOR OVER-CONCLUDE, THAT IS, ARE THE CONCLUSIONS SUPPORTED BY THE DATA.