112k views
4 votes
Professor scott conducts research on teenage risk-taking behavior. he would like to develop a hypothesis on the parental influence on teenage risk-taking at the extreme end of the spectrum, with a focus on teenagers who sail around the world alone. would a case study be an appropriate first step, and why or why not? a. yes, because professor scott already knows that parents are the driving influence behind teenage circumnavigation. b. no, because case studies are too idiosyncratic and lack scientific rigor. c. yes, because teenage circumnavigators are rare and the data will help generate new, or possibly falsify existing, hypotheses. d. no, because it will not generate a sufficient amount of data to be tested statistically.

1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:

c. yes, because teenage circumnavigators are rare and the data will help generate new, or possibly falsify existing, hypotheses.

Step-by-step explanation:

From a case study, professor Scott could gathered several types of data from the interaction of the variables in the study (in this case, they are the risk takers kids and the way their parents' teaching method)

At the end of the study, he can find out whether there are any similarities among those parents and determine whether the initial hypotheses that he made is correct.

User Delise
by
5.4k points