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Social Science Inquiry Model. Scientific inquiry has 5 steps Identify a problem Develop a hypothesis Gather data Analyze the data Draw conclusions.

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Presentation on theme: "Social Science Inquiry Model. Scientific inquiry has 5 steps Identify a problem Develop a hypothesis Gather data Analyze the data Draw conclusions."— Presentation transcript:

1 Social Science Inquiry Model

2 Scientific inquiry has 5 steps Identify a problem Develop a hypothesis Gather data Analyze the data Draw conclusions

3 Identify the problem or question Initial investigation of topic of interest Conduct preliminary research via the internet, books, databases, etc. To see if your topic of interest has been explored before.

4 Develop a hypothesis A possible answer to the initial question that guides your research by indicating what would confirm or disprove the experiment Needs to be concise Arguable Requires research Can be tested

5 Gather data (A) Secondary research- what is already known about the topic (other people’s research and statistics) (B) Primary research – your own experiments or investigation, etc

6 Analyze the data a) Tally the results b) Organize them into tabular form c) Present them as graphs d) Interpret the results

7 Draw conclusions Did the study support the hypothesis? Is it consistent with the secondary research? What were the limitations and flaws? Recommendations for future research

8 Example of a journal article... Abstract: an abstract is a summary of the article found at the very beginning of a scholarly journal indicating the thesis statement, hypothesis and overall general findings of the experiment conducted. A.P.A. Format: American Psychological Association format of citing scholarly journal articles used for all social science papers.

9 Qualitative research involves analysis of data such as words (e.g., from interviews), pictures (e.g., video), or objects (e.g., an artifact). The aim is a complete, detailed description.

10 Quantitative research involves analysis of numerical data. The aim is to classify features, count them, and construct statistical models in an attempt to explain what is observed.

11 Analyzing data

12 Central tendency The degree of clustering of the values of a statistical distribution Mean – the average of the values Median – the midway point or middle value Mode – the most reoccurring number in the set of data.

13 Measure of dispersion A measure to determine how observed values differ from each other, how spread out or homogenous the data is Range Standard deviation

14 Sample question: On a recent test out of 25, selected students received marks of: 22, 20, 16, 13, 22, 8, 18

15 Mean Average of the values =17

16 Median The middle value = 18

17 Mode The most commonly occurring number =22

18 Range The distance between the highest and lowest values =14

19 Standard Deviation The average distance of values from the mean

20 Mark Distance from meanDistance from mean squared 22 20 18 16 13 8 Total

21 Mark Distance from meanDistance from mean squared 2222-17= 525 2222-17 =525 2020-17= 39 1818-17 =11 1616-17 = -11 1313-17 = -416 88-17 = -981 Total 158

22 Standard deviation # of values 7 If you add up the second column you get 158 158 ÷ 7 = 22.57 √22.57 = 4.75

23 Standard deviation = prediction of where most of the scores will fall when graphed.

24 Line of Best Fit In cases of a strong correlation (where points on a graph are closely clustered), a line can be drawn through the data so that as many points as possible are on the line and the line has approximately the same number of points, above and below the line. This helps to predict where additional points might fall if and when your experiment is repeated...

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26 A group of people are gathered in a room. A bar is opened and they are told to drink whatever they like – a bartender will serve them. There is gin, rye, beer, wine, etc... Two hours later, most people are showing distinct signs of intoxication. When asked to perform simple coordination tasks, they fail. How can we explain this? JUST ONE THING: there was really no alcohol content to any of the drinks. How can we explain this??

27 Be Mindful of the Placebo Effect! When a Subject gives the response they believe the Researcher is expecting... In many experiments, there is a Control group and a Placebo group. Both are given similar situations with slight differences and then compared. Produces much more reliable results.

28 Placebo Effect... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yfRVCaA5 o18


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