Weaknesses
Our study contained some weaknesses and confounding variables. One of the
biggest weaknesses of the study was the non-response bias.
Of the 100 surveys sent to students we only received 74
back, and of the 11 surveys sent to teachers we only
received 9 back.
Some of the students selected for our survey were
unable to receive the survey because of attending Polaris
full time, taking classes online, or being in PSEOP. Also
some of the students chosen for the survey were in special
education classes and were not given the surveys as to not
offend anyone. Some of the returned surveys were also void
because the responder circled more than one answer or wrote
in their own response. This partly resulted from a flaw in
one of our questions. When we asked people if they used the
r-word as a medical term, we neglected to provide options
for people who didn’t use the word at all or who used the
word as both a medical term and a non-medical term. Another
one of our questions that may have created some ambiguity
was the question that asked whether the responder personally
knew someone with a disability. Because we did not provide
any standards for having a personal relationship, this was
left up to the responder to interpret. Some of the
responders may have thought a personal relationship meant a
casual acquaintance, while others may have believed it meant
a close friend or family member with whom they interacted
daily. Our study may have also contained a response bias.
Some responders may have thought it would be funny to say
they said the r-word everyday, while others may have been
embarrassed about how often they actually said the r-word
and thus put a lesser frequency. Also of all of the teachers
who responded only one chose a choice other than never. This
may have been because some of the teachers were embarrassed
to answer truthfully or felt obliged to answer the way they
did because of their professional status.
Extrapolation
After observing that many people in our sample were unable to receive and
respond to the survey, we feel that it would be better to
narrow of population of interest from students and teachers
at North Olmsted High School to North Olmsted High School
students who attend classes at the school and are not in the
special education program and North Olmsted High School
teachers. This is because we can not accurately represent
the entire NOHS population when the opinions of different
groups of students were not accounted for. However, we would
feel comfortable extrapolating our results to Northeast Ohio
public high school students not in special education who
attend traditional classes and
Northeast Ohio public high school teachers. We
would only feel comfortable extrapolating this far because
location, school type, and age are extraneous factors that
could change the outcome of our study.