Research Methods Flashcards

(19 cards)

1
Q

What are quantitative methods in sociology?

A

Research involving numerical data, focusing on patterns, statistics, and large-scale studies.

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2
Q

Advantages of quantitative methods?

A

High reliability : Methods like questionnaires can be repeated and produce consistent results.

Generalisibility : Large sample sizes make it easier to apply findings to wider populations

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3
Q

Disadvantages of quantitative methods?

A

Disadvantages of quantitative methods?

Low validity : they often fail to capture depth, emotions, or meaning.

Inflexibility : Fixed questions can miss important issues or prevent follow-ups.

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4
Q

Advantages of structured questionnaires?

A

Advantages of structured questionnaires?

  • It is cheap, quick, and easy to distribute to a large number of people
  • Produces standardised, comparable data for statistical analysis.
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5
Q

Disadvantages of structured questionnaires?

A

Disadvantages of structured questionnaires?

  • Risk of dishonesty/social desirability bias
  • Cannot explore complex issues or ask follow-up questions.
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6
Q

Advantages of structured interviews?

A

Reliable : every participant gets the same questions

  • Easier to quantify and compare results.
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7
Q

Disadvantages of structured interviews?

A

Disadvantages of structured interviews?

  • Doesn’t allow flexibility or in-depth understanding

Interviewer effects – tone/body language may still influence answers

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8
Q

Advantages of official statistics?

A
  • Free, easy to access, and based on large samples.
  • Useful for identifying trends over time (e.g., crime, education)
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9
Q

Disadvantages of official statistics?

A

Disadvantages of official statistics?

  • Definitions may be unclear, political, or inconsistent.
  • May not measure what sociologists actually want to know (lack validity).
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10
Q

What are qualitative methods in sociology?

A

Methods that explore meanings, motivations, and lived experiences, often using words rather than numbers.

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11
Q

Advantages of qualitative methods?

A

Advantages of qualitative methods?

High validity – captures depth, context, and participants’ true feelings.

Flexible : open to unexpected findings and deeper insight.

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12
Q
A
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13
Q

Disadvantages of qualitative methods?

A

Low reliability – hard to repeat due to the open and interpretive nature.

Small sample sizes – limits generalisability.

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14
Q

Advantages of unstructured interviews?

A

Builds trust – rapport may lead to more honest, detailed responses.

Allows interviewers to explore new topics that arise naturally.

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15
Q

Disadvantages of unstructured interviews?

A

Difficult to analyse or compare responses.

Time-consuming and potentially biased.

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17
Q

Advantages of participant observation?

A

High validity : The researcher experiences events directly.

  • Can uncover hidden meanings or behaviour that participants might not admit in interviews.
18
Q

Disadvantages of participant observation?

A
  • Ethical issues – deception or lack of consent may be involved.
  • Risk of researcher bias or “going native”.