Two basic kinds of research design exist:
- Experimental design in which
- the researcher manipulates some variable,
- the participants are randomly assigned to groups, &
- one group is a control group that gets a placebo or some inert treatment so that outcomes in that group can be compared to the group(s) that did get the treatment.
- the researcher manipulates some variable,
- Non-experimental design in which the researcher doesn’t manipulate anything, but just observes & records what is going on. Some of these are descriptive, correlational, case, or cohort study designs for example.
One particularly interesting “experimental” design is one in which 1 or 2 of the experimental design ideal requirements as listed above are missing. These are called quasi-experimental designs.
In a quasi experimental design
- The researcher manipulates some variable, but….
- Either the participants are NOT randomly assigned to groups
- &/OR there is no control group.
A quasi-experimental design is not as strong as a true experiment in showing that the manipulated variable X causes changes in the outcome variable Y. For example, a true experimental study with manipulation, randomization, and a control group would create much stronger evidence that hospital therapy dogs really reduced patient pain and anxiety. We would not be as confident in the results of a quasi-experimental design examining the exact same thing. In the next blog, we’ll examine why.
For more info: Check out earlier blog: “What is an RCT anyway?” at https://discoveringyourinnerscientist.com/2015/01/23/whats-a-randomized-controlled-trial/
Critical thinking: Go to PubMed & use search terms “experiment AND nurse” (without the quotation marks). Open an interesting abstract and look for the 3 elements of a classic experimental design. Now look for “quasi experiment AND nurse” (without the quotation marks.) See what element is missing!
Love it: quick, short, and clear. Thank you!!!
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What ?
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referring to title? not a typo. Mean something more like ‘whuh?’ 🙂
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