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Lesson Idea: Experimental Designs

Researchers have many decisions to make when designing their studies. In this lesson, you'll put yourself in the shoes of an experimenter and will have to make a series of design choices and justify them.

The purpose of this activity is to help you learn about design choices experimenters have and to think about the benefits and limitations of using each design. You will also learn about terminology for extraneous variables and other controls. It is designed to be studied during the Quantitative Methods unit (Chapter 6, 6.1b). It should take about 15-20 minutes.

Key Questions:

Resources


Your Task

Read the summaries of the research aims below and working with a group decide which experimental design you would choose and why.

Here are your three choices for experimental design:

  1. Repeated measures: this is when all participants in the experiment experience all conditions of the experiment.
    • For example, in a study on the effects of testosterone on brain activity, all participants would have injections of testosterone and their brain activity measured. They all would then also have a placebo treatment on a different day. Thus, the procedures are repeated on each participant.
  2. Independent samples: this is when you divide your participants into different (independent) groups (this design is also called independent groups) and they receive only one condition of the experiment.
    • For example, in the testosterone experiment mentioned, you could divide your sample in half and one group would receive an injection of testosterone and another group would receive an injection of a placebo. Thus, the groups are independent of one another.
  3. Matched pairs: this is a type of independent samples that requires matching your participants on a particular characteristic that you think might be an extraneous variable. You put one participant in one condition and their matched pair in another.
    • For example, perhaps you have reason to suspect that “aggressiveness” might be a variable other than testosterone that could affect brain function in your experiment. You could conduct a number of tests to give each participant a score of their level of aggressiveness. You would then match them with another participant who had the closest score and then one would receive the testosterone treatment and the other the placebo. 

Study Summaries

Read the following summaries and decide which experimental design you would choose and explain why. More information on these studies can be found in the textbook or on this blog if you are not familiar with them.


#1 Note Taking


#2 Misinformation effect


#3 A Bobo doll experiment


#4 Laundry schema study


#5 Length of short-term memory


Tip #1

One method of choosing a design is to first think about possible extraneous variables that might confound your results. Once you have these identified, you can then decide which design might be best for controlling for this variable.

Tip #2

Another approach could be to choose one of the design types first and then run through the experiment in your mind and think about potential problems with the use of this method.


Fast Finishers Extension #1

If you have chosen your design types appropriately, there’s probably a particular term for the extraneous variable you have controlled for. Using the textbook (pg. 312-313), see which of these variables you have controlled for with your choices:

Fast Finishers Extension #2

Using the same section of the textbook, how could you use these additional controls in one or more of the experiments above?


There are lots of new terms in this lesson and do not feel overwhelmed if you cannot get them all right away. But do take careful note of this section of the textbook because it will come in very handy when you are designing your IA and writing up your report.


Think you know all the terminology in this lesson? Try this crossword puzzle to see how much you’ve learned.

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