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Purpose of this Page

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This page is intended to help those who are teaching research based courses find resources to use in their course. This page consists of PowerPoints, videos, templates, web links and more to help instructors compile resources for their students in research based classes. The example syllabus below includes the resources and links to aid in teaching a research based course. The example syllabus is from a psychology course, so the intended focus is on psychological research.

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This is an example syllabus for a course that teaches psychological research. In this syllabus you will find topics that are covered each class period, along with recommended readings/videos, and assignments. Links are embedded to different resources and videos including information about using R and Zotero.

Topic Reading/Video Product/Notes
Introduction, Tour of Syllabus Baseline

Where are we starting? Here is where you should assess where students are in their level of expertise.

Getting set up - Software Treasure Hunt:

Download R & R Studio; Zotero and Zotero plugin

Open Teaching of Psychological Science

(OToPS)

D5 presidential address

(82 min)

Updated Slides from Keynote

In class: Housekeeping,

Discuss Keynote (breakout)

Show Zotero, OSF Projects (2019)

Get software

  • R
  • R Studio
  • Zotero (& browser plugin)

EAY To Do over weekend:

[] Set up teams (roster more stable)

Codebooks and Lab Notebooks;

Intro to Korea/UNC

Checking assumptions

Baumer Ch. 2 & 3 In class:

Data Use Agreement example

Data and Notebook tour

Visualization I: Exploratory data analysis (EDA)

In EDA mode, we are looking for convenience and understanding, not worried about style or story (yet)

Field Ch. 4 - exploring data with graphs

EDA slides - basic visualizations

  • DBSA Data Use Agreement (example)

[] Korea-UNC Survey due Sunday Night (11:59 pm Eastern)

(~75 min to complete)

Last Day to drop class without a W on transcript

The Old Big Data: Gapminder and Epidemiological Studies

Wide vs. Tall, Skinny; nesting

Items vs. scales, Cronbach's alpha

NHSR – making sure your idea is new, and registering it with IRB (and discuss Clinical Trials.gov) (exercise: identify target database, variables, hypotheses, analyses; register with IRB) Field Ch. 5 - exploring assumptions [] Make ORCID;

[] Make OSF account

[] List Zotero email, ORCID, and OSF on To Do Table here

Searching effectively: Cochrane and meta-analyses as “Sparknotes for research”; Reference management software; levels of evidence idea from EBM and TRIP; searching for data (Odum Institute, Murray Center, ICPSR U Michigan, CDC) (UNC Dataverse) In class

-- walk through R notebook

Introduced jamovi

How to save syntax in Jamovi

(special thanks, Yunshu Yu and Colin Park)

Literature Searching I

Zotero

Field Ch. 6 - correlation (after this, you’ll pick the chapters for whichever statistics you use for your projects)

Zotero Tip Sheet

Checking assumptions - rule of thumb: +/-3 for skew or kurtosis
Matching levels of measurement with analyses, visualizations Review AARF (template) [] List of variables, descriptives for your main measure and demographics
Making scales and components: Internal consistency, unit weighting, component and factor analyses Baumer Ch. 4 & 5 (data wrangling and tidy data)

YouTube Video (from 2.25 - catching up)

Models as pictures - Correlation and regression Writing models in R ← 3 page sheet about notation

YouTube Video

Link to Dr. De Los Reyes ‘Become Prolific’ Presentation (Pt. 1 w Pt. 2 Queued up
And-But-Therefore

Levels of Reading

More with Zotero

Olson chapter 7: Methods--The ABT Sentence (in Sakai) Levels of Reading starts at 41:56

1 page Guide to drafting ABT abstract

More models, starting abstract YouTube Video
Variable names versus constructs;

walking through dummy coding;

setting up analyses in R (setCorr example)

New! get rstatix, and it will do everything you learned in 210, except for chi-squared. Examples here

YouTube Video from 2021 [] Planning update due–

Template here; submit by linking your Google Doc to the “Planning Canvas” column on our ToDo list sheet (link at top left of this table)

Aims, Research Questions/Hypotheses + variables, descriptives (from earlier) + diagram or model

(FYI: compare this to a one page canvas, or one for a real paper)

Multiple regression output; comparing dummy coding to t-test and ANOVA YouTube Video [] Link to your draft abstracts in the column on our (Abstract template here) due in class

Link to view list of 2019 versions

More about interpreting the analyses Quinn & Rush article

(Note that the assumption is that you will be reading articles related to your projects for the rest of the semester…)

YouTube Video 2021

[] First draft Abstracts due in class
New patterns of reporting: Supplemental materials, COI, archiving of data and syntax, OSF, OSF Meetings YouTube Video of 2021 class meeting - COI, changes in patterns of reporting
SPRING BREAK! (NO JINX!)
Poster review in class

Rubric

Critique poster #007 from 2021 final

MAGIC

In class: Poster Rating 1.0

(due by start of class Thurs)

YouTube recording of lecture 2021

Alternate poster format

Video by the inventor

Template (official)

We could build our poster entirely inside R Markdown!  (and notes about using it)

YouTube recording of lecture

2021

In class: Pick poster to use as template, link it to ToDo sheet, start editing

[Feedback on abstracts]
Good presentation

II: Think about Ink:Data Ratio (Tufte, 1983; Yau, 2011) and the best format for the message (Kosslyn, 2006)

ggplot2 overview by Wickham

YouTube Video of lecture

Basic graphics in R

Output devices (and saving files)

Lattice in R

ggplot2 Cheatsheet

For those interested in more of Tufte’s ideas

Keep working on abstracts;
  • upload at least these things to your  OSF
    • Copy of your code
    • Copy of your abstract
    • Copy of your poster (time to pick a template!)

Note that none of the above are “final” – this is making sure that all are started, and that you can upload!

Breakout rooms --

look at posters, Notebooks (5 min per person), get files uploaded onto OSF and linked to Wikiversity

Tips for presenting a poster (and 3 minute pitch):

Feldman, D. B., & Silvia, P. J. (2010). Public speaking for Psychologists: A lighthearted guide to research presentations, job talks, and other opportunities to embarrass yourself. American Psychological Assn.

(chapter 8)

Modified version of NCPA Feedback

Initial scoring of your poster and OSF (10% of score for poster based on completion)
Effect sizes and Power Slides

Free Power Software:

G*Power

YouTube recording of Power Lecture

Tutorial for doing in R pwr

[] Abstract, syntax to OSF tonight

→ Power homework due 4,12 linked here

https://flowingdata.com/2014/11/12/relationship-status/

Resource if you want to use a map in your poster:

Free custom maps (if you don’t want to build in R)

Meta-analysis – effect sizes are connected; heterogeneity; quality   Slides

Bag of Tricks:

Converting Effect Sizes

Key for Poster Rubric 2021
Publication and dissemination: Peer review, open access, Creative Commons, Wikipedia

Authorship: CREDIT and WAARF

YouTube of our retrenchment 2021
  • Upload Power Assignment
Review for final in class

POSTERS DUE!!!!!!!! by start of class

Small group format, group score can count for 10% of your final exam grade – must be present synchronously!
  • Pre-recorded version of poster presentation due by start of class (add link to ToDo Sheet)
Poster session in class

More presentations

Easter Egg: Future Directions Forum Abstract Submissions! Due June 10 to present in June!

Peer reviewed product added to your CV!

Wrap up - Future Proofing YouTube video 2021 Post-test about research skills, how much we learned