Doing Empirical Political Research- Web Exercises
ACE Practice Tests
Chapter Outlines
Data Sets
End-of-Chapter Activities
Interactive Modules
Learning Objectives
Web Exercises
Weblinks
Political SourceNet
Textbook Site for:
Doing Empirical Political Research
James M. Carlson, Providence College
Mark S. Hyde, Providence College
Web Exercises
Chapter 6: Assessing Relationships: Association or Causality?
Exercise 6.2: Association and Temporal Order
Write a hypothesis about politics that shows what you believe to be association, but not causation. Explain why you believe the variables are
not
causally related. As a way to get started, think about the level of education and amount of income (for countries, American states, or individual persons) as possible competing independent variables.
Describe a situation in which it might be difficult to set the temporal order of the two variables in a hypothesis. For example, could the following hypothesis from Exercise 6.1 be stated with the independent and dependent variables reversed? "The greater the proportion of a state's tax revenue generated by tourism, the more that state will spend on the environment."
Site Map
|
Partners
|
Press Releases
|
Company Home
|
Contact Us
Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All Rights Reserved.
Terms and Conditions of Use
,
Privacy Statement
, and
Trademark Information