Explian different scaling methods with suitable example. In your opinion, which scale is generally used for collecting data in the field of education? why?
Answers
When doing research, variables are described on four major scales. In this lesson, we'll look at the major scales of measurement, including nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio scales.
Variables
Imagine that you are a psychologist, and you want to do a study to see whether eating breakfast will help kids focus. You think that the students who eat a healthy breakfast will do best on a math quiz, students who eat an unhealthy breakfast will perform in the middle and students who do not eat anything for breakfast will do the worst on a math quiz.
So, how do you do your study? Where do you even begin?
In research, one of the first things that you have to do is identify your variables, or factors that can change. For example, whether a person eats breakfast or not is a variable - it varies from person to person and perhaps from day to day. A person can eat a healthy breakfast, eat an unhealthy breakfast or not eat breakfast at all. If eating breakfast did not vary, every single person would eat the exact same thing for breakfast every single morning.
Likewise, performance on a math test is a variable because it varies from person to person. Susie might do great on a math quiz, while Jonas fails it. Or, Susie might do well today but not as well tomorrow. Whatever the reason, scores on a math quiz change, and therefore, they are variables.
So, we know that our variables are eating breakfast and math performance. But, how do we measure them? There are four major scales (or types) of measurement of variables: nominal, ordinal, interval and ratio. The scale of measurement depends on the variable itself. Let's look closer at each of the four scales and what types of variables fall into each category.