The final section under Threats to Validity for quantitative
and mixed method studies asks you to describe any threats to construct or
statistical conclusion validity. Let's start with a definition of construct. A
construct is an attribute, proficiency, ability, or skill that happens in the
human brain and is defined by established theories. For example,
"resilience" is a construct. It exists in theory and has been
observed to exist in practice.
Construct validity has traditionally been defined as the
experimental demonstration that a test is measuring the construct it claims to
be measuring. Such an experiment could take the form of a differential-groups
study, wherein the performances on the test are compared for two groups: one
that has the construct and one that does not have the construct. If the group
with the construct performs better than the group without the construct, that
result is said to provide evidence of the construct validity of the test. An alternative
strategy is called an intervention study, wherein a group that is weak in the
construct is measured using the test, then taught the construct, and measured
again. If a non-trivial difference is found between the pretest and posttest,
that difference can be said to support the construct validity of the test.
There are a large number of threats to construct validity-
too many to discuss here, but I do suggest that you take a look at
http://www.socialresearchmethods.net/kb/consthre.php when you are ready to
write this section. The author does a very nice job laying out the many types
of possible threats.
The last issue is statistical conclusion validity.
Statistical conclusion validity is the degree to which our conclusions about
the relationship between your variables based on the data are correct or
‘reasonable’. This is getting at the two types of statistical errors that can
occur: type I (finding a difference or correlation when none exists) and type
II (finding no difference when one exists). Statistical conclusion validity
concerns the qualities of the study that make these types of errors more
likely. Statistical conclusion validity involves ensuring the use of adequate
sampling procedures, appropriate statistical tests, and reliable measurement
procedures. If you would like a more in depth discussion of this topic, please
see http://www.socialresearchmethods.net/kb/concthre.php
Next time we will continue our review - Chapter 3: Issues of
Trustworthiness in qualitative and mixed method studies. Do you have an issue
or a question that you would like me to discuss in a future post? Would you like to be a guest writer? Send me
your ideas! leann.stadtlander@waldenu.edu
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