23
Lecture January 11, 2010

Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Practical issues in social research methods.

Citation preview

Page 1: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Lecture

January 11, 2010

Page 2: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods
Page 3: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Formulation of Theoretical Model and Research Problem (1)

THERE SHOULD BE THE POSSIBILITY OF SURPRISE IN SOCIAL RESEARCH. RESEARCH PROBLEM AS A PUZZLE

• Selecting Research Question

– A difference between advocacy research and scientific research

(Advocacy research refers to research that sifts through evidence to argue a predetermined position)

(Scientific research does not suppress contrary or inconvenient evidence)

Page 4: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Formulation of Theoretical Model and Research Problem (2)

• Researchable question– What to avoid?

Questions that imply answers dealing with different moral or aesthetic values

Questions that answering them involves unethical procedure

– Good questionsWhat proceeds why? Galileo’s maxim: description first, explanation

second

Page 5: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Formulation of Theoretical Model and Research Problem (3)

• Interesting question

“The heart of good work is a puzzle and an idea” (Abbott 2003, p. xi).

The no-surprise objection: “the answer is already well documented”, “we know answer before we do research” “the question is trivial”

The “so what” objection: “no relevance for social theory or for social life”

Page 6: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Formulation of Theoretical Model and Research Problem (4)

• Good research questions– Proposing new research

– Challenging prior research

– Extending prior research

To formulate good research problem and a theoretical model requires an extensive review of the literature.

Looking for a good review articles that provide (1) a theoretical grid or template, (2) an overview of key findings and unresolved issues, and (3) a description of the most influential studies.

Page 7: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Formulation of Theoretical Model and Research Problem (5)

• Choosing variables and specifying hypotheses

At minimum, any hypothesis involves two variables: an independent variable and a dependent variable.

- “You can’t explain a variable with a constant.” Maximizing variance to find the effect of a cause

- Substantive profiling: The use of telling comparisons

Page 8: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Preparation of Research Design (1)

A research design is a plan that shows, through a discussion of the model and data, how we expect to use our evidence to make inferences.

Model implies variables, units, and observations (values).

Data collection refers to observation, participant observation, intensive interviews, large-scale surveys, histories recoded from secondary data, ethnographies, randomized experiments, and other types.

Page 9: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Preparation of Research Design (2)

• How the data are collected?

Decisions: What data are available? What additional data will be needed?

Data collection is costly in terms of money and time.

- Sources of funding

- Timetable

We have to know how the data will be used.

Page 10: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Preparation of Research Design (3)

We have to know how the data will be used. Discussion of data analyses methods

Multi-method approaches

Page 11: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Measurement (1)

Types of sources:

• Verbal reports (self-report). Surveys

• Observation (firsthand, or through various devices)

• Archival records (statistical documents such as censuses, diaries, mass communications, and others)

Criteria of good measurement:

• Valid

• Reliable

• Exhaustive

• Mutually Exclusive

All involve measurement errors

Page 12: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Measurement (2)

• Observed reality = True reality + Error

Error = True reality - Observed reality

Minimizing errors through multi-indicator approach

Page 13: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Measurement (3)

• Missing data

Traditional approach

New approach:

- regression imputation

- random assignment

Page 14: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Sampling (1)

• .

Page 15: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Sampling (2)

• Target population --|> Frame population: Coverage error

• Frame population --|> Selected sample: Sampling error

• Selected sample --|> Collected sample: Non-response error

Coverage error and non-response error as the most serious errors in both qualitative and quantitative research

Page 16: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Sampling (3)

• Special issues:

- Samples for focus groups

- Samples for Internet studies

Page 17: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Data collection (1)

Politics of data collection

Data collection as a social process.

Sociology of data collection: Who needs what data for what purpose?

Page 18: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Data collection (2)

• Quality control of data collection

Page 19: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Analyses and interpretation (1)

• Statistics and substance in causal inferences

• Where the logic of qualitative and quantitative research is the same and – where it is different?

Page 20: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Analyses and interpretation (2)

• Special issues of causal inferences:

- endogeneity

- types of errors

– Type I (α): reject the null hypothesis when the null hypothesis is true, and

– Type II (β): accept the null hypothesis when the null hypothesis is false

Page 21: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Seven rules (1)

• Glenn Firebaugh, Seven Rules for Social Research. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008

• 1. THERE SHOULD BE THE POSSIBILITY OF SURPRISE IN SOCIAL RESEARCH. RESEARCH PROBLEM AS A PUZZLE

Page 22: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Seven rules (2)

• 2. LOOK FOR DIFFERENCES THAT MAKE A DIFFERENCE, AND REPORT THEM

• 3. BUILD REALITY CHECKS INTO YOUR RESEARCH

• 4. REPLICATE WHERE POSSIBLE

Page 23: Practical Issues in Social Research Methods

Seven rules (3)

• 5. COMPARE LIKE WITH LIKE

• 6. USE PANEL DATA TO STUDY INDIVIDUAL CHANGE AND REPEATED CROSS-SECTIONAL DATA TO STUDY SOCIAL CHANGE

• 7. LET METHOD BE THE SERVANT, NOT THE MASTER