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Index
 »Â
SOCIOLOGY
 »Â
Chapter 1
 »Â
Research methods
level: Research methods
Questions and Answers List
level questions: Research methods
Question
Answer
Macro approaches focus on the large scale of whole societies,micro approaches on small-scale social structure
Micro/macro approaches
the idea that when action occurs another always follows because the latter is caused by the former
Causation
A statistical relationship between variable that expresses a level of probability
Correlation
Approaches that start at the level of the individual,focusing on small-scale phenomena
Interpretivism
Basic agreement on a set of shared values
Consensus
Disagreement between groups with different interests
Conflict
An approach based on studying society in a scientific manner
Positivism
Information and facts that take a numerical form
Quantitative data
Prejudice that distorts the truth when research is influenced by the values of the researcher
Bias
The researcher do not allow their values or feelings to influence the research
Objectivity
A list of questions used in social surveys
Questionnaires
The systematic collection of information from a sample
Social surveys
Mini version of full scale study designed to test it's feasibility
Pilot studies
A theory at the start of a research
Hypothesis
All those to whom the findings of the study may apply
Survey population
A list of members of the population from which a sample is chosen
Sampling frame
When the findings about a sample can be said to apply to larger group of people sharing their characteristics
Generalisability
When each person has an equal chance of being selected
Random sampling
When the sampling frame is divided by gender or age
Stratified sample
Dividing how many people with what characterisitics to involve in the research and then identifying them
Quota sampling
When one respondent puts the researcher in contact with others
Snowball sampling
Information and facts that cannot be presented in numerical form
Qualitative data
An interview in which the questions ate standardised and the replies codified to produce quantitative data
Structured interview
The effectiveness of the research in generating consistent data
Reliability
The extent to which a research method measures what it claims to measure
Validity
Free form interview method objective is to get respondent to talk about whatever they feel is important about a topic
Unstructured interview
A respondent is encouraged to talk at length about a particular subject
Semi-Structured interview
Involve respondents discussing about a topic as a group
Group interview/focus group
Intentional or unintentional effect of the way that the interviewers asks questions
Interviewer bias
How relationship between researcher and respondent may bias respondent and may lead to invalid data
Interviewer effect
Lack of objectivity,the researchers view influences the approach taken
Subjectivity
Experiments taking place in a closed environment where conditions can be precisely controlled and monitored
Laboratory experiment
Changes in people's behaviour that result from their knowledge of being observed
Hawthorne effect
Experiments that take place in the natural setting of the real world
Field experiment
A form of comparative analysis that tracks changes among a representative sample over a period of time
case study
A research methid used for the systematic analysis of media texts and communication
Content analysis
Extent to which the characteristics of a sample population accurately reflect those of the target population
representativeness
Information collected by a researcher
Primary data
Already existing data
Secondary data
Non-numeric data that expresses the quality of a relationship
qualitative data
The subjects of an experiment.the researcher changes different variable to test their effect on behaviour
experimental group
No attempt is made to similarly manipulate the control group
Control group
Research method focused on identifying groups that share broad similarities
cross-sectional survey
The study of cultural meanings embedded in media forms, used to explore and interpret hidden meanings embedded within texts
Semiology
The expression of a society's collective will which bears down on an individual,shaping their beliefs and behavioural choices
collective conscience
The argument that because human have conciousness they make free and informed choices about their action
Free will
Combining research methodologies in ways that allow them to complement each other and to improve research reliability and validity
Methodological pluralism
Based solely on the values of those making a decision
Value judgement