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Methods of Social Research
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Everyday Resources for Acquiring Knowledge:
How do we “know” something? Authority Tradition Personal Experience Common Sense Media Representations Myths and Urban Legends
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Flaws in Everyday Knowledge:
Three contributions to Bias: Premature Closure Subjectivity Inappropriate Sampling
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Why Science Provides More Reliable Knowledge:
Scientific Findings are Objective Science is a Neutral Pursuit Scientific Findings are can be Generalized
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Sociology Uses Two Scientific Paradigms
-The Hypothetico-Deductive Paradigm, which makes predictions and conducts research to test those predictions -The Natural-Observational Paradigm, which makes focussed observations and uncovers findings based on those observations. This is also known and inductive or grounded research.
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Sociology Traditionally Uses Five Methods for Collecting Data:
Experimentation Surveys Ethnography Content Analysis Historical/Documentary/Library Research
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Presentation and Analysis of Data Varies with Methods for their Collection
-Sociologists study either numbers or words -Qualitative studies present narratives and descriptions of findings -Quantitative studies present findings as statistics, which can be descriptive or explanatory.
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Assessing Methods Validity: The condition that a researcher is really studying what he or she claims to study Internal Validity: Is the experiment designed to permit interpretations of causality correctly? External Validity: Does the study have any relevance to the “real world”? Face Validity: Do the survey’s questions really ask what the researcher claims they are asking? Reliability: The condition that the findings can be repeatable. Some “valid” methods of research are not reliable because the cannot be replicated; some “reliable” findings are not valid. 8
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