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A researcher is using a nonequivalent groups design to compare a new coaching intervention at two schools. During the study, a student drug overdose occurs at the treatment school but not the control school. Apply the concept of differential history to describe the specific impact of this event on the study's posttest scores and internal validity.

Question: A researcher is using a nonequivalent groups design to compare a new coaching intervention at two schools. During the study, a student drug overdose occurs at the treatment school but not the control school. Apply the concept of differential history to describe the specific impact of this event on the study's posttest scores and internal validity.

Sample answer: The student drug overdose is an isolated extraneous event that affects only the treatment school, constituting a differential history threat. This event could independently alter the treatment school's posttest scores, making it impossible to determine if observed differences are due to the coaching intervention or the overdose, thereby threatening the study's internal validity.

Key points:

  • Identify the student drug overdose at the treatment school as a differential history threat.
  • State that the overdose could independently alter the treatment school's posttest scores.
  • Conclude that this event makes it impossible to attribute posttest differences to the intervention.

Rubric: Full credit is given if the answer states that the overdose at the treatment school could independently alter posttest scores, creating a differential history threat that makes it impossible to attribute differences to the coaching intervention.

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Updated 2026-05-26

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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