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A researcher is designing a survey to measure routine study habits. The survey involves minor boredom, which is no greater than what students face in daily classes. Applying the rule for justifying minimal risk research, what must the researcher demonstrate about the study's benefits to ethically justify conducting this survey?

Question: A researcher is designing a survey to measure routine study habits. The survey involves minor boredom, which is no greater than what students face in daily classes. Applying the rule for justifying minimal risk research, what must the researcher demonstrate about the study's benefits to ethically justify conducting this survey?

Sample answer: Because the risk of minor boredom is no greater than what is encountered in daily life, the researcher only needs to demonstrate a small anticipated benefit to the participants, science, or society to ethically justify the survey.

Key points:

  • Acknowledge the survey is a minimal risk study because boredom is a daily life experience.
  • State that the researcher needs to demonstrate only a small anticipated benefit.
  • Specify that the benefit can be directed toward participants, science, or society.

Rubric: The answer must apply the minimal risk rule by stating that only a small anticipated benefit (to participants, science, or society) is required to ethically justify the survey because the risk does not exceed daily life experiences.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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