CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY LONG BEACH
PPA 696--RESEARCH METHODS:
BINGHAM & FELBINGER CH. 2
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BIBLIOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
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Author: H. McKay, L. Sinisterra, A. McKay, H. Gong, & P. Lloreda
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Title: Improving Cognitive Ability in Chronically Deprived Children.
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Source: Science, V.200, 1987, pp.270-278.
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SUMMARY OF THE RESEARCH
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PROBLEM STATEMENT:
Can deprived children's cognitive abilities be improved?
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BACKGROUND:
To assess both treatment for malnutrition and treatment for education,
and whether greater amounts of treatment will produce greater and more
enduring cognitive ability gains.
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HYPOTHESIS:
The longer the duration of treatment, the greater the gains in cognitive
ability.
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MEASUREMENT OF VARIABLES
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Dependent variable: cognitive ability
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Independent variable(s): nutrition treatments; educational treatments
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Control variable(s): n/a
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RESEARCH DESIGN:
Pre-test/Post-test control group design (true experimental design);
children exposed to from zero to four periods of treatment; one control
group; one high SES comparison group.
Group |
T1 |
Treat-ment 1 |
T2 |
Treat-ment 2 |
T3 |
Treat-ment 3 |
T4 |
Treat-ment 4 |
T5 |
G-1 |
O1 |
X |
O2 |
X |
O3 |
X |
O4 |
X |
O5 |
G-2 |
O1 |
|
O2 |
X |
O3 |
X |
O4 |
X |
O5 |
G-3 |
O1 |
|
O2 |
|
O3 |
X |
O4 |
X |
O5 |
G-4 |
O1 |
|
O2 |
|
O3 |
nutri |
O4 |
X |
O5 |
G-5 |
O1 |
|
O2 |
|
O3 |
|
O4 |
X |
O5 |
Control |
O1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
O5 |
Comparison |
O1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
O5 |
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SAMPLING:
Randomized sampling and random assignment to treatment options; population
of chronically deprived children in a poor neighborhood in Cali, Colombia.
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INSTRUMENTATION:
21 different age-appropriate instruments employed over the life of
the study to measure cognitive skills.
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DATA COLLECTION/ETHICS:
Data collected at five points over the 4-year study by cognitive
skills instruments; possible ethical concern for children left untreated
(control group).
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DATA ANALYSIS:
t-tests used to determine whether differences between the average
cognitive scores of the 4 treatment groups, one control group, and one
comparison group were statistically significant.
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CONCLUSIONS:
Treatment does result in cognitive ability gains; the earlier treatment
is begun, the higher the gains; the longer treatment continues, the higher
the gains.
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CRITIQUE
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Possible Threats to Internal Validity
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History:
Controlled by presence of control group; but a fire shortened the
treatment group for year four (180 days; 185 days; 190 days; and 172 days)
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Maturation:
Controlled by presence of control group; however, cannot separate
out the effects of age when treated from the effects of the duration of
the treatment in this study.
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Testing:
Treatment group children could have improved from repeated testing;
control and comparison groups tested only twice.
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Instrumentation:
Instruments changed over time, may not be strictly comparable; were
instruments translated from English or originally in Spanish?
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Regression Artifact:
Children were chosen on the basis of low scores, could have improved
over time without treatment.
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Selection bias:
Population was limited to children whose parents agreed to participate
in the study; could be some volunteer bias.
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Experimental Mortality:
53 children (18%) dropped out over 4 years of the study from treatment
groups; 44 (38%) from the control group; and 8 (21%) from comparison group.
Dropouts could have been different.
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Design contamination:
Children were entered into the program by neighborhood, limiting
probability of design contamination.
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Possible Threats to External Validity
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unique program features:
Testing would have to be included in future treatments.
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experimental arrangements:
Natural setting reduced effects of artificiality.
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other threats:
May not be transferable to countries with different types of diets,
languages, cultural customs, etc.