preexperiment
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From pre- + experiment.
Adjective
[edit]preexperiment (not comparable)
- Before an experiment takes place.
Noun
[edit]preexperiment (plural preexperiments)
- A simple form of research that examines a group or groups before and after an event, to see whether there is change, but does not employ a control group.
- 2016, Marina Krcmar, David R. Ewoldsen, Ascan Koerner, Communication Science Theory and Research:
- A study that uses only a manipulation is considered a pre-experiment. As the name implies, a pre-experiment has not quite achieved the level of control necessary to be termed an experiment at all.
- 2020, Earl R. Babbie, The Practice of Social Research, page 247:
- Campbell and Stanley describe three forms of preexperiments: the one-shot case study, the one-group pretest–posttest design, and the static-group comparison.