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Psychology Dictionary Q-sort: a tool that is occasionally used in therapy. A pack of cards containing statements are presented to the client, who then sorts these into a number of categories (for example, 'very like me', 'not at all like me' and so on). If therapy is successful, there will be a shift from a great distribution of negative cards to positive cards, to reflect a positive self-image. qualitative research (data): information in nonnumerical form, e.g. speech, written words, pictures, which places importance on the meaningful interpretation of data, rather than simply converting data to numbers, for instance, material gathered from a case study. quantitative research (data): information in numerical form, e.g. number of students in a class, average scores on a quiz. quasi-experiment: an experimental design whereby the experimenter does not directly influence participant allocation to different conditions, but instead utilises existing groupings. questionnaire (survey): a research method that is contains different formats of questionnaires, for example the Likert scale, open- and closed- questions. quota sampling: a technique for obtaining participants by selecting a quota of individuals, in proportion to their frequency in the population. |
Success is not the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to success. If you love what you are doing, you will be successful.
Herman Cain
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