2012-2013 Consortium Webcast Program
Overview
2012-2013 Topics and Presenters
CARMA Video Library Content
WSU Faculty and Students
Becoming a 2012-2013 CARMA Consortium Webcast Program Member
Accessing CARMA Consortium Webcast Program Sessions
Accessing the CARMA Video Library
Video Library Sample Lectures (five one hour lectures)
Register for 2012-2013 CARMA Consortium Webcast Program
Webcast Readings and PowerPoint Slides
Current CARMA Consortium Webcast Members and Viewing Rooms
Overview
The CARMA Consortium Webcast Program is established to provide university faculty, graduate students, and other researchers with advanced training in research methods and data analysis. To participate in this training, a university becomes a member of the CARMA Consortium Webcast Program. The full price for the 2012-2013 CARMA Consortium Webcast Program is $975.00. Early registration (before June 15, 2012) is $850, so register now! Access to the CARMA Video Library begins at the time of registration and ends on September 1st, 2013. The membership fee is refundable at any time during the year if a participating university is not satisfied with the program (prorated fee applies). In addition, registered CARMA users from 2012-2013 CARMA Consortium Webcast Program member organizations will receive a 50% discount for 2012 and 2013 CARMA Short Courses.
For a university that is a member of the 2012-2013 CARMA Consortium Webcast Program, all faculty and students are eligible to view, as a group, a series of ten new lectures per program year by nationally recognized methodologists. Each lecture is delivered live (with video and audio) over the internet. These lectures are targeted for an advanced doctoral student level and will typically include an introduction to the topic as well as a consideration of current technical issues. Emphasis is placed on the application of the research method technique. Prior to each lecture, background readings references and powerpoint slides for the presentation will be available on the CARMA website.
It is expected that the webcasts will typically be viewed by the group of faculty and students from a classroom or computer lab with an internet connection and a projection device for a large screen. The webcast will be streamed using MediaSite (viewers need to have Microsoft Silverlight installed). During the webcast viewers are welcome to submit questions by email. Presenters will respond to these questions as part of the webcast at the end of their formal lecture (all questions are read without mentioning the sender's name).
Each participating university will be allowed only one access point for each live webcast, but there is no limit as to how many faculty and/or students may view the webcast from the classroom with the access point. Faculty and students from different academic units on campus (e.g. business and psychology) are free to attend the webcast presentation in that same classroom. Recorded versions of the lectures will also be posted on the CARMA Video Library within a few days after each lecture is given. Faculty and students from Consortium universities will have individual access to these recorded versions at any time from any machine, as long as they are registered CARMA Website Users and they use an email address provided by the
organization. For example, if a person is a Wayne State University
student, he/she must first register as a CARMA Website User using their WSU
email address (which always ends with wayne.edu).
Finally, in addition to having access to the live and recorded versions of the ten lectures mentioned above, universities participating in the Consortium Webcast Program will also have access to the CARMA Video Library, which now includes 78 previously recorded versions of additional webcast lectures originally presented at CARMA during previous Consortium Program years.
WSU Faulty and Students (up)
WSU faculty and graduate students are also invited to view CARMA webcasts free of charge. Please, click here for WSU webcast viewing locations.
2012-2013 Topics and Presenters (up)
Sept. 27, 2012
12:00 PM (EDT) |
Dr. Steve Kozlowski, Michigan State University
Methods issues with multilevel dynamics of group/team emergence |
Oct. 19, 2012 12:00 PM (EDT) |
Dr. Steven Floyd, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Challenges and prospects in rediscovering the individual in strategy research |
Nov. 9, 2012
12:00 PM (EST) |
Dr. John Mathieu, University of Connecticut
Doing teams research: where, when, how, and why? |
01:30 PM (EST) |
Dr. Ann Cunliffe, University of New Mexico
Crafting qualitative organizational research |
03:00 PM (EST) |
Dr. Mike McDaniel, Virginia Commonwealth University
Publication bias in management research |
Jan. 25, 2013
12:00 PM (EST) |
Dr. Mo Wang, University of Florida
Growth mixture modeling |
Feb. 22, 2013
12:00 PM (EST) |
Dr. Jose Cortina, George Mason University
Moderated mediation |
01:30 PM (EDT) |
Dr. Robert Vandenberg, University of Georgia
More urban legends |
Apr. 19, 2013
12:00 PM (EDT) |
Dr. Patrick Shrout, New York University
Implementing multilevel analyses of daily diary data |
03:00 PM (EST) |
TBA |
Becoming a 2012-2013 CARMA Consortium Webcast Program Member (up)
The process through which a university becomes a 2012-2013 CARMA Consortium Webcast Program member begins with becoming a CARMA Website User. Only registered CARMA Website Users can access the Webcast Program registration process. If you are not a registered CARMA Website User, click here. The registration process requires identification of an Academic Contact (who will be the contact person for receiving information related to the content of the webcasts and distributing it to faculty and students), a Technical Contact (who will be the contact person for internet access related information), and a Fiscal Contact (who will be the contact person for billing and payment issues). The Registration Form also indicates which method of payment will be used, including options for credit card, purchase order, or invoice. Click here to Register for the CARMA Consortium Webcast Program.
Accessing Live Webcast Program Sessions (up)
On the day of each live webcast, universities are asked to log on to the CARMA website from their chosen access point 30 minutes before the scheduled start time. Each organization connects using only one machine. Click here to learn how to connect to live webcast sessions (CARMA Consortium Webcast Program members only).
Accessing the CARMA Video Library (up)
In addition to having access to the live webcast sessions, organizations participating in the 2012-2013 Consortium Webcast Program also have access to recorded versions of the ten lectures mentioned above and to 78 webcast lectures originally presented at CARMA during the 2004-2005, 2005-2006, 2006-2007, 2007-2008, 2008-2009, 2009-2010 and 2010-2011 academic years. They may be accessed by individual faculty and students as long as they are registered CARMA Website Users and they use an email address provided by their organization. For example, if a person is a Wayne State University student, he/she must register using his/hers WSU email address (which always ends with @wayne.edu). Click here to learn how to access the video library (CARMA Consortium Webcast Program members only).
Webcast Readings and PowerPoint Slides (up)
For each webcast event, bibliographic references to background readings and files with powerpoint slides will be available prior to the event. They may be accessed by individual faculty and graduate students who are registered CARMA Website Users from 2012-2013 CARMA Consortium Webcast Program member organization. To access the readings, a person must first login as a user on the CARMA Website User Area. On the CARMA Website User Area, there is a link that reads "Webcast Readings." By clicking on it, the person will be directed to the readings page. Click here to access the Webcast Readings and PowerPoint slides.
Video Library Sample Lectures (five one hour lectures) (up)
CARMA Video Library Content (up)
 |
| Video |
Presenter |
Date |
 |
| 1) |
Estimating Interaction Effects Using Multiple Regression |
Dr. Herman Aguinis |
Fall 2004 |
 |
| 2) |
Moderation in Structural Equation Modeling: Specification, Estimation, and Interpretation Using Quadratic Structural Equations |
Dr. Jeffrey R. Edwards |
Fall 2004 |
 |
| 3) |
The Effect of Criterion Reliability on Means and Interactions in Meta-Analysis |
Dr. Lawrence R. James |
Fall 2004 |
 |
| 4) |
Measures of Agreement for Group Level Research |
Dr. James M. LeBreton |
Spring 2005 |
 |
| 5) |
Hierarchical Linear Modeling |
Dr. David A. Hofmann |
Spring 2005 |
 |
| 6) |
Multilevel Structural Equation Methods |
Dr. Robert J. Vandenberg |
Spring 2005 |
 |
| 7) |
Current Issues in Measurement - Individual Level |
Dr. Claudia Cogliser |
Fall 2005 |
 |
| 8) |
The Conceptualization, Measurement, and Validation of Multilevel Constructs |
Dr. Gilad Chen |
Fall 2005 |
 |
| 9) |
Current Issues in Individual, Group, and Organizational Level Measurement : Strategic Management |
Dr. Brian Boyd |
Fall 2005 |
 |
| 10) |
Meta-Analysis and Strategy Research |
Dr. Dan R. Dalton |
Spring 2006 |
 |
| 11) |
Methods for Integrating Moderation and Mediation: An Analytical Framework Using Moderated Path Analysis |
Dr. Jeffrey R. Edwards |
Spring 2006 |
 |
| 12) |
The World Is Flat, the Earth is the Center of the Universe, and Mediating Effects Can Be Tested Using Data from Nonexperimental Research |
Dr. Eugene F. Stone-Romero |
Spring 2006 |
 |
| 13) |
Testing for mediating variables in Management Research: Concerns, Implications and Alternative Strategies |
Dr. J. Myles Shaver |
Spring 2006 |
 |
| 14) |
Issues in Social Network Analysis |
Dr. Dan Brass |
Spring 2006 |
 |
| 15) |
Contributing to Applied Psychology with Laboratory Research |
Dr. John Hollenbeck |
Spring 2006 |
 |
| 16) |
Power Analysis for Traditional and Modern Hypothesis Tests |
Dr. Kevin Murphy |
Spring 2006 |
 |
| 17) |
Regression Models for Limited Range Dependent Variables |
Dr. David Harrison |
Fall 2006 |
 |
| 18) |
Robust Regression |
Dr. William Starbuck |
Fall 2006 |
 |
| 19) |
Issues with Internet Data Collection |
Dr. Jeff Stanton |
Fall 2006 |
 |
| 20) |
Non-responses to Organizational Surveys |
Dr. Steven Rogelberg |
Fall 2006 |
 |
| 21) |
Methodological issues in Cross-Cultural Research |
Dr. Michele Gelfand |
Fall 2006 |
 |
| 22) |
Issues with Group Measurement |
Dr. Katherine Klein |
Spring 2007 |
 |
| 23) |
Item Response Theory |
Dr. Neal Schmitt |
Spring 2007 |
 |
| 24) |
Longitudinal Data Analysis |
Dr. Robert Ployhart |
Spring 2007 |
 |
| 25) |
Latent Growth Models for Longitudinal Data |
Dr. Robert Vandenberg |
Spring 2007 |
 |
| 26) |
Repeated Measures ANOVA and MANOVA |
Dr. Jorge Mendoza |
Spring 2007 |
 |
| 27) |
Goodness of Fit and Structural Equation Models |
Dr. Jose Cortina |
Fall 2007 |
 |
| 28) |
Relative Importance of Predictors with Regression Models |
Dr. James LeBreton |
Fall 2007 |
 |
| 29) |
Nonlinear Dynamic Models |
Dr. Paul Hanges |
Fall 2007 |
 |
| 30) |
Advanced Panel Methods for Strategy Research |
Dr. Peter Hom |
Fall 2007 |
 |
| 31) |
Conditional Reasoning and Personality Measurement |
Dr. Larry James |
Spring 2008 |
 |
| 32) |
Measurement Invariance and Applied Research |
Dr. Roger Millsap |
Spring 2008 |
 |
| 33) |
Restriction of Range |
Dr. Paul Sackett |
Spring 2008 |
 |
| 34) |
Discontinuous Growth Models |
Dr. Paul Bliese |
Spring 2008 |
 |
| 35) |
Strategy and Research Methods Development |
Dr. Don Bergh |
Spring 2008 |
 |
| 36) |
Publishing Criteria for Qualitative Research |
Dr. Michael Pratt |
Spring 2008 |
 |
| 37) |
Measurement Models for Linking Latent Variables and Indicators: A Review of Alternatives for Organizational Researchers |
Dr. Larry Williams |
Fall 2008 |
 |
| 38) |
Review of Research Methods in Organizational Studies |
Dr. Herman Aguinis |
Fall 2008 |
 |
| 39) |
Measurement Issues in Stress Research |
Dr. Daniel Ganster |
Fall 2008 |
 |
| 40) |
Measurement of Affect and Episodic Events |
Dr. Howard Weiss |
Fall 2008 |
 |
| 41) |
Question and Context Effects in Organizational Survey Data |
Dr. Adam Meade |
Fall 2008 |
 |
| 42) |
Joint Analysis of Multiple Categorical Dependent Variables |
Dr. Peter Westfall |
Fall 2008 |
 |
| 43) |
The Practice of Member Review in Qualitative Research: What Happens When They Read What We Write? |
Dr. Karen Locke |
Spring 2009 |
 |
| 44) |
Using Spatial Analysis in Strategy Research |
Dr. Jonathan Doh |
Spring 2009 |
 |
| 45) |
Dynamic Approaches to Studying Group Processes |
Dr. Laurie Weingart |
Spring 2009 |
 |
| 46) |
Using the Censored Regression Model (Tobit) in Management Research |
Dr. Harry P. Bowen |
Spring 2009 |
 |
| 47) |
Estimating Confidence Intervals for Correlations Corrected for Unreliability and Range Restriction |
Dr. Michael Burke |
Spring 2009 |
 |
| 48) |
Computer-Aided Text Analysis: Tips and Techniques |
Dr. Jeremy Short |
Fall 2009 |
 |
| 49) |
Mediation Analysis |
Dr. David MacKinnon |
Fall 2009 |
 |
| 50) |
The Meaning of Latent Variables in Social and Behavioral Science Research |
Dr. Ken Bollen |
Fall 2009 |
 |
| 51) |
Detecting and Diagnosing Model Misspecification |
Dr. Deborah Bandalos |
Fall 2009 |
 |
| 52) |
The Use and Misuse of Ratios Measures |
Dr. Robert Wiseman |
Spring 2010 |
 |
| 53) |
Simple Models for Analyzing Network Change |
Dr. Stephen Borgatti |
Spring 2010 |
 |
| 54) |
Mean Structure Models with Latent Variables |
Dr. Greg Hancock |
Spring 2010 |
 |
| 55) |
Multi-Level issues and WABA |
Dr. Fran Yammarino |
Spring 2010 |
 |
| 56) |
Missing Data: Problems and Prospects |
Dr. Daniel A. Newman |
Spring 2010 |
 |
| 57) |
Marker Variables and Method Variance: Models and Processes |
Dr. Larry Williams |
Spring 2010 |
 |
| 58) |
New Approaches for Evaluating Latent Variable Relations |
Dr. Larry Williams |
Fall 2010 |
 |
| 59) |
Dyadic Data Analysis |
Dr. David Kenny |
Fall 2010 |
 |
| 60) |
Judgment Policy Analysis |
Dr. Richard Priem |
Fall 2010 |
 |
| 61) |
Ethnostatistics |
Dr. Robert Gephart |
Fall 2010 |
 |
| 62) |
Multivariate Dynamics |
Dr. Richard DeShon |
Fall 2010 |
 |
| 63) |
Formative vs Reflective Measurement in Structural Equation Modeling |
Dr. Peter Bentler |
Spring 2011 |
 |
| 64) |
Quasi-Experimental Research |
Dr. Adam Grant |
Spring 2011 |
 |
| 65) |
Cross Cultural Research Methods |
Dr. Mark Peterson |
Spring 2011 |
 |
| 66) |
Lies My Statistics/Methods Teacher Taught Me |
Dr. Charles Reichardt |
Spring 2011 |
 |
| 67) |
Assessing the Validity of Higher-Order Multidimensional Constructs |
Dr. Russell Johnson |
Spring 2011 |
 |
| 68) |
Tools for Testing Contingency Models |
Dr. Brian Boyd |
Spring 2011 |
 |
| 69) |
Debunking Myths and Urban Legends About Meta-Analysis |
Dr. Herman Aguinis |
Fall 2011 |
 |
| 70) |
Practical Issues in Developing a Measure |
Dr. Fred Oswald |
Fall 2011 |
 |
| 71) |
Control Variables and Multi-collinearity: Things We Thought We Knew |
Dr. Kevin Carlson |
Fall 2011 |
 |
| 72) |
3-D Visualization of Data and Models |
Dr. Richard Gonzalez |
Fall 2011 |
 |
| 73) |
Modeling Longitudinal Data Using Structural Equation Methods |
Dr. Rick Hoyle |
Fall 2011 |
 |
| 74) |
Theoretical Specification and Methodological Rigor: Matching Theory and Methods |
Dr. Michael Hitt |
Spring 2012 |
 |
| 75) |
Photographs and Organizational Research: Photo Elicitation as a Data Source |
Dr. Anne Smith |
Spring 2012 |
 |
| 76) |
More Tales of the Field: Ethnography Then and Now |
Dr. John Van Maanen |
Spring 2012 |
 |
| 77) |
Conditional Reasoning and the Measurement of Power |
Dr. Lawrence James |
Spring 2012 |
 |
| 78) |
Meta analysis and Structural Equation Modeling |
Dr. Ron Landis |
Spring 2012 |
 |
|