Statistical Analysis for Education and Psychology Researchers

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questions about how helpful they thought the course would be with different aspects of
the writing process. Each response was scored on a scale from 1, ‘not at all helpful’ to 5
‘very helpful’. Data presented in the authors’ original paper is shown in Table 8.8.


Table 8.8: Students’ assessment of how helpful the


course would be in producing a piece of writing


(^) Product-centred COURSE Cognitive strategies Generative writing
Getting started 4.0(0.87) 4.5(0.78) 4.2(0.81)
In the middle 3.6(1.0) 3.9(0.92) 3.7(1.0)
Finishing off 3.5(0.97) 3.8(1.1) 3.3(1.2)
Developing thinking 3.7(0.92) 4.5(0.78) 4.2(0.98)
Expressing ideas
3.1(1.1) 3.8(0.87) 3.8(1.1)



  • Differences between courses significant at p<0.01
    This is an example of an independent One-way analysis of variance based on survey type
    data. Mean responses across the three independent subgroups (represented by participants
    who attended the three different writing courses) are compared. As five questions were
    asked, there are five one-way ANOVAS (one for each question). The authors reported,
    however, that there were significant differences for only two of the ANOV As (two
    questions) among the three courses, Developing thinking: F=7.34 [df](2, 102), p<0.001;
    and Expressing ideas: F=5.40 [df] (2, 98), p<0.01. The two hypotheses tested here were:
    i) no differ-ences in mean scores across the three courses on students; response to the
    question about Developing thinking; and ii) the same null hypothesis with respect to
    Expressing ideas. The degrees of freedom between subgroups is given by the number of
    groups−1=(3−1)=2, the total degrees of freedom would be n−1, and therefore the error
    degrees of freedom are given by subtraction, dftot−dfbetween. In the authors’ original table
    the sample sizes are not reported for each question mean, but it is evident from the
    reported degrees of freedom in the two F-tests (102 and 98) that the number of responses
    for at least two of the questions must have been different.
    Once a significant F-test had been found, establishing that the three means
    corresponding to the three writing courses were different, the investigators performed a
    post hoc test, (called a Scheffe test) on pairwise comparisons of which there would be
    three. The authors reported that these post hoc tests indicated that in both cases
    (developing thinking and expressing ideas), the product-centred course was perceived as
    being significantly less help than both the cognitive strategies course and the generative
    writing course (p<0.05).
    Worked Example
    In a simplified example taken from a PhD student’s project on pupils’ understanding of
    probability and cultural background, pupils’ attributions about chance events were
    determined by asking them to respond to a series of statements, such as ‘Getting a 6 on a
    normal dice depends on knowing how to throw the dice’. Attribution scores for eight
    pupils from each of three separate religious communities, Christian, Muslim and Jewish
    (24 pupils in total) are shown in Table 8.9.
    Statistical analysis for education and psychology researchers 316

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