Causal Comparative Research
Causal Comparative Research
Causal Comparative Research
RESEARCH
OBJECTIVES
• Explain what is meant by the term “causal-comparative
research.”
• Describe how causal-comparative research is both similar to
and different from both correlational and experimental
research.
• Identify and describe the steps involved in conducting a
causal-comparative study.
• Look at a diagram of a design for a causal-comparative
study.
• Describe some of the threats to internal validity that exist in
causal-comparative studies and discuss how to control for
these threats.
• Recognize a causal-comparative study when you come
across one in the educational research literature.
What is causal-
comparative research?
• Causal-comparative research is an
attempt to identify a causative
relationship between an independent
variable and a dependent variable.
• The relationship between the
independent variable and dependent
variable is usually a suggested
relationship (not proven) because you
(the researcher) do not have complete
control over the independent variable.
You are a first year agricultural education teacher at the
local high school. At the state CDE contest you run into a
Billy Bob (a fellow agricultural education teacher). When
Billy asks how your year is going, you tell them that you are
discouraged because your students do not seem to like your
teaching very much and complain about your style of
testing.
Billy Bob tells you that they have been using e-moments
and some of the concepts from the FFA Life Knowledge
materials to teach their classes. They think that their
students really enjoy their teaching and are learning more
because of it.
• Problem Formulation
• Select the sample of individuals
to be studied.
• Instrumentation- achievement
tests, questionnaires,
interviews, observational
devices, attitudinal measures…
there are no limits…
The design
• Chapter 16
• Pages 369 to 395
• Summary on pages 393 to 394
References
• Fraenkel, J. (2006). How to design and evaluate
research in education. (pp. 369-395). New York,
NY: McGraw-Hill.
• McKinney, S. (2004). A comparison of urban teacher
characteristics for student interns placed in
different urban school settings. The professional
educator, 26(2).
• Wasson, B. (2001). Classroom behavior of good and
poor readers. The professional educator, 23(3).
• www.mnstate.edu/wasson/ed603/ed603lesson12.ht
m
• www.faculty-staff.ou.edu/B/Nancy.H.Barry-
1/cause.html