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Three Ways to Do Sociology Methodological Orientations 5/2/2017 John 3:16 1 Scientific sociology Study of society based on systematic observation of social behavior Called “positivism” Objective reality exists out there Verified by our senses 5/2/2017 John 3:16 2 Concepts, Variables, and Measurement Concept: a mental construct (sort of a body of knowledge) that represents some part of the world in a simplified format – When you “add” matter, matter increases – When you “subtract” matter, matter decreases – “Society” is a concept that has parts such as “the family”, “the economy” 5/2/2017 John 3:16 3 Variable A value whose value changes from case to case Prices go up and down Social classes – Upper class – Middle class – Working class – Lower class 5/2/2017 John 3:16 4 Measurement A procedure to determine the value of a variable in a specific case – Weight – Distance – Etc. – But, how do you measure “social class?” Income, occupation, education? 5/2/2017 John 3:16 5 Operationalize a Variable Specifying exactly what is to be measured before assigning a value to a variable Before measuring the concept of “social class,” you would measure what— -income level? -years of schooling? -occupational prestige? -whatever…. 5/2/2017 John 3:16 6 Taking the Opinions of Others in Survey Because people are increasingly of mixed race, the last census permitted people to chose more than one race when describing themselves 5/2/2017 John 3:16 7 Reliability Consistency in measurement A measurement is reliable if repeated measurements give the same results time after time. 5/2/2017 John 3:16 8 Validity Measuring exactly what you intend to measure If you are studying religious people, for example, do you study people who attend church? -they could attend because they are pressured -habit 5/2/2017 John 3:16 9 Mode, Mean, Median Mode: the number that occurs most often Mean: the average of a series of numbers Median: the value that occurs half way in a series of numbers arranged from lowest to highest 5/2/2017 John 3:16 10 Relationships Among Variables Remember, a variable is a value The real payoff is seeing relationships among variables 5/2/2017 John 3:16 11 Cause and Effect A relationship in which change in one variable causes change in another -Studying hard for an exam will result in a higher grade -Practicing shooting foul shots will increase accuracy in making foul shots 5/2/2017 John 3:16 12 Independent Variable The independent variables would be the amount of study achieved or the amount of time practicing foul shots 5/2/2017 John 3:16 13 Dependent Variable The variable that changes -the exam grade -the accuracy of foul shooting 5/2/2017 John 3:16 14 Linking is Important Lets us predict the outcome of future events If you study, you will get a good grade. If you don’t study, you will not. Can you think of an independent variable and a dependent variable? 5/2/2017 John 3:16 15 Correlation A relationship in which two or more variables change together Looking at juvenile delinquency, for example, we see that densely populated neighborhoods and crowded housing correlate with juvenile delinquency…however 5/2/2017 John 3:16 16 There May Be Another Factor People living under these conditions are usually poor…in other words… Both previous conditions are caused by poverty 5/2/2017 John 3:16 17 Spurious Correlation An apparent but false relationship between two or more variables that is caused by some other variable In this case, if we control the income level (keep it the same) and increase or decrease the density of the living conditions, the delinquency rate does not change 5/2/2017 John 3:16 18 Objectivity Personal neutrality Hold to scientific procedures Attitudes and beliefs should not influence the findings 5/2/2017 John 3:16 19 Sociologists Selecting Topics for Study Most have a built in bias to some degree— hopefully small People naturally study what they have an interest in and a bias for Most sociologists are white, highly educated, and more politically liberal than the population as a whole. Like everyone else, they are influenced by their social backgrounds 5/2/2017 John 3:16 20 Replication Having others repeat the same research and getting the same results helps give credence to the original results Objectivity and truth lie in consistency over time 5/2/2017 John 3:16 21 Interpretive Sociology Sociologists suggest that the scientific may fail to find real meaning in the study Max Weber, pioneering this view point, emphasized process of interpretation— learning what meaning people find in what they do Therefore, interpretative sociology is focusing on the meanings people attach to their social world 5/2/2017 John 3:16 22 Verstehen The German word for ‘understanding” Observing more than “what” people do, but “why” they do it 5/2/2017 John 3:16 23 Critical Sociology The study of society that focuses on the need for social change Founder: Karl Marx--communist Questions like, “should society exist in its current form?” are the standard Emphasis is on social activism—get out there and protest! 5/2/2017 John 3:16 24 Sociology as Politics Critical sociologists state that all research is political or biased -either it calls for change or it does not -sociologists need to chose what positions to support An activist orientation that calls for knowledge used to take action Politics range from liberal to radical left 5/2/2017 John 3:16 25 Gender and Research The personal traits and social positions that members of a society attach to being female or male Gender stereotyping 5/2/2017 John 3:16 26 Androcentricity Seeing things only from the perspective of a male 5/2/2017 John 3:16 27 Overgeneralizing Using data drawn from people of only one sex—tainting the findings 5/2/2017 John 3:16 28 Double Standards Judging men and women differently—man as head of the household and the woman as engaging in family “support work”…the author forgets how important “support work” is… 5/2/2017 John 3:16 29 Research Ethics Be fair Make your results available to other sociologists Disclose all research material Conduct safe research Protect people’s privacy Disclose sources of financial support 5/2/2017 John 3:16 30 The Experiment—Testing the Hypothesis A research method for investigating cause and effect under highly controlled conditions Hypothesis: a statement of a possible relationship between two or more variables—usually a “if, then” statement— if it’s this way, then it will be that way. 5/2/2017 John 3:16 31 The Hawthorne Effect People change behavior merely because they are being observed 1930s study of Western electric Company Whether lights were turned up or down, productivity increased—merely because workers realized they were being observed 5/2/2017 John 3:16 32 The Hawthorne Effect The Hawthorne study stared with the question whether better lighting would help productivity – Lights turned up, better production – But when they turned the lights down, they got another increase in productivity The change was merely an awareness of being studied 5/2/2017 John 3:16 33 An Illustration: The Stanford County Prison Experiment conducted by researcher Philip Zimbardo on whether the environment of prisons fosters violence Realistic prison constructed on campus of Stanford University Students selected for experiment, some prisoners, some guards Spend 2 weeks in mock prison--results 5/2/2017 John 3:16 34 An Illustration: The Stanford County Prison Mock arrest conducted—handcuffs, fingerprinted etc. – Guards and prisoners became bitter and hostile – Guards humiliated prisons—clean toilets with hands, etc – Before end of first week, the situation was so bad (depression, crying, rage, etc) they cancelled the experiment 5/2/2017 John 3:16 35 An Illustration: The Stanford County Prison “The ugliest, most base, pathological side of human nature surfaced” “…taking pleasure in cruelty” Conclusion: Prison violence is rooted in the social character of the jails themselves and not in the personalities of the guards or prisoners Agree? Disagree? Why? 5/2/2017 John 3:16 36 Population and Sample Population: the people who are the focus of the research Sample: a part of a population that represents the whole Random sampling: drawing a sample randomly from the general population that represents the whole 5/2/2017 John 3:16 37 Population and Sample To better assure and accurate sampling, a random sampling is best – But, do you interview all those sampled on the same street? – In the same neighborhood? – In the same town? – In the same state? What are some issues to overcome? 5/2/2017 John 3:16 38 Using Questionnaires A series of written questions a researcher presents to subjects -Often, the nature of the question determines the answers -One study showed that when students e given higher number of hours to select for how many hours per week they studied, the average hours studied went up 5/2/2017 John 3:16 39 Using Questionnaires Closed-ended format: Often questionnaires use a list of fixed responses—can limit findings – When looking at possible answers, people are often influenced – Sample: how many hours do I study? 5/2/2017 John 3:16 40 Using Questionnaires Open-ended format – Subjects can answer any way they wish – Problem: trying to analyze a confusing list of answers Self-administering surveys are popular— mailing survey to subjects – Testing of the survey is needed Lots of people, but many throw them away 5/2/2017 John 3:16 41 Conducting Interviews A series of questions a researcher asks respondents in person Some interviews are best done in a open ended manner 5/2/2017 John 3:16 42 Conducting Interviews Researcher must guard against influencing answers – Tone – Body language 5/2/2017 John 3:16 43 Wording of a Question Can change an answer completely “Should gays serve in the military?”—no “Should gays be exempt from the military?’--no 5/2/2017 John 3:16 44 Wording the Question Using “welfare mothers” verses using “women who receive public assistance” Double question – “Do you think that the government should reduce the deficit by cutting spending and raising taxes?” – One part of the question may be favorable while the other not, distorting the answer 5/2/2017 John 3:16 45 Participant Observation Participant Observation is a research method in which investigators systematically observe people while joining in their routine activities – Normally, the don’t have any hypothesis in mind—e.g., I will find more red meat lovers in small towns than large towns – Exploratory, descriptinve 5/2/2017 John 3:16 46 Using Available Data Researchers may use available data of studies already done – Government agencies – There are some problems—does the data fit the current question/hypothesis? – Are categories of people in other studies the same as in your study, e.g., do people check one racial category or more than one? 5/2/2017 John 3:16 47 Inductive Logical Thought Reasoning that transforms specific observations into general theory -”There is interesting data here. I wonder what it means?” -Upward reasoning -From specific to general 5/2/2017 John 3:16 48 Deductive Logical Thought Transforms general theory into specific hypotheses suitable for testing “I have this hunch; let’s collect some data and put it to the test.” 5/2/2017 John 3:16 49 Fitting It Together: Ten Steps What is your topic? What have others already learned? What, exactly, are your questions? What will you need to carry out research? Are there ethical concerns? What method will you use? How will you record data? 5/2/2017 John 3:16 50 Fitting It Together: Ten Steps What do the data tell you? What are your conclusions? How can you share what you’ve learned? How many of these can you list off the top of your head? 5/2/2017 John 3:16 51 Can People Lie With Statistics? People select their data People interpret their data People use graphs to spin the truth Read Controversy and Debate, page 50 5/2/2017 John 3:16 52