Short Answer

You are reviewing a colleague's research proposal. They plan to conduct a true experiment but have not controlled for several obvious confounding variables. How would you apply the concept of internal validity overlap to advise them on how their study compares to a well-designed quasi-experiment?

Question: You are reviewing a colleague's research proposal. They plan to conduct a true experiment but have not controlled for several obvious confounding variables. How would you apply the concept of internal validity overlap to advise them on how their study compares to a well-designed quasi-experiment?

Sample answer: I would advise them that due to the overlap in internal validity, their poorly designed experiment with many confounds will actually have lower internal validity than a well-designed quasi-experiment that controls for obvious confounding variables.

Key points:

  • Applies the concept of internal validity overlap to the specific proposal.
  • Explains that the proposed experiment's confounding variables lower its internal validity.
  • States that a well-designed quasi-experiment without obvious confounds would have higher internal validity in this case.

Rubric: Answers should apply the concept of overlap to indicate that the colleague's poorly designed experiment will have lower internal validity than a well-designed quasi-experiment due to the presence of confounding variables.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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