Some subscribers to TIPS and TeachEdPsych might be interested in a 
discussion-list post "Re: controlled experiments" [Hake (2011)].

The abstract reads:

*********************************************
ABSTRACT: PhysLnrR's Brian Foley wrote (paraphrasing):

"I would love to be doing controlled experiments much of the time - 
but they are darn near impossible to pull off. . . . . . Once you 
have your 40 approved classrooms, you RANDOMLY SELECT 20 TEACHERS and 
train them on your innovation. . . . . Also your 20 control teachers 
need to be using their 'traditional' teaching (and specifically teach 
like they have never heard of your innovation.. . . . and if you have 
designed some good assessments of learning, then you will finally 
have your result. . . . . .and if your innovation makes a difference 
YOU JUST MIGHT GET THE MAGICAL p < 0.05 RESULT."

Brian seems to have succumbed to the siren calls of the Gold 
Standardistas and the Statistical Significance Cultists.  Modesty 
forbids mention of these possible antidotes:

a. "Should Randomized Control Trials Be the Gold Standard of 
Educational Research?" at <http://bit.ly/qrUfFz>,

b. "Seventeen Statements by Gold-Standard Skeptics #2" at 
<http://bit.ly/oRGnBp>,

c. "The Cult of Statistical Significance" at <http://bit.ly/dkTyXP>.
*********************************************

To access the complete 10 kB post please click on <http://bit.ly/onA7jk>.

Richard Hake, Emeritus Professor of Physics, Indiana University
Honorary Member, Curmudgeon Lodge of Deventer, The Netherlands
President, PEdants for Definitive Academic References which Recognize the
        Invention of the Internet (PEDARRII)
<rrh...@earthlink.net>
<http://www.physics.indiana.edu/~hake>
<http://www.physics.indiana.edu/~sdi>
<http://HakesEdStuff.blogspot.com>
<http://iub.academia.edu/RichardHake>

"In some quarters, particularly medical ones, the randomized 
experiment is considered the causal 'gold standard.' IT IS CLEARLY 
NOT THAT IN EDUCATIONAL CONTEXTS, given the difficulties with 
implementing and maintaining randomly created groups, with the 
sometimes incomplete implementation of treatment particulars, with 
the borrowing of some treatment particulars by control group units, 
and with the limitations to external validity that often follow from 
how the random assignment is achieved."
         - Tom Cook & Monique Payne (2002, p. 174)

"After 4 decades of severe criticism, the ritual of null hypothesis 
significance testing - mechanical dichotomous decisions around a 
sacred 0.05 criterion - still persists. This article reviews the 
problems with this practice, including its near-universal 
misinterpretation of p as the probability that Ho . . . .[[the null 
hypothesis]]. . . .  is false, the misinterpretation that its 
complement is the probability of successful replication, and the 
mistaken assumption that if one rejects Ho one thereby affirms the 
theory that led to the test. Exploratory data analysis and the use of 
graphic methods, a steady improvement in and a movement toward 
standardization in measurement, and emphasis on effect sizes using 
confidence intervals, and the informed use of available statistical 
methods is suggested. FOR GENERALIZATION, PSYCHOLOGISTS MUST FINALLY 
RELY, AS HAS BEEN DONE IN THE OLDER SCIENCES, ON REPLICATION."  [My 
CAPS.]
        - Jacob Cohen (1994) in "The earth is round (p < .05)"


REFERENCES [URL's shortened by <http://bit.ly/> and accessed on 11 July 2011.]
Cook, T.D. & M.R. Payne. 2002. "Objecting to the Objections to Using 
Random Assignment in Educational Research" in Mosteller & Boruch 
(2002).

Cohen, J. 1994. "The earth is round (p < .05)," American Psychologist 
49: 997-1003; online as a 1.2 MB pdf at <http://bit.ly/a45I2t> thanks 
to Christopher Green <http://www.yorku.ca/christo/>.

Hake, R.R. 2011. "Re: controlled experiments," online on the OPEN! 
AERA-L archives at <http://bit.ly/onA7jk>. Post of 11 Jul 2011 
11:15:54-0700 to AERA-L, Net-Gold, and PhysLrnR.  The abstract and 
link to the complete post are being transmitted to various discussion 
lists and are also on my blog "Hake'sEdStuff" at 
<http://bit.ly/qNlxAV> with a provision for comments.

Mosteller, F. & R. Boruch, eds. 2002. "Evidence Matters: Randomized 
Trials in Education Research." Brookings Institution. Amazon.com 
information at  <http://amzn.to/n6T0Uo >. A searchable expurgated 
Google Book Preview is online at <http://bit.ly/mTcPIE>.

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