Variable
Variable
DEPENDENT VARIABLES
INDEPENDENT VARIABLES
. . . are those that the researcher has control over. This "control" may involve
manipulating existing variables (e.g., modifying existing methods of
instruction) or introducing new variables (e.g., adopting a totally new
method for some sections of a class) in the research setting. Whatever the
case may be, the researcher expects that the independent variable(s) will
have some effect on (or relationship with) the dependent variables.
INTERVENING VARIABLES
. . . refer to abstract processes that are not directly observable but that link
the independent and dependent variables. In language learning and teaching,
they are usually inside the subjects' heads, including various language
learning processes which the researcher cannot observe. For example, if the
use of a particular teaching technique is the independent variable and
mastery of the objectives is the dependent variable, then the language
learning processes used by the subjects are the intervening variables.
MODERATOR VARIABLES
CONTROL VARIABLES
EXTRANEOUS VARIABLES
. . . are those factors in the research environment which may have an effect
on the dependent variable(s) but which are not controlled. Extraneous
variables are dangerous. They may damage a study's validity, making it
impossible to know whether the effects were caused by the independent and
moderator variables or some extraneous factor. If they cannot be controlled,
extraneous variables must at least be taken into consideration when
interpreting results
In scientific research, scientists, technicians and researchers utilize a variety of
methods and variables when conducting their experiments. In simple terms, a variable
represents a measurable attribute that changes or varies across the experiment
whether comparing results between multiple groups, multiple people or even when
using a single person in an experiment conducted over time. In all, there are six
common variable types.
Variables represents the measurable traits that can change over the course of a
scientific experiment. In all there are six basic variable types: dependent, independent,
intervening, moderator, controlled and extraneous variables.
Extraneous Variables
A well-designed experiment eliminates as many unmeasured extraneous variables as
possible. This makes it easier to observe the relationship between the independent
and dependent variables. These extraneous variables, also known as unforeseen
factors, can affect the interpretation of experimental results. Lurking variables, as a
subset of extraneous variables represent the unforeseen factors in the experiment.
Another type of lurking variable includes the confounding variable, which can render
the results of the experiment useless or invalid. Sometimes a confounding variable
could be a variable not previously considered. Not being aware of the confounding
variable’s influence skews the experimental results. For example, say the surface
chosen to conduct the ice-cube experiment was on a salted road, but the
experimenters did not realize the salt was there and sprinkled unevenly, causing some
ice cubes to melt faster. Because the salt affected the experiment's results, it's both a
lurking variable and a confounding variable.