
Social work researchers often conduct research with groups that are diverse in terms of gender, sexual orientation, race or ethnic background, or age. Consequently, social work researchers must take great care to establish research-design equivalence at all phases of the research process (e.g., problem formulation, research design, sampling, measurement selection, data collection, and data analysis); otherwise, the results might reflect methodological flaws rather than true group differences and therefore lead to erroneous conclusions. This book introduces the methodological precautions that must be taken into consideration when conducting research with diverse groups. Multigroup Confirmatory Analysis (MG-CFA) using structural equation modeling (SEM) was utilized to demonstrate how to assess seven types of measurement and structural equivalence that Milfont and Fischer (2010) have deemed important for studies with diverse samples. A hypothetical example was provided to illustrate how to design a study with good research-design equivalence. A case example was provided to demonstrate how to conduct an MG-CFA for each type of measurement and structural equivalence discussed. The Mplus syntax used to conduct the MG-CFA was provided. The results from the MG-CFA analyses were written up as they would be for publication.
This book investigates the methodological requirements for establishing research-design equivalence when conducting studies involving diverse populations. Antoinette Y. Rodgers-Farmer, an expert in social work research, addresses the risk of erroneous conclusions stemming from methodological flaws in cross-group comparisons. The text provides a framework for ensuring rigor across all phases of the research process, from problem formulation to data analysis.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Researchers and students in social work frequently utilize this text as a practical guide for applying advanced statistical techniques to diverse datasets. Experts highlight the book as a technical resource for those seeking to ensure validity in cross-group comparative studies.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190208961
ISBN-13:
9780190208967
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!