Learn Before
Short Answer

Suppose a research team wants to study whether the effectiveness of a study-skills program differs based on the number of siblings a student has. Apply the concept of independent variable manipulation to explain why the team must use a group research design rather than a single-subject design.

Question: Suppose a research team wants to study whether the effectiveness of a study-skills program differs based on the number of siblings a student has. Apply the concept of independent variable manipulation to explain why the team must use a group research design rather than a single-subject design.

Sample answer: The research team must use a group research design because the number of siblings a student has is an independent variable that the researcher cannot directly manipulate. Group research designs are necessary to investigate such non-manipulable independent variables.

Key points:

  • Identify 'number of siblings' as a non-manipulable independent variable
  • State that group research designs are required for non-manipulable independent variables
  • Explain why a single-subject design is not suitable for studying this non-manipulable variable

Rubric: Grading Rubric: - Full Credit: Explicitly identifies 'number of siblings' as a non-manipulable independent variable and correctly states that group designs are required to investigate variables that researchers cannot directly manipulate. - Partial Credit: Mentions the need for group designs but fails to clearly link it to the inability to manipulate the variable. - No Credit: Recommends single-subject design or fails to provide an explanation based on variable manipulation.

0

1

Updated 2026-05-26

Contributors are:

Who are from:

Tags

KPU

Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

Related