Analysing Quantitative Data
Analysing Quantitative Data
Special Education
Lecture :Analysing Data.
Presented By: Mr. S. Kumar
Lecturer Education
Presentation Outline
• Introduction
• Analysing qualitative data
• Analysing quantitative data
• Activities
• Conclusion
Introduction
• In the previous lectures we explored a number
of different ways we can organize the data we
have collected in order to support the analysis
process.
• In this lecture we will look at how we can
analyze data, identifying particular techniques
and processes in both qualitative and
quantitative designs.
What is data analysis?
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Data analysis and interpretation
• Think about analysis EARLY
• Start with a plan
• Code, enter, clean
• Analyze
• Interpret
• Reflect
– What did we learn?
– What conclusions can we draw?
– What are our recommendations?
– What are the limitations of our analysis?
Analyzing qualitative Data
• Considerable amount of text-based data and
images that require analysis.
• Creswell (2003) suggests that it is useful to
look at the codes that have emerged
according to:
Codes readers would expect to find;
Codes that are uprising; and
Codes that address a larger theoretical
perspective in their research.
Why do I need an analysis plan?
• To make sure the questions and your
data collection instrument will get the
information you want.
• To align your desired “report” with the
results of analysis and interpretation.
• To improve reliability--consistent
measures over time.
Preliminary Exploratory Analysis
• Open Coding
– Assign a code word or phrase that accurately
describes the meaning of the text segment
– Line-by-line coding is done first in theoretical
research
– More general coding involving larger segments
of text is adequate for practical research
(action research)
EDUC 7741/Paris/Terry
Axial Coding
• The process of looking for categories that cut
across all data sets
• After this type of coding, you have identified
your themes
• You can’t classify something as a theme unless
it cuts across the majority of the data
Clustering
Ordinal Scale Data are measured according to As for ordinal scale plus
rank. Data are compared and • Median
contrasted to determine those •Percentile rank
that are greater than(>) compared •Spearman rank order
to less than (<) within the data set. •Correlation
This scale can be used to rank •Mann- Whitney test
students within a class according
to their positions when compared
with peers.
Ratio Scale
Interval Scale Two key features are incorporated within this As for ordinal scale
approach plus:
1.The data are measured by equal units of Mean
measurement; Standard deviation
2.A zero point is established. Pearson Product-
Temperature is measured moment
on an interval scale Correlation
Inferential
procedures (e.g., t-
test, ANOVA)
Ratio Scale Two key features are incorporated within this As for ratio scale
approach plus:
1.The data are measured by equal units (as in Geometric mean
interval scale) Percentage
2.An absolute zero point is established variance
3.In the temperature example for interval Inferential
scale, the material from which the procedures
temperature is obtained may have a different
starting point (i.e. May be warmer or cooler
than other materials measured.
How the above collected data can fit
within each of these scales
• One object is different from another, you have a
nominal scale
• One object is bigger or better or more of anything
than another, you have an ordinal scale.
• One object is so many units (degrees, inches)
more than another you have an interval scale;
• One object is so many times big or bright or
bright or tall or heavy as another you have a ratio
scale
Descriptive statistics
• Calculated in order to report on and describe
what happened during the period of research.
• There are three basic categories of descriptive
statistics, all of which are frequently used by
teacher- researchers. These categories are:
Measures of central tendency.
Measures of dispersion
Measures of relationship
Measures of central tendency
• Statistical procedures that indicate, with a
single score, what is typical or standard about
a group of individuals. These indices are
commonly used when trying to describe the
collective level of performance, attitude, or
opinion of a group of study participants. There
are three measures of central tendency: the
mean, the median, and the mode.
Measures of dispersion
• Indicates what is different within a group of
scores,
• It also indicates how much spread or diversity
exist within a group of scores.
• The two primary measures of dispersion
Range (H-L)
Standard deviation is formally designed as the
average distance to scores away from the
mean
Measures of relationship
• The third type of descriptive statistics
measures relationship between variables.
There are numerous types of correlation
coefficients, the name given to these various
measures the direction and degree of relation
ship between two variables. It is calculated
when analysing data from studies using
correlation design.
Activity
• Look at the research paper. As you read the paper
identify.
a. The research question and hypothesis
b. How the participants were selected.
c. The instrument used for measurement
d. How the statistics were generated
e. How the data and statistics have been analysed
and
f. The relationship between the statistics ,
conclusions and research.
Workshop
• Discussion about Presentation
• Rubrics
Conclusion
The Big Picture
• Analysis should be approached as a critical,
reflective, and iterative process that cycles
between data and an overarching research
framework that keeps the big picture in mind
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Managing Data
• Regardless of data type, managing your data involves
– familiarizing yourself with appropriate software
– developing a data management system
– systematically organizing and screening your data
– entering the data into a program
– and finally ‘cleaning’ your data
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Drawing Conclusions
• Your findings and conclusions need to flow
from analysis and show clear relevance to
your overall project
• Findings should be considered in light of
– significance
– current research literature
– limitations of the study
– your questions, aims, objectives, and theory
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Looking ahead
Ethics and Communicating research
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