Instructor’s Manual and Test Bank
for
Understanding Research: A Consumer’s Guide
Second Edition
Vicki L. Plano Clark
University of Cincinnati
John W. Creswell
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Prepared by
Michelle C. Howell Smith
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
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Copyright © [2015, 2010] by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Manufactured in the United States of America. This publication is protected by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise. To obtain permission(s) to use material from this work, please submit a written request to Pearson Education, Inc., Permissions Department, One Lake Street, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458, or you may fax your request to 201-236-3290.
Instructors of classes using Vicki Plano Clark and John Creswell’s Understanding Research: A Consumer’s Guide, may reproduce material from the instructor's resource manual and test bank for classroom use.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 ISBN-10: 0132902753
ISBN-13: 9780132902755
PREFACE
This Instructor's Manual and Test Bank has been written as a resource for individuals teaching a consumer-focused course on understanding research. This course can be challenging to teach. Many students take this course simply to fulfill a requirement without much enthusiasm for or appreciation of the importance of understanding research to help them become better professionals. This Instructor's Manual has been designed to provide you with numerous resources to facilitate your course preparations and use of activities to help students learn to apply the content in contexts that are meaningful to them.
Following is an overview of the resources provided within the Instructor's Manual for each chapter in Understanding Research: A Consumer's Guide.
- Learning Objectives
- The learning objectives from each chapter are reprinted in this manual as a quick overview of the goals of each chapter.
- New Glossary Terms
- The glossary terms which are introduced within each chapter are included in this manual so you have this list readily at hand.
- List of Full-Text Articles Associated With The Chapter
- Notes are provided in this manual alerting you to the articles that students will be asked to read as part of the textbook.
- Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts
- Several activities that you may consider using in class to help students apply the concepts that they have learned for each chapter are also included. Most activities are well suited to students working together in small groups and/or sharing their ideas with the whole class.
- Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria
- Each chapter in Understanding Research: A Consumer's Guide includes a rating scale that students can apply to evaluate a published research study. Suggestions for using the rating scales with students are included, as well as printable full-page handouts of the rating scales that provide adequate space for students to write their responses.
- Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research
- Although Understanding Research: A Consumer's Guide targets a consumer audience, it is likely that many instructors will want to also consider activities that encourage students to think of themselves as producers of research. Therefore, this manual includes at least one activity for each chapter that requires students to apply the ideas in the context of conducting research.
- Handouts
- At least one printable, full-page handout per chapter that can be used with students is included. These handouts include copies of the evaluation rating scales from each chapter, as well as other activity-related resources discussed in the manual such as a grading rubric for a literature review assignment.
- Test Bank
- The Test Bank contains various types of items—multiple-choice, matching, short essay, and fill-in-the-blank—for the chapters. Questions ask students to identify and describe research processes and design characteristics they have learned, and to classify and evaluate quantitative, qualitative, and combined studies and research situations.
- Test Bank Answers
- Answers for all items included in the Test Bank are included.
In addition to the materials contained within this Instructor's Manual, there are PowerPoint lecture slides available for your use. A complete set of lecture slides prepared for each chapter is available for download from the website. Each set of slides includes the following features:
- Talking points that answer the questions asked in the section headings
- Definitions of key terms presented in the text
- Quality criteria listed at the end of the chapter
I hope you find these materials useful and wish you a very successful course!
Michelle C. Howell Smith
Lincoln, Nebraska
April, 2014
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1. THE PROCESS OF RESEARCH: LEARNING HOW RESEARCH IS CONDUCTED AND REPORTED 1
Learning Objectives1
Lecture Slides1
New Glossary Terms1
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter2
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts2
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria3
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research3
Handout: Figure 1.14
CHAPTER 2. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE RESEARCH: UNDERSTANDING DIFFERENT TYPES OF STUDY REPORTS 5
Learning Objectives5
Lecture Slides5
New Glossary Terms5
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter5
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts6
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria7
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research7
Activity: Characteristics of Research8
Handout Figure 2.39
CHAPTER 3. STATEMENTS OF THE PROBLEM: IDENTIFYING WHY A STUDY IS IMPORTANT 10
Learning Objectives10
Lecture Slides10
New Glossary Terms10
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter10
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts11
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria11
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research12
Handout Figure 3.413
CHAPTER 4. LITERATURE REVIEWS: EXAMINING THE BACKGROUND FOR A STUDY 14
Learning Objectives14
Lecture Slides14
New Glossary Terms14
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter14
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts15
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria16
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research16
Handout Figure 4.917
Activity: Grading Rubric for Literature Review Project18
CHAPTER 5. PURPOSE STATEMENTS, RESEARCH QUESTIONS AND HYPOTHESES: IDENTIFYING THE INTENT OF A STUDY 19
Learning Objectives19
Lecture Slides19
New Glossary Terms19
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter20
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts20
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria21
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research21
Handout Figure 5.523
CHAPTER 6. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH DESIGNS: RECOGNIZING THE OVERALL PLAN FOR A STUDY 24
Learning Objectives24
Lecture Slides24
New Glossary Terms24
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter24
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts25
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria26
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research26
Handout Figure 6.327
CHAPTER 7. PARTICIPANTS AND DATA COLLECTION: IDENTIFYING HOW QUANTITATIVE INFORMATION IS GATHERED 28
Learning Objectives28
Lecture Slides28
New Glossary Terms28
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter29
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts29
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria30
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research30
Handout Figure 7.431
CHAPTER 8. DATA ANALYSIS AND RESULTS: EXAMINING WHAT WAS FOUND IN A QUANTITATIVE STUDY 32
Learning Objectives32
Lecture Slides32
New Glossary Terms32
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter33
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts33
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria34
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research34
Handout Figure 8.1035
CHAPTER 9. QUALITATIVE RESEARCH DESIGNS: RECOGNIZING THE OVERALL PLAN FOR A STUDY 36
Learning Objectives36
Lecture Slides36
New Glossary Terms36
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter36
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts37
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria38
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research38
Handout Figure 9.339
CHAPTER 10. PARTICIPANTS AND DATA COLLECTION: IDENTIFYING HOW QUALITATIVE INFORMATION IS GATHERED 40
Learning Objectives40
Lecture Slides40
New Glossary Terms40
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter41
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts41
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria42
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research42
Handout Figure 10.443
CHAPTER 11. DATA ANALYSIS AND RESULTS: EXAMINING WHAT WAS FOUND IN A QUALITATIVE STUDY 44
Learning Objectives44
Lecture Slides44
New Glossary Terms44
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter45
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts45
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria46
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research46
Handout Figure 11.1147
CHAPTER 12. MIXED METHODS RESEARCH: STUDIES THAT MIX QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE RESEARCH 48
Learning Objectives48
Lecture Slides48
New Glossary Terms47
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter48
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts49
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria49
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research49
Handout Figure 12.850
CHAPTER 13. ACTION RESEARCH DESIGNS: RESEARCH FOR SOLVING PRACTICAL PROBLEMS 51
Learning Objectives51
Lecture Slides51
New Glossary Terms51
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter51
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts52
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria52
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research53
Handout Figure 13.554
CHAPTER 14. CONCLUSIONS: IDENTIFYING THE INTERPRETATIONS AND IMPLICATIONS OF A STUDY 55
Learning Objectives55
Lecture Slides55
New Glossary Terms55
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter55
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts56
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria56
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research57
Handout Figure 14.258
TEST BANK59
CHAPTER 1. THE PROCESS OF RESEARCH60
CHAPTER 2. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE RESEARCH67
CHAPTER 3. STATEMENTS OF THE PROBLEM71
CHAPTER 4. LITERATURE REVIEWS76
CHAPTER 5. PURPOSE STATEMENTS, RESEARCH QUESTIONS AND HYPOTHESES 80
CHAPTER 6. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH DESIGNS86
CHAPTER 7. QUANTITATIVE PARTICIPANTS AND DATA COLLECTION90
CHAPTER 8. QUANTITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS AND RESULTS95
CHAPTER 9. QUALITATIVE RESEARCH DESIGNS100
CHAPTER 10. QUALITATIVEPARTICIPANTS AND DATA COLLECTION105
CHAPTER 11. QUALITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS AND RESULTS111
CHAPTER 12. MIXED METHODS RESEARCH115
CHAPTER 13. ACTION RESEARCH DESIGNS122
CHAPTER 14. CONCLUSIONS127
ANSWERS FOR THE TEST BANK132
CHAPTER 1. THE PROCESS OF RESEARCH133
CHAPTER 2. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE RESEARCH134
CHAPTER 3. STATEMENTS OF THE PROBLEM135
CHAPTER 4. LITERATURE REVIEWS136
CHAPTER 5. PURPOSE STATEMENTS, RESEARCH QUESTIONS AND HYPOTHESES 137
CHAPTER 6. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH DESIGNS138
CHAPTER 7. QUANTITATIVE PARTICIPANTS AND DATA COLLECTION139
CHAPTER 8. QUANTITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS AND RESULTS140
CHAPTER 9. QUALITATIVE RESEARCH DESIGNS141
CHAPTER 10. QUALITATIVE PARTICIPANTS AND DATA COLLECTION142
CHAPTER 11. QUALITATIVE DATA ANALYSIS AND RESULTS143
CHAPTER 12. MIXED METHODS RESEARCH144
CHAPTER 13. ACTION RESEARCH DESIGNS145
CHAPTER 14. CONCLUSIONS146
1
Chapter 1: The Process of Research
CHAPTER 1
The Process of Research: Learning How Research Is Conducted and Reported
Learning Objectives
By the end of this chapter, your students should be able to:
- State a definition of research and use it to recognize reports of research studies.
- Identify the reasons for needing to read research reports.
- Name different formats where you can find reports of research studies.
- Name the steps in the process of research that researchers undertake when they conduct research studies.
- Identify the major sections of a research report, and know which steps of the research process are reported within each section.
- Read a research report and recognize the information included about a study’s research process.
Lecture Slides
Use the provided PowerPoint® lecture slides found at as you discuss the chapter content with your students.
New Glossary Terms
The following important terms are introduced in this chapter. Definitions for the terms are provided in the chapter and the Glossary.
- Research
- Abstract
- Evidence-based practices
- Style manuals
- Process of research
- Identifying a research problem
- Reviewing the literature
- Specifying the purpose
- Choosing a research design
- Selecting participants
- Collecting data
- Reporting results
- Drawing conclusions
- Disseminating research
- Evaluating research
- Front matter
- Introduction section
- Method section
- Results section
- Conclusion section
- Back matter
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter
Students are asked to read the following two articles found at the end of this chapter.
Xu, F., Chepyator-Thomson, J., Liu, W., & Schmidlein, R. (2010). Association between social and environmental factors and physical activity opportunities in middle schools.European Physical Education Review,16(2), 183-194.
Tucker, P., van Zandvoort, M. M., Burke, S. M., & Irwin, J. D. (2011). Physical activity at daycare: Childcare providers’ perspectives for improvements.Journal of Early Childhood Research,9(3), 207-219.
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts
- Ask students to discuss their responses to the Practicing Your Skills questions at the end of the chapter. Encourage them to present their reasoning beyond the answers provided in the Appendix.
- Ask students to discuss the use of evidence-based practices in their respective professional areas (e.g., K-12 education, special education, nursing, or social work). What current practices can they name that they think are based on research? What practices do they think may be used at this time without evidence for their effectiveness?
- Ask students to name specific topics that they would like to learn about by reading research. They can then state how the available research might add to their knowledge, inform their stance in a policy debate, and help to improve their practices.
- Present a scenario that serves as an example of every-day problem solving (posing a question, gathering information, and presenting an answer). Example scenarios include deciding what car to buy or a teacher figuring out a way to motivate a particular student. Have students discuss how this scenario is and is not an example of the process of research. That is, what steps are present? What steps are missing? Ask students to identify examples of problem solving they have used in their own lives.
- Bring one or two sample articles to class. Ask students to review these documents in small groups and to use the headings to identify the major sections of the report. Have students list the names of these sections and compare them to the four major sections discussed in the textbook (introduction, method, results, and conclusion). Ask students to identify which steps of the research process they find reported in each section.
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria
- Bring copies of the abstracts from some recently published journal articles. You can select your own abstracts or use abstracts from the studies that appear in the textbook. It is suggested that you include at least one example that is NOT a research study.
Have students work in small groups to use the rating scale from the Chapter 1 Handout(included in this manual) to determine whether the provided abstracts report a research study. They should make notes about the evidence for their decision.
Suggested Activities Related to Producing Research
- Pick a problem of interest, such as binge drinking in college, teaching science to students learning English as a second language, or students lacking proper nutrition at home. Break students into small groups and ask them to consider how the seven steps of the process of research could be applied to study this problem. Have groups share their different ideas.
Handout Figure 1.1: A Rating Scale for Determining Whether an Article Reports a Research Study
- Examine the article’s title, abstract, and Method section.
- For each criteria in the following rating scale, assign a rating of no (0) or yes (1) and record your evidence and/or reasoning behind the rating.
- Add up the ratings. A total of 3 should indicate that the article is a report of a research study. A total of 0–2 likely indicates that the article does not report a full research study and instead reports another type of article such as a literature review.
Criteria / Rating / Your Evidence and/or Reasoning
0 = No / 1 = Yes
1.Terms are present that identify the report as research, such as study, investigation, empirical research, or original research.
2.The authors describe gathering data.
3.The authors describe analyzing the gathered data and report results of the analysis.
Overall Determination
0–2 = Likely not research
3= Likely research / Total
Score = / My Overall Determination =
1
Chapter 14: Interpreting Research
CHAPTER 2
Quantitative and Qualitative Research:
Understanding Different Types of Study Reports
Learning Objectives
By the end of this chapter, your students should be able to:
- Identify the overall approach used in a research report as quantitative, qualitative, or combined.
- Identify reasons why you should read research that used quantitative approaches and research that used qualitative approaches.
- Recognize the key differences in the steps of the research process as reported in quantitative and qualitative research studies.
- Evaluate the quality of quantitative and qualitative research reports.
Lecture Slides
Use the provided PowerPoint® lecture slides found at as you discuss the chapter content with your students.
New Glossary Terms
The following important terms are introduced in this chapter. Definitions for the terms are provided in the chapter and the Glossary.
- Quantitative research
- Qualitative research
- Combined research
Full-Text Articles Associated With This Chapter
There are no new articles presented in Chapter 2, but students should read the following two articles from the end of Chapter 1 before they read Chapter 2.
Suggested Activities to Apply the Concepts
- Ask students to discuss their responses to the Practicing Your Skills questions at the end of the chapter. Encourage them to present their reasoning beyond the answers provided in the Appendix.
- Have students list as many characteristics of quantitative and qualitative research as they can from the quantitative and qualitative studies presented in Chapter 1. Help students distinguish between general characteristics of research (e.g., the researchers collected data) and characteristics of a specific approach (e.g., the researchers collected data by talking to participants and recording the participants' words).
- Bring copies of the abstracts from some recently published journal articles. You can select your own abstracts oruse abstracts from the studies that appear in the textbook. Have students work in small groups to decide whether the study used a quantitative or qualitative approach. Ask the groups to list their evidence for their choice.
- Plan to have your students work in small groups (3-5 students per group). Print enough copies of the list of concepts found in the Chapter 2 Group Activity (included in this manual) so you can give one to each group. Cut apart the list so each item is separate. Mix up the order and put each set into an envelope. Pass the envelopes out to each group and ask the groups to sort the papers into piles representing characteristics of all research, characteristics of quantitative research, and characteristics of qualitative research. Have them share their results and discuss any points of confusion or misconceptions.
- Assign students the task of completing two formal article reviews. You may want to assign these so they are due either early in the semester so you can provide feedback or later in the semester (say after Chapters 8 and 11) when the students will have covered most of the content in depth. You might assign the following steps to students for completing this activity:
A. Locate one quantitative research study and one qualitative research study on a topic of interest to you. These reports should be published as journal articles.
B. Read the articles and analyze the process of research used in each article. Indicate the major sections and steps using margin annotations as found in the sample studies in the textbook.
C. Write an article review for each article that (a) summarizes how the authors implemented each step of the research process, (b) evaluates the quality of the research process as described in the report, and (c) discusses the usefulness of the article and its results for your own work.
D. Each article review should be three pages long using double-spaced typed text. Be sure to include a in-text and end-of-text reference for each article (students will learn about this in Chapter 4).
E. Students should submit their three-page reviews with a copy of the article that includes their annotations.
Suggested Activities to Apply the Evaluation Criteria