Friday, January 9, 2015

A Critical Look At School Aged Children of Alcoholics

Research Study Article Critique
Introduction    
Reading an article or publication laden with generalizations or determinations about social groups always requires a healthy dose of skepticism. Despite the writer's spin, the reader employs her own objectivity as a filter to try and score balance. After reading and reviewing “School–age children of alcoholics and non-alcoholics: Their anxiety, self-esteem and locus of control” an article published in Professional School Counseling in 1998, I realized just how important a critical eye can be (Post, 1998). The following is my analysis of the article mentioned above. I discuss the accuracy and validity of the article, relevance and applicability of the resources, instruments used, and the proposed results. In sum, I share my opinion of the overall value of the publication and it’s contribution to the field of research.
Accuracy and Validity
            The research topic addressed in the article regarding school-aged children of alcoholics was stated at the beginning of page one. It is important to describe the topic at the start of a publication for the reader’s benefit. This serves the reader by informing him of the issues to be addressed in the coming pages.  However, the entire article, including the first paragraph lacked consistency and uniformity in how the subjects were addressed and who the actual subjects were.
            On page one, in the introductory paragraphs, the subjects of the study were introduced to the reader as “young children of alcoholics (YCOA)” (Post, 1998). However, in the title the subjects are referred to as “School-age children of alcoholics” (post, 1998). On page two, the subjects are referred to as “school-aged COA” (Post, 1998). Finally, on page three the subjects are referred to as “COA” and another group “ACOA” is mentioned with no introduction at all (Post, 1998). The clear inconsistency in how the subjects are referred to may raise questions for the reader about who the actual subjects really are.  Furthermore, because of the inconsistencies, the reader may begin to question the true validity of the entire article.
Relevance and Applicability
            A primary source for any research publication must include references to previously published sources. Information from past research is always applicable and does impact the shape, plan, execution, and outcome of any new projects. With this in mind, a thorough review of previous research in the field is a fundamental prerequisite to prevent redundancy. Reviewing past research also helps to design projects most relevant and applicable to present needs.
            The article on “School-aged children of alcoholics” did mention many sources, however, those sources were quite outdated with some dating back more than 10 years from the date that the article was published (Post, 1998). At best, this is poor practice. Without reviewing more recent data, research could be unnecessarily repeated as well as time and resources wasted pursuing results that may not be relevant based on other, more recently published, data.
            The article also included a variety of tests as instruments for determining which children did have alcoholic parents and the impact of that parenting. Theoretically, there must be some way to distinguish between children with and without alcoholic parents and determine the impact to the child. There were four test instruments used to gather the results presented in the study.   
Results
Each of the tests instruments used in the study of “school-aged children of alcoholics” had proven test-retest validity except for one, the Nowiki (Post, 1998).  The Nowiki test was used to determine where the subject’s locus of control rests. As the results of this test were directly related to the primary prediction of the article, which is, “that school-aged YCOAs would score higher on anxiety, lower on self-concept, and higher on external locus of control than a control group of school aged non-YCOAs”, the results should have been amongst the strongest. However, the internal consistency of this test was only .12 compared to .96, .87, and .63 of the other tests used (Post, 1998). This causes reason to question the validity of any assertion made based on the results of the Nowiki test.
Also, the primary test used to determine which children had alcoholic parents, “CAST Questionnaire”, was so leading that it was not at all a reliable measure for the purposes intended. It was also a very long and laborious test for a school-aged child to take all at once. This likely impacted the responses, further compromising the results of the study.
Conducting research that involves the study of large groups should always be done on the broadest scale possible. Sample group size is particularly important when the results will be used to make generalizations about all people within that group. In the case of the article regarding “school-aged children of alcoholics” this rule appears to have been neglected (Post, 1998). The size of the group was 108 children, all of whom were from the same area, attending the same school (Post, 1998). This narrow test group is not nearly reflective enough of the entire population of school-aged children of alcoholics to make any reasonable generalizations or predictions. Results gathered from such a narrow research study hold very little validity or general pertinence.
Conclusion
            There are limits to the applicability of any study. In addition to those mentioned above, this article itself also mentions “generalizing the findings too broadly” on page four, and that all the measures are “self-reports from the student” also on page four (Post,1998). These findings undeniably reiterate the necessity to think critically about the information we read. We must take care not to place too much confidence in the validity of information we hear, read, or see presented, in the relevance or accuracy of sources, or in the reliability of results.
Reference

Post, P., Robinson, B.(1998). School-age children of alcoholics and non-alcoholics: their anxiety, self-esteem and locus of control. Professional school counseling. Vol. 1 Issue 5, p36. Retrieved from MasterFILE Premier database.  

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