This document outlines different methods that sociologists use to conduct research, including quantitative and qualitative approaches. Quantitative methods involve gathering measurable data through surveys and experiments, while qualitative methods involve field research approaches like participant observation, ethnographic studies, and case studies. The goal of sociological research is to investigate how human societies function using empirical evidence and the scientific method or interpretive frameworks. Researchers aim to design studies that are reliable, valid, and value neutral in disclosing results.
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Research methods in sociology
1.
2. NUMBERS
• You can measure how many women there are in a room and you
can measure how many men there are.
Specific
actions
• You can measure people’s actions (but not why they do it!)
Opinions
• You can measure people’s opinions by asking closed questions:
“Do you think our prime minister will win the next election?”
Or?
• This question would be followed up by additional (anonymous)
information from the informant: gender, age, city etc.
Finale
• You can use these data as valuable information in your research
objective.
3. •THAT IS THE PURPOSE OF
SOCIOLOGICAL
RESEARCH—TO
INVESTIGATE AND
PROVIDE INSIGHTS INTO
HOW HUMAN SOCIETIES
FUNCTION.
4. SOCIOLOGISTS USE
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
(THAT IS, EVIDENCE CORROBORATED
BY DIRECT EXPERIENCE AND/OR
OBSERVATION)
COMBINED WITH THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD OR AN INTERPRETIVE
FRAMEWORK TO DELIVER SOUND SOCIOLOGICAL RESEARCH.
5. 7. anticipating
further
development when
future researchers
respond to and
retest findings.
2. gathering
information
and resources
through
observation
3. forming a
hypothesis
4. testing the
hypothesis in a
reproducible
manner
5. analyzing and
drawing
conclusions
from the data
6. publishing
the results
1. defining a
specific
question
PROCESS IN
CONDUCTING
A RESEARCH!
6. researchers want to maximize
the study’s
RELIABILITY -(how likely
research results are to be replicated if
the study is reproduced).
10. QUANTITATIVE RESEARCHES
• A SURVEY
collects data from subjects
who respond to a series of
questions about behaviors
and opinions, often in the
form of a questionnaire.
13. FIELD RESEARCH refers to
gathering primary data from a natural
environment without doing a lab experiment
or a survey. It is a research method suited to
an interpretive framewrk.
14. •PARTICIPANT
OBSERVATION
in which researchers join people
and participate in a group’s
routine activities for the purpose
of observing them within that
context. This method lets
researchers experience a specific
aspect of social life.
QUALITATIVE RESEARCHES
15. • ethnographic study focuses on
how subjects view their own
social standing and how they
understand themselves in
relation to a community.
16.
17. • A case study is an in-depth
analysis of a single event,
situation, or individual. To
conduct a case study, a
researcher examines existing
sources like documents and
archival records, conducts
interviews, engages in direct
observation, and even
participant observation, if
possible.
18.
19.
20.
21. •Sociologists, as per Maw Weber
should
VALUE NEUTRALITY, a
practice of remaining impartial,
without bias or judgment, during the
course of a study and in publishing
results
Sociologists are obligated to disclose research findings
without omitting or distorting significant data.