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Vocab Quiz on Friday! • Chapter 2 vocab words only • List is located in the chapter review section of chapter 2 • Start in class and finish for homework – • Make a list of the words and their definitions to bring to class on Wednesday • 23 words total • HINT!!!!!!!--- you may actually want to READ the chapter to help you gain a better understanding of these words. (Crazy, right?) Sociological Research How do sociologists study social behavior? The Sociological Research Process • Quantitative Research- has the goal of objectivity and data that can be measured -numbers -example: statistically examining divorce rates • Qualitative Research- relies on interpretation and description of underlying meanings and patterns of social relationships • -open-ended questions • -example: asking people about their lives Correlations • Sociologists are interested in finding correlations between two variables. EXAMPLES • What is the correlation between student perceptions of the teacher and grades? • What is the correlation between a parent’s education level and what level classes their children take in school? • What is the correlation between your income level and your geographic location? • What is the correlation between religious views and political beliefs? Sociological Research Methods • Naturalistic Observations- Observing people in their natural environments (aka field research) • Surveys- polls that gather facts or determine relationships among facts • Experiments- in which subjects are exposed to an independent variable to determine how this impacts a dependent variable Survey • Is a poll in which the researcher gathers facts of attempts to determine relationships among facts • How to collect data? • Survey—Questionnaire and Interview • Decide on a population and select a sample • Random sampling- every member of a population has the same chance of being selected • Probability sampling- people are chosen because they have certain characteristics Strengths and weaknesses? Field Research • Is the study of social life in its natural setting: observing and interviewing people where they live, work, and play. • Case studies, interviews • Ethnography- is a detailed study of the life and activities of a group of people by researchers who may live with that group over a period of time Strengths and weaknesses? Experiments Are carefully designed situations in which the researcher studies the impact of certain variables on subjects’ attitudes and behaviors • Experimental group vs. control group • Follow the scientific method • Hypothesis • Independent vs. dependent variables • Use existing sources• Secondary analysis—use previously collected data • Content analysis—analyze your results Steps of Sociological Research • The scientific method involves eight basic steps: • 1) Observation of an event that stimulates thinking. • 2) Defining or classifying the terms or events being considered. • 3) Formulating the research issue or hypothesis. • 4) Generating a theory or proposition - a general statement that serves as a potential answer to the research question. Steps of Sociological Research • 5) Creating a research design in order to test whether the theory or proposition is valid. • 6) Collecting data-working through the research design to make observations. • 7) Analyzing the data • 8) Making conclusions and evaluating the theory. Strengths & weaknesses of experiments • A.) advantages include the high degree of control, the low cost, small numbers of subjects, and the ability to replicate many times • B.) disadvantages include artificiality, a less communal approach to data gathering, biases on the part of the researcher, and subject reactivity • Hawthorne Effect- is an example of how subjects react to their knowledge of being studied. Can you think of situations in which your behavior changed because you knew you were being observed? Challenges in Conducting Research • Reliability • Validity • Specifying the relationship between variables • People are not reducible to simple cause and effect equations Validity • The degree to which a study measure what it is attempting to measure • More simply put – does the study do what it’s designed to do? Reliability • The degree to which a study yields the same results when repeated by the original researcher or by others Sociological Research • The best way to conduct sociological research is to triangulate- meaning to combine more than one method • Ethics of sociological research—code of ethics • • • • • Objectivity/integrity Privacy/confidentiality Avoid harm to subjects Informed consent Disclose