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Multiple Choice

An educational psychologist is evaluating two proposed participant-assignment methods for a between-subjects experiment designed to compare a new reading intervention against a standard curriculum.

Method A: The researcher uses a computerized random number generator to assign each student to either the intervention or control group. This results in 2828 students in the intervention group and 1212 students in the control group.

Method B: The researcher assigns students in pairs; for each pair, they flip a coin to put the first student in either the intervention or control group, and automatically place the second student in the other group. This results in exactly 2020 students in each group.

When evaluating these two methods in terms of strict experimental control, internal validity, and the criteria of random assignment, which of the following judgments is methodologically correct?

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Updated 2026-06-15

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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