Introducing
Your new presentation assistant.
Refine, enhance, and tailor your content, source relevant images, and edit visuals quicker than ever before.
Trending searches
The conclusions you would be able to draw from the data is whether or not braces work better/cause less pain or if Invisalign works better and causes less pain.
The participants I choose will be 5 with braces and 5 using Invisalign. They will be chosen randomly. The 5 people with braces will get a survey with 2 questions on it. One will be "How long have you had your braces on?" and the other will be "On a scale of 1-10, what number would you say matches the amount of pain they have caused you averagely?" The other 5 people that use Invisalign will also get the same survey however, replacing "braces" with "Invisalign". This is how I will collect the data.
As you design your study, use the following format.
Part 1. Introduction. Develop your research question. What is it that you want to know? A good research question will tell the reader exactly what your study is about and help you maintain your focus throughout the research process.
Part 2. Methodology. What will be the target population? How will you get your sample? How will the control and treatment groups be formed? What treatment will be applied? What statistics will you collect?
Part 3. Discussion. What conclusions would you be able to draw from the data?
Do braces or invisalign work better/feel better?