Engaging Undergraduate Psychology Students with Research Methods and with the Process of Conducting Research

A strong understanding of quantitative research methods is a pre-requisite to psychological literacy and evidence-based practice in psychology. Quantitative research methods are also an area of weakness for many psychology students. Furthermore, many students have relatively little interest in readi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Allen, Peter James
Format: Thesis
Published: Curtin University 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/54162
_version_ 1848759301636620288
author Allen, Peter James
author_facet Allen, Peter James
author_sort Allen, Peter James
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description A strong understanding of quantitative research methods is a pre-requisite to psychological literacy and evidence-based practice in psychology. Quantitative research methods are also an area of weakness for many psychology students. Furthermore, many students have relatively little interest in reading and conducting research, hold negative attitudes toward research methods, struggle to see the relevance or utility of methods and statistics courses, and experience high levels of statistics anxiety. Consequently, efforts have been undertaken to reform traditional research methods and statistics pedagogy, with the objective of making these subjects more applied, relevant and engaging for students. Many of these reforms are based on active learning principles, and the idea that, as much as is practicable, students should be ‘doing’ research, rather than merely reading about it, or listening to instructors talking about it. In an undergraduate psychology degree, ‘doing research’ can manifest in multiple activities, of which the current thesis focuses on three: (1) participating in authentic research; (2) working with authentic data; and (3) conducing an original research project. The first two papers herein focus on understanding and quantifying undergraduate psychology students’ perspectives on the educational value of participating in authentic research, which is a ‘rite of passage’ in most research active schools of psychology. The third describes the development and evaluation of an active learning exercise in which students participated in a class experiment, then analysed the data it generated. Papers 4-7 address issues arising from the supervision of final year dissertations projects, including the quality of student collected data, and the ethics of surveying online. Finally, paper 8 explores the difficulties faced by students (but not ‘experts’) when required to identify statistical tests and procedures appropriate to their research questions and hypotheses, while paper 9 describes the development of a mobile application specifically developed to support this process. Combined with the exegesis that precedes them, the nine papers in this thesis offer a range of insights into, and strategies that promote the engagement of undergraduate psychology students with research methods, and with the process of conducting research.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:57:43Z
format Thesis
id curtin-20.500.11937-54162
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:57:43Z
publishDate 2016
publisher Curtin University
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-541622017-07-24T07:08:38Z Engaging Undergraduate Psychology Students with Research Methods and with the Process of Conducting Research Allen, Peter James A strong understanding of quantitative research methods is a pre-requisite to psychological literacy and evidence-based practice in psychology. Quantitative research methods are also an area of weakness for many psychology students. Furthermore, many students have relatively little interest in reading and conducting research, hold negative attitudes toward research methods, struggle to see the relevance or utility of methods and statistics courses, and experience high levels of statistics anxiety. Consequently, efforts have been undertaken to reform traditional research methods and statistics pedagogy, with the objective of making these subjects more applied, relevant and engaging for students. Many of these reforms are based on active learning principles, and the idea that, as much as is practicable, students should be ‘doing’ research, rather than merely reading about it, or listening to instructors talking about it. In an undergraduate psychology degree, ‘doing research’ can manifest in multiple activities, of which the current thesis focuses on three: (1) participating in authentic research; (2) working with authentic data; and (3) conducing an original research project. The first two papers herein focus on understanding and quantifying undergraduate psychology students’ perspectives on the educational value of participating in authentic research, which is a ‘rite of passage’ in most research active schools of psychology. The third describes the development and evaluation of an active learning exercise in which students participated in a class experiment, then analysed the data it generated. Papers 4-7 address issues arising from the supervision of final year dissertations projects, including the quality of student collected data, and the ethics of surveying online. Finally, paper 8 explores the difficulties faced by students (but not ‘experts’) when required to identify statistical tests and procedures appropriate to their research questions and hypotheses, while paper 9 describes the development of a mobile application specifically developed to support this process. Combined with the exegesis that precedes them, the nine papers in this thesis offer a range of insights into, and strategies that promote the engagement of undergraduate psychology students with research methods, and with the process of conducting research. 2016 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/54162 Curtin University fulltext
spellingShingle Allen, Peter James
Engaging Undergraduate Psychology Students with Research Methods and with the Process of Conducting Research
title Engaging Undergraduate Psychology Students with Research Methods and with the Process of Conducting Research
title_full Engaging Undergraduate Psychology Students with Research Methods and with the Process of Conducting Research
title_fullStr Engaging Undergraduate Psychology Students with Research Methods and with the Process of Conducting Research
title_full_unstemmed Engaging Undergraduate Psychology Students with Research Methods and with the Process of Conducting Research
title_short Engaging Undergraduate Psychology Students with Research Methods and with the Process of Conducting Research
title_sort engaging undergraduate psychology students with research methods and with the process of conducting research
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/54162