Research Methods

    Cards (29)

    • Positivists attempt to research with scientific methods to obtain quantitative data and objective facts
    • Positivists focus on how structures in society shape individuals
    • Positivism is a macro perspective
    • Positivist methods use both controlled and field experiments. They also look at statistics and conduct surveys
    • Non-participant observation is when the researcher does not get involved with the group being studied
    • Quantitative data is helpful for finding cause and effect relationships. It is reliable and allows the government to make generalisations that can inform policy
    • Positivism struggles to answer the why behind people's actions. It is also inflexible and may not represent the diverse range of behaviours in modern or postmodern society
    • Durkheim's suicide study was a positive approach that examined social facts
    • Interpretivists focus on individual actions and behaviours, favouring qualitative data
    • Verstehen is the idea of forming empathy with your subjects to obtain more valid data
    • Interpretivists say individuals have free will, and that their choices are unique based on personal factors and cannot be studied scientifically
    • Interpretivists may use participant observation to be immersed in a group to understand their behaviour
    • Interpretevist research is more unstructured and values personal accounts and opinions
    • Interpretivist research can provide insight into groups that are underrepresented or hard to research otherwise
    • Interpretivism is valid but not reliable. It operates on a small scale so it is difficult to generalise. It may lack objectivity or be hard to falsify so is less useful for governments
    • There are practical, ethical and theoretical issues when choosing how to conduct research
    • Practical issues relate to the logistics of research - how will this be carried out?
    • Ethical issues concern the morality of the research and its implications on the subjects
    • Theoretical issues are the biases towards the researcher's preferences, but also how appropriate methods are for a particular subject
    • Research must be funded, and the overall cost and source of the funding can influence what research is done and how it is performed
    • Different methods will take different amounts of time
    • Some groups are easier to access than others, and access can be determined by a researcher's individual attributes and skills
    • Research proposals must be submitted to the British Sociological Association to be assessed for ethics
    • Data gathered must comply with GDPR guidelines and remain private
    • Participants must remain anonymous and the study should be confidential - this allows for more honest answers which leads to more valid data
    • Some research deceives the participants by being dishonest about the study or by not disclosing it at all
    • Informed consent is where a participant consents while understanding the contents and purposes of the study
    • Participants should never be harmed physically or psychologically for the purposes of a study
    • A method may be chosen for validity or reliability, the type of data needed, and based on whether generalisations should be made from it
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