Educational Research Methods 10
Contents
Research Methods for the Learning Sciences 85-748
Spring 2010 Syllabus Carnegie Mellon University
Class times:
4:30 to 5:50 Tuesday & Thursday
Location:
3501 NSH
Instructors:
Professor Kenneth R. Koedinger Office hours by appointment Location: 3601 Newell-Simon Hall Phone: 8-7667 Email: Koedinger@cmu.edu
Dr. Philip I. Pavlik Jr. Office hours by appointment Location: 300S Craig St, 224 Phone: 8-1618 Email: ppavlik@andrew.cmu.edu
Class URL:
Goals:
The goals of this course are to learn data collection, design, and analysis methodologies that are particularly useful for scientific research in education. The course will be organized in modules addressing particular topics including overview of methods, cognitive task analysis, qualitative methods, protocol and discourse analysis, and educational data mining and log analysis. A key goal is to help students think about and learn how to apply these methods to their own research programs.
Course Prerequisites:
To enroll you must have taken 85-738, "Educational Goals, Instruction, and Assessment" or get the permission of the instruction.
Readings Textbook:
"The Research Methods Knowledge Base: 3rd edition" by William M.K. Trochim and James P. Donnelly Other readings will be assigned in class.
Reading Reports:
Students are required to submit at least one original post per week to the course discussion group before Monday morning (i.e. Sunday night) that addresses the readings for the FOLLOWING week. Students are also required to submit one reply or comment on another students post before Tuesday morning (i.e. Monday night).
Posts should be:
- a question you had about the reading, something important you did not understand
- an idea inspired by the reading
- an interesting connection with something you learned or did previously in this or another course, or in other professional work or research
Replies should be:
- an on-topic, relevant response, clarification, or further comment on another student’s post
Grading:
There will be assignments associated with each section of the course. Grades will be determined by your performance on these assignments, by your participation in Reading Reports, and by your participation in class.
- Course work
- 10% Reading reports
- 50% Homework assignments
- Project & final paper
- 40% Design a new study based on one (or more) of these methods that pushes your own research in a new direction.
Class Schedule:
(Topics continue into blanks!)
- 1-12-09 ERM Basic Research & Experimental Methods (Koedinger, Pavlik)
- 1-14-09 ERM
- 1-19-09 ERM
- 1-21-09 ERM
- 1-26-09 ERM Cognitive Task Analysis (Koedinger, Pavlik)
- 1-28-09 ERM
- 2-2-09 ERM
- 2-4-09 ERM Video and Verbal Protocol Analysis (Lovett, Rosé)
- 2-9-09 ERM
- 2-11-09 ERM
- 2-16-09 ERM
- 2-18-09 ERM
- 2-23-09 ERM
- 2-25-09 ERM Psychometrics, reliability, Item Response Theory (Junker, Koedinger)
- 3-2-09 ERM
- 3-4-09 ERM
- 3-9-09 ERM NO CLASS – Spring break
- 3-11-09 ERM NO CLASS – Spring break
- 3-16-09 ERM Ethnography & Design Experiments?
- 3-18-09 ERM Surveys, Questionnaires, Interviews (Kiesler)
- 3-23-09 ERM
- 3-25-09 ERM Educational data mining (Scheines, Pavlik, Koedinger)
- 3-30-09 ERM
- 4-1-09 ERM
- 4-6-09 ERM
- 4-8-09 ERM
- 4-13-09 ERM
- 4-15-09 ERM NO CLASS – Spring Carnival
- 4-20-09 ERM Cognitive Task Analysis - Revisited (Koedinger, Pavlik)
- 4-22-09 ERM
- 4-27-09 ERM Wrap-up
- 4-29-09 ERM Wrap-up