Chapter 2 - Asking and Answering Sociological Questions - Polity
Part I – The Study of Sociology Chapter 2: Asking and Answering Sociological Questions Lecture #3.
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Transcript of Part I – The Study of Sociology Chapter 2: Asking and Answering Sociological Questions Lecture #3.
Sociological Questions
“Sociological Imagination”
To remove yourself from the “world-taken-for-granted.”
So that we are able to discover something new in the routines of everyday life.
Sociological Questions
Knowledge ≠ Commonsense belief
- Beliefs or propositions with no scientific ground
Stereotypes
Sociological Questions
What are “sociological” questions?
What kinds of question do sociologists have to ask?
Sociological Questions
1. Factual (Descriptive) questions
“What happened?”
“How did (do) things happen?”
Sociological Questions
2. Comparative questionsQuestions asked when one social context within a
society is related to another, or examples drawn from different societies are contrasted.
- Space“Did this happen everywhere?”
- Time“How different are a phenomenon in a period and
one in another?”
Sociological Questions
3. Developmental questions
Questions asked in order to understand the main direction that processes of change have taken.
“What has happened over time?”
Sociological Questions
4. Theoretical questions
Generalization
- Why do things happen?- What factor brings this about?
- What underlies this phenomenon?
Sociological Questions
Questions / Research Problems
How are you gonna answer your question?
Systematic scientific procedure
2. Reviewing the evidence
To familiarize yourself to the research problem
- Literature review
- Initial observations etc.
3. A clear formulation of the research problem
- Setting up hypotheses
Hypotheses
“Educated guesses about what is going on”
(P.34)
Temporary conclusions
Understanding Cause and Effect
“All events have causes.” (P.35)
One of the main tasks of sociological research is to identify causes and effects.
“What brings it about?” = “Causal relationship (Causation)
An event or situation causes or produces another
Understanding Cause and Effect
Variables= “Any dimensions along which individuals and groups
vary.” (p.32)- Factors telling an individual or group from another- Criteria based on which an individual or group is
categorized- Age
- Income- Educational attainment
- Social class- Race/ethnicity etc.
Understanding Cause and Effect
Correlation
The “existence of a regular relationship between variables” (p. 35)
Correlation ≠ Causation
4. Research design
- to decide “how” the data are collected
- Select methods
- Research subjects
- Duration of the research etc.