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6. Evaluation A program or a project is expected to be carried out in a certain way and expected to produce a certain result; research is intended to determine whether the anticipated procedure and the outcome are realized. Evaluation research that focuses on the procedure is called formative, and that which attends particularly to the outcome is called summative. Examples: • Effectiveness of mental health programs that serve hearing- impaired children • Evaluation of a regional family planning program • Impact of county drug and alcohol programs • Evaluation of a rural marketing plan for fire insurance • Effectiveness of rehabilitation counseling: an evaluation 7. Developmental The changes over time in one or more observable factors, patterns, or sequences of growth or decline may be traced or charted and reported. Examples: • Growth of child care centers in American business and industry • Emergence and spread of credit card utilization • The written language development of children • The computer and the knowledge explosion: a developmental study 8. Experimental One or more variables may be deliberately manipulated and the results analyzed and rationalized—“true” experiments requiring tight controls and subject randomization. Examples: • Reduction of separation anxiety through use of mental imagery • Use of programmed instruction to correct errors in the written language of deaf adolescents • The effects of listening training on salesperson effectiveness • Effects of a parental intervention strategy on reading skill development • Effects of different options for continued employment on retirement decisions 9. Exploratory Investigations into new or relatively unknown territory for the purpose of searching out or closely scrutinizing objects or phenomena to lead to a better understanding of them. Examples: • Telescopic and satellite observations of the composition of the surface of the moons of Jupiter • The parasitic life in the feces of wild horse herds of the Rocky Mountain region • The behavior of molten metals under conditions of virtually zero gravity • The characteristics of “private” languages used by twins and triplets in communication between and among themselves • The study of extraterrestrial objects for evidences of life forms 10. Historical Individuals or activities are studied to reconstruct the past accurately and without bias to ascertain, document, and interpret their influences or to check the tenability of an hypothesis. Examples: • The relevance of the thought of Albert Camus for education • Sources of individual differences in solutions to management problems • Historical landmarks in the management of environmental noise • The search for the perpetual motion machine: its contribution to engineering • Origins and status of the Montessori movement in the United States
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