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- Sep 5, 2007
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Hi all,
I'm looking for help to come up with a construct that my prof has asked me to develop. I do not know whether a question like this is acceptable, I am not looking for the easy way out, but I am on the verge of getting really (!!) frustrated.
Okay, so...the problem is that my prof has asked me to come up with a construct to assess change in attitude/outlook on a certain aspect. I don't feel completely comfortable sharing it publicly because it is my prof's research but if someone would like more info, feel free to send me a PM.
Anyways, he wants me to come up with a way to measure how the attitude of a certain population changes over time or rather, what the factor/variable is that contributes to the change. Problem is that can't really be a within subject design because this change in attitude occurs occurs over a time-span of several years and our subjects are college students (which are actually the target population) and we don't have the means to pay people to commit to a larger study anyways. So, research suggest that this change in attitude occurs sometime when people are in college (or around that age in general) but it isn't necessarily the result of persuasion or something along those lines. It's something that "just" occurs and we're not sure what it exactly the variable is that this attitude change can be attributed to. We have some guessed based on the existing literature but pretty much this will be an exploratory study because not much research has been done in this area.
I pretty much feel like I have to come up with the impossible. It's not so much the potential factors that we think that might be responsible for the attitude change but how to use data from one time-point to make the inference that certain variables are responsible for the change.
Maybe I am missing something that is really obvious but ANY input would be appreciated
ME --> 😕 😕 😕 😕
I'm looking for help to come up with a construct that my prof has asked me to develop. I do not know whether a question like this is acceptable, I am not looking for the easy way out, but I am on the verge of getting really (!!) frustrated.
Okay, so...the problem is that my prof has asked me to come up with a construct to assess change in attitude/outlook on a certain aspect. I don't feel completely comfortable sharing it publicly because it is my prof's research but if someone would like more info, feel free to send me a PM.
Anyways, he wants me to come up with a way to measure how the attitude of a certain population changes over time or rather, what the factor/variable is that contributes to the change. Problem is that can't really be a within subject design because this change in attitude occurs occurs over a time-span of several years and our subjects are college students (which are actually the target population) and we don't have the means to pay people to commit to a larger study anyways. So, research suggest that this change in attitude occurs sometime when people are in college (or around that age in general) but it isn't necessarily the result of persuasion or something along those lines. It's something that "just" occurs and we're not sure what it exactly the variable is that this attitude change can be attributed to. We have some guessed based on the existing literature but pretty much this will be an exploratory study because not much research has been done in this area.
I pretty much feel like I have to come up with the impossible. It's not so much the potential factors that we think that might be responsible for the attitude change but how to use data from one time-point to make the inference that certain variables are responsible for the change.
Maybe I am missing something that is really obvious but ANY input would be appreciated
ME --> 😕 😕 😕 😕