faith mullen the catholic university of america
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The Plural of Anecdote is not Data: Teaching Law Students to Conduct Empirical Research on Behalf of Community Partners. Faith Mullen The Catholic University of America. It would be dreadful . . . if it were true. The request The rebuttal The research* *see note pages. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
The Plural of Anecdote is not Data: Teaching Law Students to Conduct Empirical Research
on Behalf of Community Partners Faith Mullen
The Catholic University of America
It would be dreadful . . . if it were true
• The request
• The rebuttal
• The research*
*see note pages
Good reasons to teach research to law students:
• Give students new tools for problem solving• Help students become better consumers of data• Strengthen community partnerships• Good class, clinic, independent study, or pro
bono project• Promote change• Teach policy*
*see note
Right now: Select a topicIt would be dreadful, if it were true
• A law, regulation, or policy is not followed• A rule has a harsh effect on one person or
group • Someone fails to meet an obligation• A need goes unmet
The Most Important Thing
• Find the “right-sized” research project
Questions to ask:• Who knows what?– Statutes and regulations– Published reports– Literature reviews– Informational interviews
Questions to ask:
• Can you get your hands on the data?– Does it exist?– Can you have it?– Is there an easier way to get it?
Questions to ask:• Are there any hoops to jump through?
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)Institutional Review Board (IRB)*
*see note pages
Questions to ask:
• How many students will work on the project?• What background do they need to have?• Will they all have the same role? • Should you name a student as project
manager?
Questions to ask:
• How much time do you have?– Academic calendar– How long it will take– The needs of community partners– The shelf-life of the topic
Things to think about:
Things to think about:
• Two key concepts
– Reliability (reproducibility)
– Validity (measure reflects the underlying concept)
Things to think about:
• Surveys will be trouble– Don’t use surveys when “revealed preferences” are
available– Craft questions carefully– How you ask question is as important as what you ask– Think about tomorrow when you draft questions today– Limit the number of questions– Limit open-ended questions– Ask for help
Things to think about:
• Reporting your results
– Formal or informal?
– Find a format
– Brand your product
– Create an executive summary
Things to think about:
Things to think about:
• Keep moving parts to a minimum– Variables– Sources of data– Scope of research – Stakeholders
Things to think about:
• Learn from my mistakes– Write up methodology as you go– Conduct a pre-test (but exclude results)– Be at peace with making choices (just be transparent)– Practice with students how to conduct research– Realize it will take longer than you think