Short Answer

A researcher is using an interrupted time-series design to study student absences in a psychology class. Before the treatment (introducing public attendance taking), they collect only a single measurement of absences from the week immediately prior. Apply your knowledge of this design's structure to explain why collecting only one pre-treatment measurement, instead of multiple measurements, compromises the validity of their conclusions.

Question: A researcher is using an interrupted time-series design to study student absences in a psychology class. Before the treatment (introducing public attendance taking), they collect only a single measurement of absences from the week immediately prior. Apply your knowledge of this design's structure to explain why collecting only one pre-treatment measurement, instead of multiple measurements, compromises the validity of their conclusions.

Sample answer: Collecting only one pre-treatment measurement makes it impossible to establish a stable baseline trend. Without multiple pre-treatment measurements, the researcher cannot determine whether a post-treatment drop in absences is a true effect of the intervention or simply a result of normal weekly fluctuations.

Key points:

  • Explain that multiple pre-treatment measurements are needed to establish a stable baseline or trend.
  • Explain that a single pre-treatment measurement fails to account for normal weekly fluctuations.
  • Explain that without a baseline, it is impossible to determine if the post-treatment change is due to the intervention.

Rubric: Explain that a single measurement cannot establish a stable baseline trend or account for normal weekly fluctuations, preventing the researcher from distinguishing treatment effects from random variations.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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