Experimental research aims to determine whether changes in one variable cause changes in another. This requires deliberate manipulation of the independent variable and control over other factors that might influence the outcome. By holding extraneous variables constant or randomizing them, the researcher can attribute observed differences in the dependent variable more confidently to the treatment.
Option A:
Option A describes qualitative interviewing, which is useful for exploration but does not by itself establish causality through controlled manipulation.
Option B:
Option B is correct because it combines the two essential ingredients of true experimentation: manipulation and control. Without these, causal claims remain weak or speculative.
Option C:
Option C refers to biased selection of participants, which can threaten internal validity and does not help in establishing causal relationships.
Option D:
Option D mentions very small samples and lack of control group, both of which weaken the ability to infer causality and generalize findings.
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