Choosing a Research Method Flashcards
Define primary data and give examples.
Information collected by sociologists themselves for their own purposes. An example may be a picture taken ‘first-hand’.
Define secondary data and give examples.
Information that has been collected or created by someone else for their own purposes, but which the sociologist can then use. An example may be the use of statistics.
Summarise how time and money is a practical issue.
Different methods require different amounts of time and money and this may influence the sociologist’s choice. For example, large-scale surveys may employ dozens of interviewers and data-inputting staff and cost a great deal of money.
Summarise how the requirement of funding bodies is a practical issue.
Research institutes, businesses and other organisations that provide the funding for research may require the results to be in a particular form.
Summarise how personal skills and characteristics is a practical issue.
Each sociologist possesses different personal skills and this may affect their ability to use different methods.
Summarise how subject matter is a practical issue.
It may be much harder to study a particular group or subject by one method than by another. For example, it might prove difficult for a male sociologist to study an all-female group by means of participant observation.
Summarise how research opportunity is a practical issue.
Sometimes the opportunity to carry out research occurs unexpectedly and this means that it may not be possible to use structured methods such as questionnaires. For example, a Glasgow gang leader offered the sociologist James Patrick the chance to spend time with his gang. Patrick had no option but to use participant observation.
Summarise how informed consent is an ethical issue.
Research participants should be offered the right to refuse to be involved. The researcher should also tell them about all relevant aspects of the research so that they can make a fully informed decision.
Summarise how confidentiality and privacy is an ethical issue.
Researchers should keep the identity of research participants secret in order to help to prevent negative effects on them.
Summarise how harm to the research participants is an ethical issue.
Researchers need to be aware of the possible effects of their work on those they study. These could include police intervention, harm to employment aspects, social exclusion and psychological damage.
Summarise how using vulnerable groups are an ethical issue.
Special care should be taken where research participants are particularly vulnerable because of their age, disability or physical or mental health.
Summarise how covert research is an ethical issue.
Covert research is when the researcher’s identity and research purpose are hidden from the people being studied. This can create serious ethical problems, such as deceiving or lying to people in order to win their trust or obtain information.
Summarise how validity is a theoretical issue.
A valid method is one that produces a true or genuine picture of what something is really like. It allows the researcher to get closer to the truth.
Summarise how reliability is a theoretical issue.
Another word for reliability is replicability. A replica is an exact copy of something, so a reliable method is one which, when repeated by another researcher, gives the same results.
Summarise how representativeness is a theoretical issue.
Representativeness refers to whether or not the people we study are a typical cross-section of the group we are interested in.