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Sociological Research Methods

Sociological Research Methods. Issues of Interest. What do sociologists research? Structures and functions of various features in society Rates of behavior Stability and change. Issues of Interest. Goals of Sociological research: Describe Predict

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Sociological Research Methods

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  1. Sociological Research Methods

  2. Issues of Interest • What do sociologists research? • Structures and functions of various features in society • Rates of behavior • Stability and change

  3. Issues of Interest • Goals of Sociological research: • Describe • Predict • Explain • “A social scientist’s work is never done.”

  4. Correlation vs. Causation • Sociologists want to uncover the causal connections between events • Study cause/effect by examining relationships between variables • Independent Variable: variable that causes a change in another variable • Dependent Variable: variable that is changed by the independent variable

  5. Correlation vs Causation • Example: • In a study of teenage drug use, sociologists want to know what factors impact drug use. First they see if drug use is lower among students who are on the honor roll. • What is the IV? • What is the DV?

  6. Correlation vs Causation • Student Response: • Think of your own sociological study: What is the independent variable? The dependent variable?

  7. Causation vs Correlation • 1st step in cause/effect is to see if there is a correlation • Correlation: when a change in one variable is regularly associated with a change in another • Correlations may or may not be causal! • Positive Correlation: both variables change in the same direction • Negative Correlation: variables change in opposite directions

  8. Correlation vs Causation • Student Response: • Think of an example of a positive correlation • Think of an example of a negative correlation

  9. Correlation vs Causation • WARNING: Correlation does NOT imply causation!!

  10. Correlation vs Causation • For something to cause something else 3 things must be present: • Correlation • Time order • Ruling out alternative explanations

  11. The Research Process • Step 1: • Define the problem • Step 2: • Review the literature • Step 3: • Form a hypothesis

  12. The Research Process • Step 4: • Choose a research design • Step 5: • Collect the data • Step 6: • Analyze the data • Step 7: • Present the Conclusions

  13. Research Methods: Types of Research • Quantitative: • Focuses on data that can be measured numerically • Qualitative: • Focuses on interpretive descriptions & direct observations

  14. Research Methods • Survey Research: • An interview, questionnaire or survey administered to a large group of people • Strengths: collect info from large # of people in short amount of time • Weaknesses: misinterpretation, lying, bias

  15. Research Methods • Experimental Research: • Tests the way in which an independent variable affects a dependent variable in a controlled setting • Strengths: can control IV’s • Weaknesses: may not always be applicable

  16. Research Methods • Observational Research: • A direct observation of subjects’ reactions • Detached: subjects not aware • Participant Observation: researcher directly involved • Strengths: observe behavior in natural setting • Weaknesses: Detached – miss details; Participant – influence behavior

  17. Research Methods • Analysis of Existing Sources: • Historical Method: toys, clothes, diaries • Content Analysis: count # of times word, symbol, etc appears in a context • Strengths: easy to use and inexpensive • Weaknesses: may not provide enough info

  18. Research Methods • Case Study Research: • Intensive analysis of a person, group, event or problem • May employ other methods to one focus • Strengths: provides in-depth view • Weaknesses: may lack generalizability

  19. Research Ethics Guidelines: • Do no harm • Informed Consent • Voluntary Participation (public place exception) • Report all information accurately • No conflict of interest or dual relationships with subjects

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