Quantitative Methodology

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Across
  1. 4. "a philosophy that respects and embraces diverse experiences inclusive of race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, religious orientation, and other cultural dimensions" (Cokley & Awad, 2013, p. 28).
  2. 6. the most challenging aspect of conducting quantitative research with marginalized populations is
  3. 8. what is counted as knowledge. who can and cannot be knowledgable and the hierarchy of how knowledges are valued
  4. 11. Modernism, "rejects modernist claims of an objective truth via method and instead emphasizes perspectivism and the social construction of all reality using contextually appropriate methods" (Cokley & Awad, 2013, p. 27).
  5. 13. "emphasizes an objective, knowable truth where universal psychological processes can be discovered using the scientific method" (Cokley & Awad, 2013, p. 27).
  6. 14. design that includes the use of surveys, classification and data reduction techniques, and assessments of relations among variables (Cokley & Awad, 2013, p. 28)
Down
  1. 1. designs that manipulate variables for study but do not employ random assignment (Cokley & Awad, 2013, p. 28)
  2. 2. designs that are correlational, quasi-experimental, and experimental (Cokley & Awad, 2013).
  3. 3. type of sampling used to obtain a sample by locating one of these participants and then developing a referral network to locate other likely participants
  4. 5. In non-experimental research. this sampling is often the most common method of data collection
  5. 7. designs that utilize highly controlled environments and random assignment to conditions (Cokley & Awad, 2013, p. 28)
  6. 9. position, the position of an individual in a given society and culture
  7. 10. nature of being
  8. 12. justice, a type of research wherein investigators examine circumstances and systems of exploitation, inequality, and oppression and how they adversely impact individuals and groups who are marginalized and disempowered, and actively use the outcomes of research to change the material conditions and positively impact the psychological well-being of marginalized and disempowered individuals, with the ultimate goal being to transform society into a more just place for everyone (Cokley & Awad, 2013, p. 28).