Introductory Research Methods and Analysis Webcast Lectures

Introductory Research Methods and Analysis Webcast Lectures

CARMA’s Introductory Research Methods and Analysis Webcast Lectures are a set of  of 25 recorded presentations from the CARMA Video Library.  They have been selected so as to result in content roughly comparable to that covered in a graduate level introductory level research methods course that would be offered in organizational and social sciences.  Each one-hour Introductory Lecture is accompanied by its Powerpoint slides, and also an on-line assessment is available for those participating in CARMA’s Research Methods and Education Program.  Presenters include nationally recognized scholars, many of whom are former editors and editorial board members as well as research methods award winners. Examples of topics in the Introductory Lectures include inductive research, hypothesis testing, survey research and scale development, regression analysis, multi-level methods, ethnography, publishing qualitative research, and meta-analysis.

The full set of Introductory Lectures include:

Title Presenter(s) Date
Theoretical Specification and Methodological Rigor: Matching Theory and Methods Dr. Michael Hitt Spring 2012
Inductive Research Approaches Dr. Paul Spector Fall 2015
Power Analysis for Traditional and Modern Hypothesis Tests Dr. Kevin Murphy Spring 2006
Non-Responses to Organizational Surveys Dr. Steven Rogelberg Fall 2006
Relative Importance of Predictors with Regression Models Dr. James LeBreton Fall 2007
Practical Issues in Developing a Measure Dr. Fred Oswald Fall 2011
The Promise and Perils of Wearable Sensors in Organizational Research Dr. John Hollenbeck Spring 2015
Measures of Agreement for Group Level Research Dr. James LeBreton Spring 2005
Developments and Resources for Relative Importance Analysis Dr. Scott Tonidandel Fall 2013
Estimating Interaction Effects Using Multiple Regression Dr. Herman Aguinis Fall 2004
Regression Models for Limited Range Dependent Variables Dr. David Harrison Fall 2006
Mediation Analysis Dr. David MacKinnon Fall 2009
Hierarchical Linear Modeling Dr. David Hofmann Spring 2005
Multi-Level Organizational Research: Where We’ve Been, and Where are We Heading Dr. Gilad Chen Fall 2013
Contributing to Applied Psychology with Laboratory Research Dr. John Hollenbeck Spring 2006
Lab vs Field OB: Do Findings Converge? Dr. Jason A. Colquitt Fall 2014
Emerging Questions in Longitudinal Research Dr. Robert Ployhart Spring 2014
Cross Cultural Research Methods Dr. Mark Peterson Spring 2011
Crafting Qualitative Organizational Research Dr. Ann Cunliff Fall 2012
Qualitative Rigor in Inductive Organizational Research Dr. Kevin G. Corley Fall 2013
More Tales of the Field: Ethnography Then and Now Dr.  John Van Maanen Spring 2012
Publishing Criteria for Qualitative Research Dr. Mike Pratt Spring 2008
Tips and Traps for Publishing Qualitative Research: An Editor’s Perspective Dr. Tima Bansal Spring 2013
Statistical and Methodological Myths and Urban Legend Dr. Robert Vandenberg Spring 2013
Total Recall: Should Meta-Analyses Have Expiration Dates Dr. Hannah Rothstein Spring 2014

Introductory Research Methods and Analysis Webcast Lectures

CARMA’s Introductory Research Methods and Analysis Webcast Lectures are a set of  of 25 recorded presentations from the CARMA Video Library.  They have been selected so as to result in content roughly comparable to that covered in a graduate level introductory level research methods course that would be offered in organizational and social sciences.  Each one-hour Introductory Lecture is accompanied by its Powerpoint slides, and also an on-line assessment is available for those participating in CARMA’s Research Methods and Education Program.  Presenters include nationally recognized scholars, many of whom are former editors and editorial board members as well as research methods award winners.

The full set of Introductory Lectures include:

Title/Presenter/Date
Theoretical Specification and Methodological Rigor: Matching Theory and Methods

Dr. Michael Hitt

Spring 2012

Inductive Research Approaches

Dr. Paul Spector

Fall 2015

Power Analysis for Traditional and Modern Hypothesis Tests

Dr. Kevin Murphy

Spring 2006

Non-Responses to Organizational Surveys

Dr. Steven Rogelberg

Fall 2006

Relative Importance of Predictors with Regression Models

Dr. James LeBreton

Fall 2007

Practical Issues in Developing a Measure

Dr. Fred Oswald

Fall 2011

The Promise and Perils of Wearable Sensors in Organizational Research

Dr. John Hollenbeck

Spring 2015

Measures of Agreement for Group Level Research

Dr. James LeBreton

Spring 2005

Developments and Resources for Relative Importance Analysis

Dr. Scott Tonidandel

Fall 2013

Estimating Interaction Effects Using Multiple Regression

Dr. Herman Aguinis

Fall 2004

Regression Models for Limited Range Dependent Variables

Dr. David Harrison

Fall 2006

Mediation Analysis

Dr. David MacKinnon

Fall 2009

Hierarchical Linear Modeling

Dr. David Hofmann

Spring 2005

Multi-Level Organizational Research: Where We’ve Been, and Where are We Heading

Dr. Gilad Chen

Fall 2013

Contributing to Applied Psychology with Laboratory Research

Dr. John Hollenbeck

Spring 2006

Lab vs Field OB: Do Findings Converge?

Dr. Jason A. Colquitt

Fall 2014

Emerging Questions in Longitudinal Research

Dr. Robert Ployhart

Spring 2014

Cross Cultural Research Methods

Dr. Mark Peterson

Spring 2011

Crafting Qualitative Organizational Research

Dr. Ann Cunliff

Fall 2012

Qualitative Rigor in Inductive Organizational Research

Dr. Kevin G. Corley

Fall 2013

More Tales of the Field: Ethnography Then and Now

Dr.  John Van Maanen

Spring 2012

Publishing Criteria for Qualitative Research

Dr. Mike Pratt

Spring 2008

Tips and Traps for Publishing Qualitative Research: An Editor’s Perspective

Dr. Tima Bansal

Spring 2013

Statistical and Methodological Myths and Urban Legend

Dr. Robert Vandenberg

Spring 2013

Total Recall: Should Meta-Analyses Have Expiration Dates

Dr. Hannah Rothstein

Spring 2014