Guest guest Posted November 13, 2002 Report Share Posted November 13, 2002 Ceep, I am real new to this site but have been involved in 2 others for about 6 months. I certainly appreciated your comments, although it was rather long. I am one of those people that can occasionally state my opinion as fact. So I appreciated your honesty. I generally try to express what I am saying as an opinion or, atleast where I have gotten the information. Just for background information - I have an Associates degree in Business. I had every intention on becoming an accountant but realized I hated the field, I hated punching numbers. SO I left school to find out what I wanted to be and spent 12 years doing accounting. DOn't figure. I finally returned to school and earned my degree in Social work with a minor in Sociology. The reason I mention this is that on top of having to do tons of research work, I also have taken 9 hours of statistics (6 hours of business, 3 hours of social) as well as a computer class on how to compile the data and process the reports. I have taken several Social Research classes as well Because of this, I have learned to take statistical data with a grain of salt. There is so many variables that go into statistical data that it is unbelievable. First, you have to make sure that what you are wanting to measure is truly what you are measuring. When doing social research, a lot of the surveys you do for social policies depends on how a question is worded. If worded incorrectly, you are not truly measuring what you are wanting. (For example, if you want to know how colors effect people, asking them if they know what a particular color is does not measure how it truly effect them.) Then you have to look at study size. The more subjects you have the better your study. The fact that you tested something on 10 people may be totally different then if you tested the same thing on 10,000 people. I also tend to look at wording. If there is a lot of could's, maybes, mights, looks as if, etc. that tells me that the findings were probably not conclusive. I guess what I am trying to say in all of this is that I need to be careful how I word things. I do not intentionally mean to offend anyone and would not want to. Thank you for sharing. Lori O. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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