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TaskVIII.docx

Your job in this project is rather simple: to operationalize the two central variables in this

research – combat experience and serious violent offending – by creating an index/scale for each variable. To accomplish this task, you will be using data from Wave IV (2008) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add-Health), collected by social scientists at The University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill. I have uploaded the relevant codebooks to Canvas (Military Experience and Violent Offending and Victimization), along with the data. Students will be accessing the data directly from the ICPSR website, via the UNA Social and Behavioral Sciences Research Center (we will go through this process together). Once the data has been downloaded, students will be asked to construct and compute two scales in order to

operationalize the independent and dependent variables: (1) a five-item combat experience

scale, which includes a number of relevant combat-related measures (shooting/killing someone

in combat, the experience of being wounded/injured during combat, and witnessing individuals

being wounded or killed); and (2) a scale of serious violent behavior. I will provide students

with considerable assistance in constructing the combat experience scale, but students will be

expected to create their scale of serious violence on their own. Fortunately, The Add Health

has arranged the five combat variables in consecutive order in the Military Codebook (section

10). The five variables comprising the scale are as follows:

R_H4MI14: During your combat deployment have you ever killed, or thought you killed, someone

R_H4MI15: During your combat deployment, were you wounded or injured?

R_H4MI16A: During combat deployment, did you see a friend/ ally wounded, killed, dead?

R_H4MI16B: “” an enemy combatant?

R_H4MI16C : “” a civilian?

Students are simply asked to create a summated scale of these five items

(TRANSFORM/COMPUTE command within SPSS), entitled COMBAT_EXP. The Variable

Label should be “five-item summated scale for combat experience”. Since the variables are

all measured on the same metric, more or less, there will be no need for performing any recodes on your initial scale. VERY IMPORTANT: REMEMBER THAT WHEN COMPUTING SCALES AND RECODING VARIABLES STUDENTS SHOULD PASTE ALL OF THEIR PROCEDURES INTO A SYNTAX FILE IN SPSS.

As for your scale on serious violence scale/index, students are to go through the Section 21 Add-

Health Codebook (Violent Offending and Victimization – see uploaded file in Canvas), and

select the items that they think should comprise the serious violent offending scale (Hint: I

think there are six items that “can” be used here, but students are to make their own choices,

and defend them). Please keep in mind that some of these items are on different metrics, (two are dichotomous, the others are on a four-point scale), so recodes may be necessary, as to ensure that we are comparing “apples to apples”. In the event that students need to perform recodes on some of these measures (four of them), I would recommend dummy-coding all scale indicators, as to where the values indicate (0 = have not committed the act at least once in the past year, and 1 = have committed the act at least once in the past year the following). This can be done via the following steps: recode these items into different variables ( SPSS: TRANSFORM/RECODE INTO DIFFERENT VARIABLES) and change the OLD values (2-3) into NEW values (1). Copy the OLD values 0 and 1. Remember, I recommend renaming your newly recoded variables with the “R” designation. Therefore, all of the indicators that comprise your soon-to-be created scale will have the values 0 or 1. When creating the summated violence scale in SPSS, I recommend using the following name: SERIOUS_VIOLENCE. I would label the variable “summated scale for serious violent behavior”. Again, students have the freedom to choose the indicators that they prefer, as long as they can defend their choices.

When the scales have been constructed, students are encouraged to run a frequency distribution of their scales, and see if anything looks odd (e.g., are some of the attributes not represented in your scales, and may be in need of being collapsed/merged into another attribute/value?).

Lastly, students are to perform a reliability analysis on their newly-created scales by performing

the following procedures in SPSS: ANALYZE/SCALE/RELIABILITY ANALYSIS. Students use the proper statistics to measure reliability (as indicated in the TWO classroom demonstrations).

After performing these procedures, students are asked to answer the following discussion questions, which will be used as the primary means of assessment for class project V.

1. Why were some of the indicators of your violence scale recoded? Does this choice make sense? Why or why not?

2. Run a frequency distribution of your two newly-minted scales. Do any of your scales need to be recoded? Why or why not?

a. If your scales need to be recoded (I think at least one of them might), how would you recode them and why?

3. Comment on the reliability of your two scales. In particular, are the two scales reliable?

a. What procedure in SPSS did you use to make this determination?

b. After performing the procedure, how did you come to the conclusion that your measures were reliable, or lacking in reliability? In other words, what threshold did you use to make this determination?

4. Comment on the validity of these two measures. Do you think that you have accurately captured combat-related PTSD, and serious violent behavior? Why or why not (be prepared to defend your choices)?

a. What procedure did you use to make this determination?

b. Are there statistical procedures that can assess validity?

5. Discuss the process by which you moved from the abstract (what does violence really mean, man? What is post-traumatic stress), through conceptualization and operationalization to the final point of real-world measurement. Discuss the “science” behind the procedures you performed, while also giving some attention to the position that this science may still be viewed by some as being “soft”.

· Students should include the syntax files for all procedures used. As a matter of fact, while students will not receive a grade on their syntax submission, the syntax file is of equal importance to your assignment submission, as I will use your syntax file to determine if you have performed all procedures properly. Only the class project VIII assignment drop box will actually be evaluated.

AddHealthCodebookSection21--CriminalOffendingandVictimization2.pdf

Wave IV Section 21: Criminal Offending and Victimization

Number of observations: 15,701

The next questions are about things you may have done in the past 12 months.

H4DS1 Num 1. In the past 12 months, how often did you deliberately damage property that didn't belong to you?

Frequency Percent Value Label

15011 96% 0 never

558 4% 1 1 or 2 times

52 0% 2 3 or 4 times

33 0% 3 5 or more times

28 0% 6 refused

19 0% 8 don't know

H4DS2 Num 2. In the past 12 months, how often did you steal something worth more than $50?

Frequency Percent Value Label

15384 98% 0 never

220 1% 1 1 or 2 times

31 0% 2 3 or 4 times

25 0% 3 5 or more times

30 0% 6 refused

11 0% 8 don't know

H4DS3 Num 3. In the past 12 months, how often did you go into a house or building to steal something?

Frequency Percent Value Label

15556 99% 0 never

71 0% 1 1 or 2 times

19 0% 2 3 or 4 times

12 0% 3 5 or more times

31 0% 6 refused

12 0% 8 don't know

H4DS4 Num 4. In the past 12 months, how often did you use or threaten to use a weapon to get something from someone?

Frequency Percent Value Label

15526 99% 0 never

104 1% 1 1 or 2 times

9 0% 2 3 or 4 times

17 0% 3 5 or more times

32 0% 6 refused

13 0% 8 don't know

H4DS5 Num 5. In the past 12 months, how often did you sell marijuana or other drugs?

Frequency Percent Value Label

15001 96% 0 never

275 2% 1 1 or 2 times

98 1% 2 3 or 4 times

286 2% 3 5 or more times

32 0% 6 refused

9 0% 8 don't know

H4DS6 Num 6. In the past 12 months, how often did you steal something worth less than $50?

Frequency Percent Value Label

15038 96% 0 never

495 3% 1 1 or 2 times

63 0% 2 3 or 4 times

63 0% 3 5 or more times

31 0% 6 refused

11 0% 8 don't know

H4DS7 Num 7. In the past 12 months, how often did you take part in a physical fight where a group of your friends was against another group?

Frequency Percent Value Label

15163 97% 0 never

431 3% 1 1 or 2 times

46 0% 2 3 or 4 times

18 0% 3 5 or more times

33 0% 6 refused

10 0% 8 don't know

H4DS8 Num 8. In the past 12 months, how often did you buy, sell, or hold stolen property?

Frequency Percent Value Label

15238 97% 0 never

328 2% 1 1 or 2 times

53 0% 2 3 or 4 times

39 0% 3 5 or more times

32 0% 6 refused

11 0% 8 don't know

H4DS9 Num 9. In the past 12 months, how often did you use someone else's credit card, bank card, or automatic teller card without their permission or knowledge?

Frequency Percent Value Label

15556 99% 0 never

78 0% 1 1 or 2 times

14 0% 2 3 or 4 times

10 0% 3 5 or more times

32 0% 6 refused

11 0% 8 don't know

H4DS10 Num 10. In the past 12 months, how often did you deliberately write a bad check?

Frequency Percent Value Label

15357 98% 0 never

244 2% 1 1 or 2 times

33 0% 2 3 or 4 times

25 0% 3 5 or more times

32 0% 6 refused

10 0% 8 don't know

H4DS11 Num 11. In the past 12 months, how often did you get into a serious physical fight?

Frequency Percent Value Label

14851 95% 0 never

713 5% 1 1 or 2 times

59 0% 2 3 or 4 times

34 0% 3 5 or more times

35 0% 6 refused

9 0% 8 don't know

If Q11=1, 2, 3, ask Q.12, else skip to Q.13.

H4DS12 Num 12. In the past 12 months, how often did you hurt someone badly enough in a physical fight that he or she needed care from a doctor or nurse?

Frequency Percent Value Label

508 3% 0 never

263 2% 1 1 or 2 times

23 0% 2 3 or 4 times

10 0% 3 5 or more times

14895 95% 7 legitimate skip

2 0% 8 don't know

Which of the following things happened in the past 12 months:

H4DS13 Num 13. Someone stole something from you worth more than $50?

Frequency Percent Value Label

10351 66% 0 no

3882 25% 1 yes

32 0% 6 refused

12 0% 8 don't know

1424 9% . missing

H4DS14 Num 14. You saw someone shoot or stab another person?

Frequency Percent Value Label

13034 83% 0 no

1200 8% 1 yes

34 0% 6 refused

9 0% 8 don't know

1424 9% . missing

H4DS15 Num 15. Someone pulled a knife or gun on you?

Frequency Percent Value Label

13248 84% 0 no

985 6% 1 yes

35 0% 6 refused

9 0% 8 don't know

1424 9% . missing

H4DS16 Num 16. Someone shot or stabbed you?

Frequency Percent Value Label

13733 87% 0 no

503 3% 1 yes

32 0% 6 refused

9 0% 8 don't know

1424 9% . missing

H4DS17 Num 17. Someone slapped, hit, choked, or kicked you?

Frequency Percent Value Label

12766 81% 0 no

1469 9% 1 yes

31 0% 6 refused

11 0% 8 don't know

1424 9% . missing

H4DS18 Num 18. You were beaten up?

Frequency Percent Value Label

13787 88% 0 no

449 3% 1 yes

32 0% 6 refused

9 0% 8 don't know

1424 9% . missing

H4DS19 Num 19. You pulled a knife or gun on someone?

Frequency Percent Value Label

13874 88% 0 no

361 2% 1 yes

32 0% 6 refused

10 0% 8 don't know

1424 9% . missing

H4DS20 Num 20. You shot or stabbed someone?

Frequency Percent Value Label

14077 90% 0 no

156 1% 1 yes

37 0% 6 refused

7 0% 8 don't know

1424 9% . missing

AddHealthCodebooksection10--Military2.pdf
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