quantitative +qualitative research

Cards (289)

  • What influences sociologists' choice of research methods?
    Practical, ethical, and theoretical issues
  • What are the practical issues affecting research methods?
    • Time and money
    • Requirements of funding bodies
    • Personal skills of researchers
    • Subject matter of the study
    • Research opportunity
  • What are the ethical issues in sociological research?
    • Informed consent
    • Confidentiality and privacy
    • Harmful effects
    • Vulnerable groups
    • Covert methods
  • What are the theoretical issues in sociological research?
    • Reliability
    • Validity
    • Representativeness
  • What do interpretivists prefer in research methods?
    Qualitative data that provides a 'feel'
  • What do positivists prefer in research methods?
    Quantitative data in numerical form
  • What is the main means of data gathering in natural sciences?
    Laboratory experiments
  • How do positivist sociologists view society?
    As an objective reality made of social facts
  • What do positivists believe about social patterns?
    They follow observable and measurable patterns
  • What do positivists use to discover laws of cause and effect?
    Careful observation and measurement
  • How can quantitative data on exam results be used?
    To show class differences in achievement
  • What are the quantitative research methods preferred by positivists?
    • Experiments
    • Questionnaires
    • Structured interviews
    • Analysis of official statistics
  • What is a key feature of laboratory experiments?
    They are controlled experiments
  • What is the purpose of dividing subjects into experimental and control groups?
    To measure the effect of the independent variable
  • What is the independent variable in an experiment?
    The variable believed to have an effect
  • What does a change in the experimental group indicate?
    It may be caused by the independent variable
  • Why are laboratory experiments rarely used in sociology?
    Due to practical, ethical, and theoretical reasons
  • What are the practical issues limiting laboratory experiments in sociology?
    • Open systems make control difficult
    • Individuals are complex and unique
    • Cannot study past events
    • Small sample sizes limit generalizability
    • Risk of artificial behavior (Hawthorne effect)
  • What is the Hawthorne effect?
    Behavior changes due to awareness of being studied
  • What is the expectancy effect?
    Researcher's expectations influence outcomes
  • What are the main ethical issues in experiments on humans?
    • Informed consent
    • Harmful effects on subjects
  • Why is informed consent important in research?
    Subjects must agree after understanding the study
  • When might deception be necessary in research?
    When it ensures valid experimental results
  • What are the theoretical strengths and limitations of laboratory experiments?
    Strengths:
    • High reliability
    • Controlled conditions

    Limitations:
    • Lack of validity
    • Not suitable for studying meanings
  • What is reliability in research methods?
    Ability to replicate results consistently
  • Why do positivists value reliability?
    It allows checking of other researchers' work
  • What are field experiments?
    • Conducted in natural surroundings
    • Subjects are unaware they are being studied
  • How do field experiments differ from laboratory experiments?
    Field experiments occur in natural settings
  • What is the purpose of actor tests in field experiments?
    To test for discrimination in real situations
  • What are the advantages and disadvantages of field experiments?
    Advantages:
    • More natural and valid
    • Avoid artificiality of labs

    Disadvantages:
    • Less control over variables
    • Ethical concerns about deception
  • What are questionnaires in sociological research?
    • Written answers to pre-set questions
    • Can include closed-ended questions
  • What is the comparative method in sociology?
    • A thought experiment
    • Compares two similar groups to find effects
  • Who conducted a famous study using the comparative method?
    Emile Durkheim
  • What is the goal of the comparative method?
    To discover cause-and-effect relationships
  • What are the limitations of laboratory experiments in sociology?
    • Lack of external validity
    • Small sample sizes
    • Artificial conditions
  • What are the strengths of laboratory experiments from a positivist perspective?
    • High reliability
    • Objective data collection
    • Effective for hypothesis testing
  • What are closed-ended questions also called?
    Forced choice questions
  • How is the comparative method different from field and laboratory experiments?
    It is a thought experiment conducted mentally
  • What does the comparative method rely on?
    Re-analyzing secondary data
  • What is the main goal of the comparative method?
    To discover cause-and-effect relationships