research methodology (the theory) Flashcards
why sociologists research society
social= society
issue= problem of mass concern
- social issues threaten society - solutions can only come through understanding - understanding can only come through research
- a social issue is any problem that has negative consequences for society as a whole
- examples of social issues: domestic violence, effects of divorce, single parents, lack of effective socialisation
what are ‘social facts’
- durkheim (one of the 1st sociologists) taught that humans are subject to external forces that shape their behaviour
- he called these external forces ‘social facts’ as you can’t escape/ deny them
- example: norms and laws
the theory: academic tribes and their territories
- there are 2 different ways of thinking about society and how to do social research
- positivists VS interpretivists
difference between positivists and interpretivist researchers
positivists= are scientific in their approach (hence term social science)
interpretivists= prefer to take a detailed look at individual experience
pluralists
combine positivist and interpretivists research approaches
positivists
- earliest sociologists believed people were a product of society
- for example: they would say humans have morals because society forces it on us through socialisation
- all humans exposed to same socialisation, living in same society, experiencing same ‘social facts’
- this means people’s actions can be explained and predicted by looking at factors such as their gender, social class and ethnicity
- the point of systematic research is to unclogs laws that govern human behaviour
social facts
durkheim taught that humans are subject to external social forces that shape their behaviour, he called these external forces ‘social facts’ as you can’t escape/ deny them
social issues
any problem that has negative consequences for society as a whole e.g. domestic violence, effects of divorce, single parents
verstehen
empathetic understanding, listening to the participants views
valid
claims to give a true and full picture of people’s experiences - interpretivist research
generalisable
claims to be made and assumed to be true for most people
representative
the large scale nature means the results characterise the rest of the population
reliable
positivists conduct studies that can be replicated, with same results
systematic
a following of logical process in research used by positivists
triangulation
using more than one approach/ research method in one study
micro study
looks in detail at individuals/ a small number of people - usually used by interpretivist researchers
macro study
draws from a large number of people - usually positivist researchers