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Chapter 2: Sociological Inquiry

Resource Details:

Notes:

Code of ethics: a set of guidelines of appropriate behavior established by an organization for its members to follow

– principles of conduct about how you are supposed to behave in a given situation

Hawthorne effect: the tendency of people to change their behavior when they know they are being watched

Snowball sampling: a process in which people in the group being studied introduce the researcher to other people to study

Objectivity: the effort to eliminate bias from the research

Time diary method: a research method in which subjects track their actions at various points in time over several days

Debriefing: a follow-up review of the research

Experimental group: the study subjects exposed to the independent variable

In-depth interview: a one-on-one-open-ended method that probes for deeper meaning and understanding of the responses of the interviewee

– ability to explore different angles and levels

Ethnography: a descriptive account of social life and culture in a particular social system derived from the researcher being embedded over time within a group, organization, or community

Groupthink: the tendency of group members to yield to the desire for consensus rather than expressing individual or alternative ideas

Focus Group: a small group interview or guided discussion using a moderator to gain insight into the participants opinions on specific topics

– ease of implementation and quick results

Content analysis: a systematic method of assigning codes to text, video, music, and other media to analyze and infer patterns

– does not involve human subjects and cost-effective

Participant observation: a method in which the researcher takes part in the social phenomenon being studied

– unrestricted access to observe social behavior

Sustainability: the idea that current and future generations should have equal or greater access to social, economic, and environmental resources

Survey: a series of questions used to extract specific information from respondents

Cost effective and convenient

Secondary analysis: the use of data previously collected for other purposes

Existing data is plentiful and study can be conducted quickly

Experiments: the use of two or more groups in which one group is exposed to a factor being examined

More control over design and stronger validity and reliability, inability to generalize

Longitudinal Studies: the repeated observation of the same subjects over a duration of time

provides broad and detailed data

reliability: the extent to which a study yields the same result in repeated studies 

validity: the extent that the study measures what it claims to measure

qualitative: data collection using interviews, fieldwork, observation, photos, text, and other subjective measures

quantitative: data collection that focuses on exploring correlations by using systematic, numerical, and other objective measures to generalize across groups of people

dependent variable: a factor that is changed by another variable

anonymity: concealing the identities of participants within the research project 

informed consent: a signed statement by participants indicating full knowledge of the risks involved, and acknowledgment of the procedures to withdraw from the study at any time willingly

independent variable: a factor that causes a change in another variable

representative sample:

confidentiality: guarding who has the right of access to the data provided by the participants, are two basic ways to shield the participants from harm

peer review: research is evaluated by a group of experts in the specific subject area

hypothesis: an educated guess about a relationship between two or more situations

operational definition: a clear, concise, and observable measure of the variable

representative sample: a subset of the population whose characteristics accurately reflect those of the larger population from which it is drawn

IRB: a committee that reviews research proposals to protect the rights and welfare of human participants in research

Step1: Define the Question or Problem

Step2: Review the Literature

Step3: Develop Hypotheses

Step4: Choose a Research Design and Methods

Step5: Collect the Data

Step6: Analyze the Data

Step7: Develop Conclusions

Step8: Report Results and Pose New Questions