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Book Reviews
Issue 29(2)
Practicing
research: Discovering evidence that matters.
(2008). Arlene Fink. Thousand Oaks,
CA: Sage Publications, 373 pp. Price $44.95 (softcover). ISBN
978-1-4129-3770-2.
Review
by: Jason P.
Browning
Systems Analyst
Office of Undergraduate Advising Practice
University
of Louisville
Research
skills are a necessary component of doctoral programs in higher
education and are becoming an increasingly important skill for the
student affairs practitioner. In the volume, Practicing Research:
Discovering Evidence That Matters , Arlene Fink attempts to
provide an introductory survey of research practices. Fink operates
under the concept of the reader as a “research consumer” charged
with discovering evidence that matters. The author defines the research
consumer as one who either practices research or uses research as
a basis for his or her decision-making.
Fink
bases her work on the framework of evidence-based practice, leaning
strongly on the methodology of evidence-based medicine. Throughout
the volume, examples are readily provided, but they are generally
drawn from the medical profession and often unclear. (Fink is a
professor of medicine and public health at the University of California,
Los Angeles.)
Fink
addresses the concepts of program databases and the literature review,
and introduces screening criteria for journal articles, primarily
considering basics such as research design, program characteristics,
and outcomes measures. Little guidance, however is provided, regarding
the synthesis of the results of a literature review. The discussion
is primarily conceptual in nature, and provides only elementary
practical guidance.
A
particular strength of the work is chapter four, which discusses
the importance of research design, considering concepts such as
randomized controlled trials, quasi-experimental, and observational
designs. Fink excels in this introduction to research design and
includes a useful discussion on threats to internal and external
validity. A discussion of commonly used instruments and measures
ensues in chapter five to complement this design introduction.
While
the author provides an accessible introduction to various types
of reliability and validity, little is discussed regarding quantitative
reliability statistics. The reader is not cautioned, for example,
of the limitations of the popular but imprecise measure of percent
agreement, which has historically been prevalent practice in program
evaluations throughout higher education. A more thorough treatment
of reliability and validity measures is needed for an effective
research consumer to understand these essential concepts.
What
Practicing Research fails to accomplish is to adequately
educate the reader in research methods. While it attempts to serve
as a high-level survey of various issues and concerns to considering
in evaluating research evidence, it addresses topics unevenly and
glosses over several important concepts. Actual statistical methodologies
go largely unmentioned. Summarily, Fink generally does not present
the concepts discussed in sufficient detail as to be actionable
by research practitioners.
As
NACADA and the advising community continues its movement toward
advising as a discipline, it is important to transition from theory
and conceptual framework to practice and tangible results. A necessary
place for this catalyst to begin is in the area of research methods.
In addition, as practitioners more actively consider research-based
programs and interventions, it is important that they operate from
a firm understanding of fundamental research concepts. The appropriate
selection and assessment of research is a necessary skill to ensuring
that he or she does indeed select evidence that matters.
While Fink endeavors
to fulfill this goal, her volume is an insufficient introduction.
For an overview of accessing and interpreting the literature, one
is encouraged to turn to a more robust introduction, such as Reading
and Understanding Research by Locke, Silverman, and Spirduso.
This volume explores issues of choosing appropriate research, interpreting
its trustworthiness, and provides a reasonable summary of both quantitative
and qualitative methods. The more statistically inclined reader
may benefit from Spicer’s cursory review of the increasingly common
multivariate techniques offered in his accessible work, Making
Sense of Multivariate Data Analysis .
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