Critiquing Single-Subject Designs
750 words
Overview
By successfully completing this assignment, you demonstrate your proficiency in the following competency and specialized behaviors:
- Competency 4: Engage in practice-informed research and research-informed practice.
- C4.SP.A: Apply leadership skills, decision making, and the use of technology to inform evidence-based research practice to develop, implement, evaluate, and communicate interventions across the specialization of advanced generalist practice settings.
- Related Assignment Criterion:
- 1: Critique single-subject designs.
- Related Assignment Criterion:
- C4.SP.B: Apply leadership skills, decision making, and the use of technology to inform program evaluation to develop, implement, evaluate, and communicate interventions across the specialization of advanced generalist practice settings.
- Related Assignment Criterion:
- 2: Apply critical thinking in verbal and written communication through the use of leadership and technology.
- Related Assignment Criterion:
- C4.SP.A: Apply leadership skills, decision making, and the use of technology to inform evidence-based research practice to develop, implement, evaluate, and communicate interventions across the specialization of advanced generalist practice settings.
Assignment Description
After reading Whitfield’s 1999 article, “Validating School Social Work,” you will answer a series of questions aimed at critiquing single subject designs.
Assignment Instructions
Read Whitfield’s 1999 article, “Validating School Social Work: An Evaluation of a Cognitive-Behavioral Approach to Reduce School Violence,” and answer the following questions in an APA-formatted document:
- What was the purpose of this study?
- What was the sample?
- What dependent variables were studied? How were the dependent variables operationalized?
- Why was a single-subject design used? What are the strengths of a single-subject design?
- What were the key findings (the results of the data analysis)?
- How would you critique the findings? What are limitations of a single-subject design?