Now that you have read all about psychological research, it's time to demonstrate your understanding of the material by designing your own study. Note: you are not actually conducting the study. You're simply designing it.
Choose an area of interest to you something you've personally experienced, observed in others, seen on TV, or read about. What is something related to behavior and/or mental processes that you've been wondering about?
Part 1 Design your own study to answer some questions of interest to you. Describe the pros and cons of the research method you select (e.g., experiment, correlation, survey, naturalistic observation, longitudinal, cross-sectional). How will your research participants be selected? What ethical considerations should be made to ensure that your study would conform to the scientific community's expectations of ethical research? Note: you are not actually conducting the study. You're simply designing it by addressing each of the points above.
Use the following link to access the Research Design Checklist to help guide your thinking -
Research Design Checklist.pdfPreview the document
Part 2 Review the Ethics and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study section of Chapter 2, as well as pit-oupti located on the Tuskegee University website - https://www.tuskegee.edu/about-us/ceRtbeek center about-the-usphs-syphilis-study (Links to an external site.). Why is this study alak§riiii&O participated and their families harmed as a function of this research?
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