Social Research Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches

(Brent) #1
STRATEGIES OF RESEARCH DESIGN

REVIEW QUESTIONS

1.What are the implications of saying that qualitative research uses more logic in
practice than a reconstructed logic?
2.What does it mean to say that qualitative research follows a nonlinear path? In
what ways is a nonlinear path valuable?
3.Describe the differences between independent, dependent, and intervening variables.
4.Why don’t we proveresults in social research?
5.Take a topic of interest and develop two research questions for it. For each research
question, specify the units of analysis and universe.
6.What two hypotheses are used if a researcher uses the logic of disconfirming
hypotheses? Why is negative evidence stronger?
7.Restate the following in terms of a hypothesis with independent and dependent
variables: The number of miles a person drives in a year affects the number of
visits a person makes to filling stations, and there is a positive unidirectional
relationship between the variables.
8.Compare the ways in which quantitative and qualitative researchers deal with
personal bias and the issue of trusting the researcher.
9.How do qualitative and quantitative researchers use theory?

10.Explain how qualitative researchers approach the issue of interpreting data. Refer
to first-, second-, and third-order interpretations.


NOTES


  1. See Tashakkori and Teddlie (1998).

  2. Ward and Grant (1985) and Grant and colleagues
    (1987) analyzed research in sociology journals and sug-
    gested that journals with a higher proportion of qualita-
    tive research articles address gender topics but that
    studies of gender are not themselves more likely to be
    qualitative.

  3. See Kaplan (1964:3–11) for a discussion.

  4. On the issue of using quantitative, statistical tech-
    niques as a substitute for trust, see Collins (1984), Porter
    (1995), and Smith and Heshusius (2004).

  5. For discussion, see Schwandt (1997), Swanborn
    (1996), and Tashakkori and Teddlie (1998:90–93).

  6. For examples of checking, see Agar (1980) and
    Becker (1970c).
    7. Problem choice and topic selection are discussed in
    Campbell and associates (1982) and Zuckerman (1978).
    8. See Flick (1998:51).
    9.Exceptionsare secondary data analysis and existing
    statistics research. In working with them, a quantitative
    researcher often focuses the research question and devel-
    ops a specific hypothesis to test after she or he examines
    the available data
    10. See Ball and Smith (1992) and Harper (1994).
    11. For place of theory in qualitative research, see
    Hammersley (1995).
    12. See Harper (1987:9, 74–75) and Schwandt (1997:
    10–11).
    13. See Gerring (2007:20) and George and Bennett
    (2005).


nonlinear research path
null hypothesis
reconstructed logic
reductionism

second-order interpretation
spuriousness
tautology
teleology

third-order interpretation
triangulation
universe
variable
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