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by mattkrause
1297 days ago
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Eh, it’s tricker than just “go with what you’ve got.” For example, you should be checking whether the response rate is associated with other factors and incorporate that into your analysis. You might find that you have pretty good data from unhappy students, but not satisfied ones, or vice versa. |
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I realize I'm taking a very harsh stance here, but I've seen again and again people 'fixing' data in multiple rounds, the effect of which is any actual insight is removed in favor of reinforcing the assumptions held before collecting data. When you do this at multiple steps in the process it becomes very hard to have a good intuition about whether you've done things that invalidate the conclusion (or the ability to draw any conclusion at all).