Short Answer

You are planning a research project to evaluate whether a new stress-reduction program is effective. Rather than conducting three identical laboratory experiments, how should you vary the designs and flaws of your three studies to maximize confidence in your final conclusion, and why?

Question: You are planning a research project to evaluate whether a new stress-reduction program is effective. Rather than conducting three identical laboratory experiments, how should you vary the designs and flaws of your three studies to maximize confidence in your final conclusion, and why?

Sample answer: To maximize confidence, I should employ three different research designs (e.g., a laboratory experiment, a correlational survey, and a field study) so that each has different methodological flaws. This ensures that when the findings converge, the specific weaknesses of one design (like low external validity in the lab) are balanced by the strengths of another (like high external validity in the field), providing complementary strengths.

Key points:

  • Use diverse research designs rather than repeating the same design.
  • Ensure each study design has a different type of methodological flaw.
  • Explain that the strengths of one design will balance the weaknesses of another when results converge.

Rubric: The answer should describe a plan to use different/diverse research designs with different types of flaws (rather than repeating the same design and flaws) and justify this by stating it allows the weaknesses of one design to be balanced by the strengths of another when the results converge.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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