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Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research Outline: The Process and Problems What is the Question? What is the Strategy? What is the Theory? What is the Design? Is it Ethical?

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Page 1: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social

Research Outline: The Process and Problems

◦What is the Question?

◦What is the Strategy?

◦What is the Theory?

◦What is the Design?

◦Is it Ethical?

Page 2: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

What Is the Question?

• Do mandatory arrest policies decrease domestic violence recidivism?

• Does how much a person loves his or her dating partner influence the frequency of lying?

• What factors influence men’s and women’s level of retirement income?

Page 3: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

What Makes a Research Question “Good”? 1. Feasibility:

Can you start and finish the research with the resources that you have and

in the time that is available?

Page 4: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

2. Social Importance

• Will an answer to your research question make a difference in the social world?

• Will it help in understanding a problem considered important

Page 5: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

3. Scientific Relevance

Does your research question help to resolve contradictory research findings or

a confusing issue in social theory? *

Page 6: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Deductive, Inductive, or Descriptive?

What is the Strategy?

Page 7: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Deductive research starts with a theoretical premise (theory) and deduces a specific expectation.

Strategy #1: Deductive Research

Page 8: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

What Is the Theory?• Social theory is a logically interrelated set of propositions about empirical reality

• (i.e., the social world as it exists)

• Theories are important in social research

•Make connections to general social processes and large bodies of research

• Building and evaluating theory one of most important objectives of social science

Page 9: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

What Is the Theory?

Page 10: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Inductive Research starts with data.

Strategy #2: Inductive Research

Page 11: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Inductive Research

• If police in a precinct noticed (from their arrest existing data) that arrests of at least one person from the scene of a domestic violence case resulted in fewer subsequent calls to that same scene,

• the police officers might develop (induce) a theory that mandatory arrests decrease domestic violence recidivism. *

Page 12: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Descriptive research starts with data and proceeds only to making generalizations, not generating entire theories.

Strategy #3: Descriptive Research

Page 13: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Descriptive Research

• “How frequently do those arrested for domestic violence return to violence?”

• Description of social phenomena can stimulate more ambitious deductive and inductive research

• Good description of data is the basis for scientific research process and

• an essential component for understanding the social world. *

Page 14: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

What Is the Design?

•Once you’ve chosen a:• Research question, • Strategy, and • theory

• You must decide on a research design

•Cross-sectional• Look at cases at one point in time

•Longitudinal • Look at two or more points in time

Page 15: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Unit of Analysis• Another important distinction between research designs is the focus on individuals—the individual unit of analysis• Victims or perpetrators of DV

•Or• Focus on groups, or aggregates of individuals—the group unit of analysis• Police precincts, cities, states

Page 16: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Three types of Research Designs

Page 17: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Cross-Sectional Design• In a cross-sectional design, all the data

are collected at one point in time. • You take a “cross-section”—a slice that

cuts across an entire population—and use that to see all the different parts, or sections, of that population.

Page 18: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Cross-Sectional Design

•To study the effects of mandatory arrests

•Take a “cross-section” of all domestic violence cases and

•Examine whether arrests affected recidivism*

Page 19: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Longitudinal Designs: The Panel Design

1. A sample (called a panel) is drawn from a population at time 1, and data are collected from the sample (for instance, 100 arrestees from domestic violence cases are selected and interviewed).

2. As time passes, some panel members become unavailable for follow-up, and the population changes (some arrestees move or refuse to continue participating).

3. At time 2, data are collected from the same people (the panel) as at time 1—except for those people who cannot be located (the remaining arrestees are re-interviewed).

Page 20: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Weaknesses of Panel Designs• Expense and Attrition • can be expensive to keep track of

individuals for long periods of time • proportion of panel members who can be

located for follow-up will decline over time.

• Subject fatigue • Participants may grow weary of repeated

interviews and drop out of the study• Others may become so used to answering

the standard questions in the survey that they start giving stock answers

Page 21: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Longitudinal Designs: Repeated Cross-Sectional Design (Trend

study)

1. A sample of domestic violence cases is drawn from a population of cases at time 1, and data are collected from the sample.

2. As time passes, some people leave the population and others enter it.

3. At time 2 a different sample of cases is drawn from this population.

Page 22: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Cases in Cases in

In a cohort study, the follow-up samples (at one or more times) are selected from the same cohort—

Cohort: People who have experienced a similar event or a common starting point

(Example: Baby Boomers, Gen-Xers)

Longitudinal Designs: A Cohort Study

Page 23: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Cases = individual arrests

Precinct #1Precinct #2Precinct #3

Cases =precincts

Individuals as Unit of Analysis

Groups as Unit of Analysis

Units of Analysis and the Domestic Violence Example

Page 24: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Errors in Reasoning

Page 25: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Ethical Considerations• Honesty and Openness• Should not conceal motives to subject• Full disclosure of researcher identity

• The Uses of Science• How will findings be used?• Who controls final report?• Who controls publicity?

• Confidentiality• Informed consent agreement• Identifying information is available only to designated

research personnel for specific research needs

• Institutional Review Board (IRB)• Federally funded research

Page 26: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Conclusion: The Process of Researching the Effects of

Mandatory Arrests

Page 27: Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Social Research  Outline: The Process and Problems ◦ What is the Question? ◦ What is the Strategy? ◦ What is the

Contemplate:

• the question,

• the strategy,

• the theory,

•the design, and

• the ethics of the project.

Start planning!

For Your Own Research…