¶ … experimental strategies of inquiry.
Quantitative methods: Surveys vs. experiments
Surveys are primarily used to compile data on a particular phenomenon. Cross-sectional studies attempt to encapsulate a phenomenon that is occurring at a particular point in time while longitudinal studies track a phenomenon for an extended duration of time (Survey methods, 2013, IS School). Regardless, the purpose of surveys is informative. The method is not designed come to a conclusion about why something is taking place and how we should address it. For example, a cross-sectional survey might attempt to discern the patterns of Internet use of low-income students within a particular district. A longitudinal study might track those patterns of Internet use over time. Surveys can be useful to gather data for experiments even though they rarely establish causal relationships themselves.
An experiment, in contrast, poses a hypothesis that can be proven or disproven....
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