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Constructs and Variables. S. Kathleen Kitao Kenji Kitao Keywords construct, variable, operationalization, operational definition. will discuss Relationship between: actual characteristic the researcher is looking at how that characteristic is measured.
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Constructs and Variables S. Kathleen Kitao Kenji Kitao Keywordsconstruct, variable, operationalization, operational definition
will discuss • Relationship between: • actual characteristic the researcher is looking at • how that characteristic is measured
Differences between Constructs and Variables • A variable is essentially what we can observe or measure of a characteristic or ability. • A construct is the underlying characteristic or ability itself.
Measuring constructs • Some constructs, such as height or weight can be measured directly. • Other constructs, such as closeness of a friendship, cannot be measure directly. • Researchers use questionnaires, interviews, or observation instead.
Example of questionnaire measuring closeness of friendship • Ask participants to agree or disagree with statements like these: • 1. I spend as much time with my friend as possible. • 2. If my friend needed $100, and I had the money, I would give it to her. • 3. I can trust my friend with a secret. • These measure such aspects of closeness of a friendship as time spent together, willingness to help, and trust.
It is important to keep in mind, however, that though the results of such a questionnaire are intended to reflectthe closeness of a friendship, the results are not themselves the closeness of a friendship. • In doing or evaluating research, you must think about how well the measures used for the variables actually reflect the underlying construct they are intended to reflect.
Operationalization • Operationalization is the link between the construct and the way it is measured; the operational definition of a variable is the way that it is measured or quantified. • For example, English proficiency might be operationalized as • a TOEFL score • a rating of a person's ability to carry on a conversation in English under certain conditions • the results of a reading test.
Requirements of an Operational Definition • 1. It must be conceptually linked to the construct that it is intended to represent, that is, it must measure the characteristics that the concept actually has. • In the questions about the closeness of a friendship above, the three questions could be intended to measure time spent together, willingness to help, and trust.
It is assumed that these are some of the characteristics that a close friendship would have. • In measuring closeness of friendships, you should think about the characteristics of friendship and ask questions about those characteristics. • In addition, the questions should not measure any characteristics that should not be included in the construct. • For example, the question, "My friend is rich" would not be an appropriate as part of the above questionnaire, if the amount of money the friend has is not a characteristic of closeness of friendship.
If you are measuring English proficiency, you need to think about what kind of proficiency you want to measure. • If your hypothesis is that the higher speaking proficiency is, the better chance a nonnative speaker has of forming friendships with Americans.
For the purpose of your research, you need to measure speaking. What is the best way of measuring speaking? • You could ask subjects of the research to prepare a speech. But that type of speaking is not related to forming friendships. • In this case, a better way to measure speaking ability would be to have the subject carry on a conversation and rate speaking ability based on that conversation.
2. Secondly, an operational definition must be unique to that concept, that is, it must measure that concept and no other. • For example, a test of listening proficiency that requires some reading may also be measuring reading proficiency. That is, the score for listening proficiency may be influenced by ability to read. • In that case, the operational definition includes a concept that the researcher did not intend to measure.
The Importance of Operational Definitions • Operational definitions are important for three reasons. • 1. A clear operational definition allows researchers to be consistent throughout the research. • 2. it allows readers of the research to clearly understand the findings. • 3. It allows other researchers to do the same research to see if they get the same results.
Clear definitions of constructs are important. • In considering the relationship between variables and constructs when you read a research paper or do research yourself, it is necessary to consider the definitions that the researcher uses for the construct, if they are specified.
Whether a variable truly reflects a construct is, in part, dependent on how that construct is defined. • For example, if the definition of English proficiency is related to fluency in speaking English, then a TOEFL score is not a good operationalization, because the TOEFL emphasizes a knowledge of grammar, reading comprehension, and other factors that are not be related to the ability to fluency in speaking.
Conclusion • Social scientists study many phenomena that cannot be measured directly. • The actual phenomenon is called a construct; the results of the measurement of that construct is called a variable. • One of the most important issues in social science is the relationship between constructs and variables, and whether a particular variable accurately represents a construct.