Research Methods Flashcards
Define reliability
Can be repeated with the same results
Define validity
A true social picture of what the sociologist is researching
Define representitave
Reflective of the population as a whole
How do you achieve representative data
Research similar proportions of ages, gender, classes and ethnicity etc.
What is primary data?
Data collected first hand by the sociologist themselves
Give 4 examples of methods a sociologist could use to obtain primary data?
Interviews
Questionnaires
Observations
Experiments
Give 2 examples of advantages of primary data
- Data is always up to date
- Choose method; makes it valid/reliable
Give 6 examples of disadvantages to primary data
- Expensive
- Time consuming
- May put researcher in dangerous situation
- May be unethical (e.g. not give informed consent)
- Possibility of bias
- May not be able to access desired group
What is secondary data?
Existing information gathered by someone else
Give 4 examples of types of secondary data
- Official stats
- Diaries
- Newspapers
- Letters
Give 4 advantages of secondary data
- Quick and easy to collect
- Can compare different societies
- Can study past events
- Don’t have to worry about informed consent
Give 4 disadvantages of secondary data
- May not be valid/reliable
- Documents may not be authentic/representative, and may be biased
- May not contain the desired information
- Researchers values may have ruined the validity of the data
Define quantitative data
Numbers and stats that can be easily grouped and compared
Define qualitative data
Subjective opinions etc.
Is quantitative data reliable or valid?
Reliable