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All lecture notes from Introduction to social science research EUR CM1002 $3.21
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All lecture notes from Introduction to social science research EUR CM1002

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All lecture notes from the course Introduction to social science research @EUR Rotterdam. Course code CM1002. Based on all eight lectures from 2019. Based on the book The basics of social research from Babbie.

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  • October 31, 2019
  • 29
  • 2019/2020
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Lectures Introduction to social research
Lecture 1: What is research?

What is research?

Knowing things – what we know (theory) vs how we know (methods)
Observing & experiencing reality

Empirical research = how can me make observations with what we understand the world.

How to be observe scientifically
- Be objective
- Be precise: focused and paying attention to details, how to define different topics
- Be systematic: follow certain procedures
- Be reflective

What do we want to know
- Interesting parts of reality  relevance
- Usually not the unique  the patterns

What we do not research / at least what we cant prove
- Philosophical issues
- Aesthetical issues
- Moral issues

How do we start research?
Certain ingredients  concepts and relations
Certain preparation of ingredients  from abstract to concrete
Certain order op preparing  procedure

Concepts and relations
Theoretical concept = is a social phenomenon that is considered relevant to study
Translating topic into concept is called conceptualization

Globalization = a process or set of processes which embodies a transformation in the spatial
organization of social relations and transactions – assessed in terms of their extensity, intensity,
velocity and impact – generating transcontinental or interregional flows and networks of activity,
interaction, and the exercise of power

Coherent explanation of one or more concepts and their relations  theory

What is a theory?
Systematic explanation for the observations that relate to a particular aspect of life, famous
examples: big bang theory & evolution theory (Babbie)

From abstract to concrete
Globalization: changes on worldwide level
How can we make observations for digital skills
Choose a method to do so:

, - Experiment
- Survey
- Online ethnography

Procedure
Deductive = general principles  specific instances
Building on what we already know

Inductive = specific instances  general principles
If there is hardly any theory

Logic of inquiry:




Scientific understanding of the world must make sense, and correspond to what we observe. We
have methods for observing reality (recipeds!)

3 steps
1. Start with theory & theoretical concept
2. Go from abstract concept to something more concrete
3. Procedure can go 2 ways; inductive of deductive

, Lecture 2: Paradigms & research design

Last week
Concepts (abstract)
Measurement (concrete)

Already theory  deductive
No theory  inductive

Paradigms
Sometimes people don’t agree about theories
- Because of fundamentally different perceptions of the world
- Because they represent different backgrounds

Paradigm= a model or framework for observation and understanding, which shapes both what we
see and how we understand it
(general idea, framework)


paradigm shift = realizing something is wrong with the paradigm

famous example  first they thought the earth is the middle of the universe, but the sun is actually.

Paradigm shift in social sciences
- In psychology
- Behavioursm  cognitive psychology

Paradigm shift in media field
- Almighty media (power, people absorb all info told on the TV)  agency of audiences
(people not always believe what is said on tv)

Paradigms mentioned in babbie, don’t have to learn all. But you have to know with what approach




Variable – value
1. Unit of analysis (object/person) very essential
2. Variable (describes unit of analysis)
3. Value (or attribute)(manifestation of the variable)

Variable  sex

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