The head of your education research unit has just read a book on criticisms of the NHST and worries that all your unit’s data analysis is now flawed. How might you reassure her?
A. NHST is a flawless approach and we need to invest in more training for researchers in our unit.
B. NHST is a flawless approach and the book was probably written by a disciple of the Bayesian approach.
C. NHST does have its flaws but everyone else uses it, therefore we should.
D. NHST does have its flaws but if we incorporate an examination of effect sizes into our analysis, we should be able to trust our research outputs.
Answer: D
You might also like to view...
The court cases, like Larry P. v Riles and Dianna v. State Board of Education and laws of the 1970's, such as the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act and the Education for all Handicapped Children Act have impacted how students with exceptionalities are educated and the role of assessments. What are the major implications of the litigation and laws from this time period that still influence
special education policy? What will be an ideal response?
. One of the potential benefits to a team of a slow-to-act leader is ______.
A. increased positional leadership B. decreased decision effectiveness C. encouraging team members to emerge as leaders D. preventing problems from getting out of control
Answer the following statement(s) true (T) or false (F)
The title of a written work is one of the least important aspects of the work from the perspective of the reader.
When employment interviewers ask "Why do you want to enter your occupation?" they are most likely trying to discover the job-seeker's:
a) knowledge of the company. b) career interests and work values. c) aptitudes or skills. d) salary demands.