Personal tools
You are here: Home Academics Syllabi Fall 2012 MIS 84112 FALL 2012 GUIFFRIDA

MIS 84112 FALL 2012 GUIFFRIDA

Research Methods - BAD 84112

Department of Management and Information Systems

Kent State University

Fall 2012

 

Instructor       

Dr. Alfred L. Guiffrida

Office:               A-411 Business Administration Building

Office Hours:    Tuesday: 3:00 – 6:00; & Wednesday: 3:00 – 6:00; and by appointment

Telephone:        (716) 954-3504

E-mail:              aguiffri@kent.edu

 

 

Course Objectives

Our course is a doctoral seminar on applied research methods. The goal is to expose you to a portfolio of research methodologies and techniques that will help you in the completion of your doctoral research program. The course objectives are:

 

1) To help students formulate a research problem and develop testable research hypotheses.

 

2) To help students develop research skills by learning the different research methods and techniques.

 

At the end of the course, students should be able to conduct meaningful and high quality research in their own field and be comfortable with how to plan, design, and conduct experiments efficiently and effectively, and to analyze the resulting data to obtain objective conclusions. This skill based will be accomplished using formal lectures by the course instructor, mini-lectures presented by students enrolled in the class and discussion of readings selected from the literature.

  

Course Notes and Textbook

Textbook: there is no required textbook.

A collection of research articles will be provided by the instructor.

Class lecture slides (power point) notes will be provided by the intructor

 

 

Course Prerequisites and Enrollment Requirements

Doctoral Standing in the KSU School of Business

Familiarity with a statistics package (SPSS, SAS, R or similar)

Knowledge of how to use the research databases from the KSU library such as JSTOR and E-Journal Finder (among others) during the course.

 

 

 

 

Enrollment/Withdrawal:

Students have responsibility to ensure they are properly enrolled in classes.  You are advised to review your official class schedule (using Student Tools on FlashLine) during the first two weeks of the semester to ensure you are properly enrolled in this class and section.  Should you find an error in your class schedule, you have until Sunday, September 9, 2012 to correct the error.  If registration errors are not corrected by this date and you continue to attend and participate in classes for which you are not officially enrolled, you are advised now that you will not receive a grade at the conclusion of the semester for any class in which you are not properly registered.

For Fall 2012, the course withdrawal deadline is Sunday, November 4, 2012.

 

Grading Policy

Grades will be based on three attributes: (1) written assignments, (2) student mini-lectures and presentation and (3) the quality of your class room discussion. Each attributed is equally weighted.

 

Academic Integrity

We will follow the University Policy on Academic Integrity.  Academic honesty: Cheating means to misrepresent the source, nature, or other conditions of your academic work (e.g., tests, papers, projects, assignments) so as to get undeserved credit.   In addition, it is considered to cheating when one cooperates with someone else in any such misrepresentation.  The use of the intellectual property of others without giving them appropriate credit is a serious academic offense.  It is the University's policy that cheating or plagiarism result in receiving a failing grade for the work or course.  Repeat offenses result in dismissal from the University.

 

 

Students with disabilities

University policy 3342-3-01.3 requires that students with disabilities be provided reasonable accommodations to ensure their equal access to course content. If you have a documented disability and require accommodations, please contact the instructor at the beginning of the semester to make arrangements for necessary classroom adjustments. Please note, you must first verify your eligibility for these through Student Accessibility Services (contact 330-672-3391 or visit http://www.registrars.kent.edu/disability/ for more information on registration procedures).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Course Topics (subject to revision)

 

1. Introduction to Experimentation

 

a) Ch1 Introduction and Ch2 The Principles of Experimentation Illustrated by a Psycho-Physical Experiment, from The Design of Experiments, by Ronald A. Fisher, 1949; pages 1-25.

 

b) Freund, J. E. and Perles, B. M. (1993). Observations on the Definition of P-values, Teaching Statistics, 15(1), 8-9

 

c) Cowles, M. and Davis, C. (1982). On the Origins of the 0.05 Level of Statistical Significance, American Psychologist, 37(5), 553-558

 

 

2. Power Analysis

 

a) Cohen, J. (1992) “A Power Primer”, Psychological Bulletin, 112(1), 155-159

 

b) Koele, P. (1982) “Calculating Power in Analysis of Variance”, Psychological Bulletin, 92(2), 513-516

 

3. Experimental Design

 

a) Experimental and Quasi-Experimental Designs – chapter handout

 

b) Inadequate Designs and Design Criteria – chapter handout

 

c) Factorial Models – handouts

 

d) Multiple Comparison Methods – handouts

 

e) Orthogonal Polynomials - handouts

 

4) Sampling Theory

 

a) Handouts

 

5. Measurement, Reliability and Validity

 

a) Measurement and Scientific Inquiry,  Ch 2, Measurement, Design and Analysis An Integrated Approach, E. J. Pedhazur and L. P. Schmelkin, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Hillsdale, NJ, 1991.

 

b) On the Theory of Scales of Measurement, S. S. Stevens, Science, 103(2684), 1946.

c) Reliability, Ch 27 Foundations of Behavioral Research, F. N. Kerlinger and H. B. Lee, Foundations of Behavior Research, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Publishers, 2000.

 

d) Validity, Ch 28, Foundations of Behavioral Research, F. N. Kerlinger and H. B. Lee, 2002.

 

e) “Construct Validity in Psychological Tests”, L. J. Cronbach and P. E. Meehl, Psychological Bulletin, 52(4), 1955, 281-302

 

f) Cronbach Alpha Tutorial – Handout

 

6. Additional Topics (time permitting)

 

a) Models for Categorical Data

 

b) Introduction to Path Analysis

 

c) Response Surface Methodology

Document Actions