Techniques Used in Studying Behaviour/Conduct Research in Educational Psychology
Techniques Used in Studying Behaviour/Conduct Research in Educational Psychology
Techniques Used in Studying Behaviour/Conduct Research in Educational Psychology
Studying
Behaviour/Conduct
Research in Educational
Psychology
Why
is it Research
important Methods/
to study Techniques
The
behaviour? Scientific
Approach
Why is it important to study behaviour or
conduct esearch in educational psychology?
• Develope hypothesis
• Collect data/information
• Hypothesis testing
• Draw conclusions
• Revise research conclusions and theory
Research Methods/Techniques
• Observation
• Case Study
• Survey
• Correlational Research
• Experimental Research
Observation
• Scientific observation is highly systematic
which requires knowing what you are looking
for (e.g.: the types of behaviour to be
studied), conducting observations in an
unbiased manner, accurately recording and
categorizing what you see, and effectively
communicating your observations (Cone
1999).
• 2 types of observation:
- Naturalistic observation
- Laboratory observation
Naturalistic Observation
• Behaviour is observed out in the real world.
• Educational psychologists conduct
naturalistic observations of children in the
classrooms, at museums, on play grounds, in
homes, in neighbourhoods, and in other
settings.
Advantages
• Various kinds of behaviour can be being
observed in a more natural and spontaneous
manner.
• Involving real life situation
Cohen (1988):
.5 1.00 (high/strong)
.3 .49 (moderate)
.1 .29 (low/weak)
The direction of the relationship
Advantages
• This design allow researchers to study
variables as they are, without creating artificial
situation.
• Many important research can be studied only
in correlational study (e.g. gender vs maths
achievement, gender cannot be manipulated)
• This design let researchers study the
interrelationships of many variables at the same
time.
Disadvantages/Limitations
Students’ grade’s in
DV school
Extraneous Variables
• Variables that are not included in the
experiment influence the DV
• post threat to the validity of the experiment
• examples: Students’ grades are influence by
the tuitions they attended instead of the time
management program
Advantages