Positivism, interpretivism and sociological methods Flashcards
Topic 1, research methods chapter, year 1 textbook
Positivism definition
an approach in sociology that believes society can be studied using similar scientific techniques to those used in natural sciences, such as physics, chemistry and biology
Interpretivism definition
an approach emphasising that people have consciousness involving personal beliefs, values and interpretations, and these influence the way they act
social facts definition
phenomena which exist outside individuals and independently of their minds, but which act upon them in ways which constrain and mould their behaviour (law, the family, education system etc)
quantitative data definition
anything that can be expressed in statistical or numerical form or can be measured in some way, such as age, qualifications etc
macro approach definition
one which focuses on large numbers of people and the large-scale structure of society as a whole, rather than on individuals
Durkheim, a positivist, suggested that there are external social forces
which make up society’s structure and cause or mould ideas and actions, and Durkheim called these social facts
Durkheim said the aim of sociology should be
to study social facts, which should be considered as objects which can be observed and measured, whereas feelings, emotions and motives cannot be measured so shouldn’t be studied
Durkheim (1987) used a positivist approach in his study of suicide,
using suicide statistics to try and establish the social causes of suicide
Methods favoured by positivists
- experiments
- the comparative method
- social surveys
- structured questionnaires
- formal/structured interviews
- non-participant observation
Positivists think that research should
use quantitative data, be large-scale so its generalisable and be repeatable (reliable)
Verstehen definition
the idea of understanding human behaviour by putting yourself in the position of those being studied, and trying to see things from their point of view
Interpretivists believe that, as behaviour is influenced by interpretations and meanings which they give to situations,
a sociology researcher needs to understand these meanings, and should therefore use methods which provide verstehen
Qualitative data definition
concerned with feelings and meanings people associate with and the interpretations they give to some even, and try to get at the way they really see things
Micro approach definition
one which focuses on small groups and individuals, rather than on large numbers of people and the structure of society as a whole
Atkinson (1978) interpretivist suicide study
involved an interpretivist approach which contrasted Durkheim and argued that suicide statistics are social constructions reflecting the behaviour and ideas of coroners, doctors, relatives etc and their definitions of suicide