Social Research Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches

(Brent) #1
Appropriate Technique
A Short History of the Experiment
Random Assignment
Experimental Design Logic
Internal and External Validity

Practical Considerations
Results of Experimental Research:
Making Comparisons
A Word on Ethics
Conclusion

Experimental Research


The experiment is distinguished by the activity of the researcher who determines
the conditions under which investigation will take place. Wholly or in part,
the researcher... creates, builds or controls the research setting.
— Willer and Walker,Building Experiments, Testing Social Theory,p. 2

Pager (2007) wanted to examine the impact of imprisonment on the chances of getting
a job after release. In addition, he was curious about whether race had an effect. He
created a field experiment in which he hired college-age male “testers.” Half the testers
were White and half were Black. In 2001, the testers applied for entry-level jobs that
had been advertised in the newspaper in the Milwaukee metropolitan area. The jobs
required no experience and only a high school diploma. Pager matched testers of each
race on age, physical appearance, and presentation style. He trained the testers, checked
their interview skills, and created a fake résumé for each. For one-half of the testers of
each race, he created résumés that showed a felony conviction for drug possession and
18 months of prison time. The other half had a virtually identical résumé but no
criminal record. Pager randomly assigned testers to the advertised jobs. In this study,
the independent variables were tester race and criminal record. The dependent variable
was whether an employer called back to offer a job to a tester. Pager found that testers
with a criminal record on their résumé and the Black testers received far fewer job offers.
When he looked at the two independent variables together, he learned that a White tester
with a criminal record was more likely to be offered a job than an equally qualified Black
tester who had no criminal record. In Wisconsin as in many other states, laws bar hiring
discrimination by race and by criminal conviction when the conviction has no relevance
to a job. Pager also looked at data suggesting the large racial effect he found in
Milwaukee may be larger in other major urban areas.

From Chapter 9 ofSocial Research Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches,7/e. W. Lawrence Neuman.
Copyright © 2011 by Pearson Education. Published by Allyn & Bacon. All rights reserved.

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