SOCIOLOGISTS

    Cards (13)

    • Practical Issues 

      time - money - personal skills - funding bodies - subject matter - research opportunity.
    • Ethical Issues
      informed consent - confidentiality - harm - vulnerable groups - covert research.
    • Theoretical Issues
      validity - accuracy - reliability
    • Micheal Rutter
      He postulated that the selective attachment between baby and mother was special in a sense in that it later became the base for love relationship, close friendships and parenting.
    • Types of Interviews
      structured - semi-structured - unstructured - group
    • Hilary Graham - 1983 

      Claim structured interviews are patriarchal and don't represent the women's experience - Researcher is in control mirroring women's societal subordination - Treat women as isolated individuals rather than in their oppressive power relationships
    • Labov - 1972
      Found that young black respondents were far more likely to speak freely when interviewed by a black researcher in an informal setting.
    • The Hawthorne Effect 

      Is a situation where an individual or group of people know they are being observed and so change their behaviour accordingly. This is why some researchers favour covert observation.
    • Field Experiments
      take place in real-life settings such as a classroom, the work place or even the high street. Field experiments are much more common in sociology than laboratory experiments.
    • Comparative Method

      retains the main principles of the experiment but collects data on different societies or social groups and then compares them with another society or group.
    • Harvey & Slatin - 1976

      examined whether teachers had preconceived ideas about pupils of different social classes, where they used a sample of 96 teachers, each teacher was shown 18 photographs of children from different social class backgrounds.
    • Mason - 1973
      Looked at whether negative or positive expecatiaiton had the greater effect. Teachers were given positive, negative or neutral reports on a pupil.
    • Rosenthal & Jacobson

      tested the theory of the self-fulfilling prophecy using a field experiment. In a state primary school in California, they gave teachers false information about the IQ scores of some of the pupils.
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