Prelim Concepts

Eveyday Expertise

Domain-Specific

General real life skills

Macro-cognition

Micro-Cognition

Declarative vs Applied Knowledge

Depth of knowledge

Self-Managment of Chronic Conditions

Skills

Tasks

Naturalistic Desicion Making

Differences between experts and novices

Task Analysis

Learning Task Analysis

Cognitive Task Analysis

Adaptive Expertise

Activitity-Based Task Analysis

Everyday Experitse Research Setting

Laboratory

Naturalistic Setting

Validity

r

The degree to which a study accurately reflects or assesses the specific concept that the researcher is attempting to measure. A method can be reliable, consistently measuring the same thing, but not valid. See also internal validity and external validity

Internal

r

(1) The rigor with which the study was conducted (e.g., the study's design, the care taken to conduct measurements, and decisions concerning what was and wasn't measured) and (2) the extent to which the designers of a study have taken into account alternative explanations for any causal relationships they explore (Huitt, 1998). In studies that do not explore causal relationships, only the first of these definitions should be considered when assessing internal validity. See also validity.

External

r

The extent to which the results of a study are generalizable or transferable. See also validity

Types of research methods

Quantitative

Qualitative

r

Empirical research in which the researcher explores relationships using textual, rather than quantitative data. Case study, observation, and ethnography are considered forms of qualitative research. Results are not usually considered generalizable, but are often transferable.