Uploaded by Ebooks Manuals

Answer Key For A Cross Section of Psychological Research Journal

advertisement
Get Complete Answer Key By email at student.support@hotmail.com
A NSWERS
A Cross Section of
Psychological Research
Journal Articles for Discussion and Evaluation
SECOND EDITION
Andrea K. Milinki
Editor
Get Complete Answer Key By email at student.support@hotmail.com
Get Complete Answer Key By email at student.support@hotmail.com
Answers to Factual Questions
Article 1: Factors That Influence Fee Setting by Male and Female Psychologists
1. 39. (See lines 88–89.) 2. Self-pay clients seen in self-employed private practice. (See lines 97–99.)
3. Yes. (See line 150.) 4. No. (See lines 152–156.) 5. No. (See lines 188–192.) 6. The difference
regarding local competition. (See lines 269–274 and 285–288.)
Article 2: Involvement of Fathers in Therapy: A Survey of Clinicians
1. 135. (See lines 180–182.) 2. 27.0%. (See lines 197–198.) 3. 62.00. (See Table 2.) 4. 39.46. (See
Table 2; note that this is rounded to 39.5% in line 307.) 5. Yes, at the p < .01 level. (See Table 2 and the
footnote to the table.) 6. Yes, the r for this relationship is .32, which is significant at the .01 level. (See
lines 393–395.)
Article 3: Screening for Domestic Violence: Recommendations Based on a Practice Survey
1. 12%. (See lines 53–57.) 2. Yes. (See lines 161–165.) 3. They were randomly selected. (See lines
183–184.) 4. 2% to 80%. (See lines 203–207.) 5. Females. (See Table 2.) 6. No. (See lines 240–
245.)
Article 4: Students’ Ratings of Teaching Effectiveness: A Laughing Matter?
1. 1 for Strongly Disagree and 5 for Strongly Agree. (See lines 28–32.) 2. 453. (See Abstract and lines
32–33.) 3. 21. (See Abstract and line 35.) 4. .49 (See lines 41–45.) 5. “The lecturer helped me to
develop an interest in the subject matter,” with r = .60. (See lines 40–48.) 6. Yes. (See lines 40–48.)
Article 5: Psychological Correlates of Optimism in College Students
1. That students who rated optimism high would also score more positively on adjustment, higher on selfesteem, and lower on loneliness. (See lines 18–21.) 2. Yes. (See lines 22–24.) 3. Life Orientation Test.
(See lines 24–26.) 4. Yes. (See lines 28–37.) 5. r = .51 for Total adjustment score ratings and scores
on the Rosenberg scale. (See lines 54–56.) 6. One. (See lines 51–58.)
Article 6: Relationships of Assertiveness, Depression, and Social Support Among Older Nursing
Home Residents
1. No. (See lines 57–58 and 174–182.) 2. No, because the mean score was 9.0, while the highest
possible score is 30. (See lines 67–71 and 83–84.) 3. r = –.33. (See lines 85–86.) 4. No. (See lines 88–
91.) 5. No. (See lines 88–89.) 6. Inverse. (See lines 98–101.)
Article 7: Correlations Between Humor Styles and Loneliness
1. Loneliness and self-defeating humor. (See lines 37–39.) 2. 23.5. (See lines 65–66.) 3. Choice A.
(See lines 110–112.) 4. The r = –.47 for the relationship between Loneliness and Affiliative Humor.
(See lines 111–112.) 5. Yes, at the p < .001 level. (See lines 111–113.) 6. No. (See lines 115–117.)
Get Complete Answer Key By email
1 at student.support@hotmail.com
Related documents
Download