Choice of methods and the research process

Cards (32)

  • What are the two main approaches to research discussed in Chapter 2?
    Positivism and interpretivism
  • How do positivists view social reality?
    As a measurable, objective reality
  • What is the aim of positivist research?
    To discover underlying causes of behavior
  • What methods do positivists use to gather data?
    Questionnaires and structured interviews
  • What type of data do positivists aim to obtain?
    Reliable and representative quantitative data
  • What do interpretivists believe about social reality?
    It is subjective and based on individual meanings
  • What is the goal of interpretivist research?
    To uncover actors' meanings or worldview
  • What types of methods do interpretivists prefer?
    Open-ended methods producing qualitative data
  • What are the three key concepts used to judge research methods?
    • Reliability
    • Representativeness
    • Validity
  • What does reliability in research mean?
    It must be replicable to obtain the same results
  • What do positivists think about participant observation?
    They regard it as unreliable
  • Why is representativeness important in sociological research?
    It allows generalizations about the wider group
  • What does validity refer to in research?
    How authentic and true the data is
  • What is primary data?
    Evidence collected by sociologists themselves
  • What is secondary data?
    Information collected by someone else
  • What factors influence a sociologist's choice of research method?
    • Methodological preference
    • Practical aspects of research
    • Ethical concerns
  • What do positivists prefer in terms of data?
    Quantitative data to reveal cause-and-effect
  • What practical factors can restrict research methods?
    Time, finance, and personal commitments
  • What is a pilot study?
    A trial run of a questionnaire or interview
  • What is operationalization in research?
    Defining concepts in measurable ways
  • What is a sampling frame?
    A list of all members of the research population
  • Why is representativeness important for positivists?
    To make generalizations about social behavior
  • What is random sampling?
    Every member has an equal chance of selection
  • What is stratified sampling?
    Sampling based on specific characteristics proportions
  • What is quota sampling?
    Filling specific quotas of characteristics in samples
  • What are the interrelated factors affecting research methods?
    • Practical factors (time, finance)
    • Ethical factors (informed consent, confidentiality)
    • Theoretical factors (data preference)
  • What is triangulation in research?
    Combining quantitative and qualitative methods
  • What influences the choice of research topic?
    Practical factors, funding bodies, and chance
  • What is the first step in the research process?
    Choosing a topic and research method
  • What is the difference between an aim and a hypothesis?
    An aim is general; a hypothesis is specific
  • What should researchers consider when interpreting questions?
    They should read carefully for method or topic
  • What is systematic/quasi-random sampling?
    some sociologists introduce an element of structure to the sampling by selecting every nth person in the sampling frame