Schedule

 

SOCIOLOGY AND THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD

January 23

First day of class.

 

January 28

Assigned reading:

Babbie, Earl. 1992. "Theory and Research." Pp. 39-65 in The Practice of Social Research. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.

Ghaziani, Amin. 2017. "The Closet." Contexts 16(3): 72-73.

scientific method

theory

concepts, variables, and indicators

hypothesis

observation

empirical generalization

theory building

operationalization

deduction vs. induction

falsification

objectivity and intersubjectivity

paradigm

 

January 30

Assigned reading:

Abbott, Andrew. 2004. Pp. 13-15, 42-79 in Methods of Discovery: Heuristics for the Social Sciences. New York: W.W. Norton.

categorical variables: nominal, ordinal

numerical variables: interval, ratio

unit of analysis

narration vs. analysis

description

explanation

understanding

causality

contextualism vs. noncontextualism

transcendent vs. situated knowledge

behaviorism vs. culturalism

positivism vs. interpretivism

individualism vs. emergentism

realism vs. constructivism

 

PROPOSING & TESTING HYPOTHESES

February 4

Assigned reading:

Carter, Gregg Lee. 2017. "A Primer on Critical Reading." Pp. 3-8 in Doing Sociology with Student CHIP. 6th ed. Boston, MA: Allyn & Bacon (previous editions).

independent variable (x)

dependent variable (y)

relationships between variables: positive, negative, linear, independent

intervening variable

validity

reliability

error: random vs. systematic

measures of central tendency: mean, median, mode

correlation coefficient

statistical significance

crosstabulation

to control variables

relationships between variables: spuriousness, multivariate model, intervening variable, interaction effect

 

February 6

Bring your laptop to class to access the Student CHIP software.

Assigned reading:

Carter, Gregg Lee. 2017. "A Primer on Elementary Data Analysis." Pp. 9-28 in Doing Sociology with Student CHIP. 6th ed. Boston, MA: Allyn & Bacon (previous editions).
Construct the tables and perform the calculations that this chapter asks you to do. Check your answers in the footnotes to this chapter.

Preview Carter, chap. 1 (which we'll complete in class).

 

STUDYING ATTITUDES & BEHAVIOR WITH SURVEY RESEARCH

February 11

Assigned reading:

Neuman, W. Lawrence. 2001. "Survey Research." 246-89 in Social Research Methods. 4th ed. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.

survey research

questionnaire vs. interview schedule

closed-ended vs. open-ended questions

response rate

index

scale

dummy variable

secondary data analysis

regression analysis

cross-sectional, trend, and panel analysis

 

February 13

Student CHIP assignment due.

 

EXPLAINING URBAN FOOD SECURITY WITH CLOSED-ENDED INTERVIEWS

February 18

Assigned reading:

Cannon, Kylie, Ethan Fischer, et al. 2011. "Report to Building Bridges: Preliminary results of household survey and analysis of the City of Poughkeepsie's food system." Paper submitted to the Building Bridges community food assessment.

Nevarez, Leonard, Susan Grove, et al. 2014. "Poughkeepsie Plenty: A Community Food Assessment." Discussion brief #14, Center for Research, Regional Education, and Outreach, SUNY New Paltz.

Nevarez, Leonard, Kathleen Tobin and Eve Waltermauer. 2016. "Food Acquisition in Poughkeepsie, NY: Exploring the Stratification of 'Healthy Food' Consciousness in a Food-Insecure City." Food, Culture & Society 19: 19-44.

 

UNDERSTANDING URBAN INJUSTICE WITH OPEN-ENDED INTERVIEWS

February 20

Assigned reading:

Shedd, Unequal City: chaps. 1-2, Appendix A.

 

February 25

Assigned reading:

Shedd, Unequal City: chaps. 3-4, Appendices B-C.

qualitative vs. quantitative research

unstructured interview

triangulation

 

February 27

Survey evaluation due.

Assigned reading:

Shedd, Unequal City: chaps. 5-6.

exploration

reactivity

 

READING MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS

March 3

Take-home midterm handed out in class.

Assigned reading:

Sharkey, Patrick, Gerard Torrats-Espinosa and Delaram Takyar. 2017. "Community and the Crime Decline: The Causal Effect of Local Nonprofits on Violent Crime." American Sociological Review 82: 1214-1240.

regression analysis

dummy variable

adjusted r2

 

March 5

In-class portion of midterm – bring laptop.

 

SPRING BREAK: March 8-21

 

OBSERVING URBAN POVERTY WITH PARTICIPANT-OBSERVATION

March 24

Assigned reading:

Desmond, Evicted.

ethnography

field research

participant observation

field notes

 

March 26

Desmond, Evicted (cont.).

 

DOING OBSERVATIONAL FIELDWORK

March 31

Assigned reading:

Lofland, John and Lyn H. Lofland. 1995. Pp. 16-69, 89-98 in Analyzing Social Settings. 3d ed. New York: Wadsworth.

Leonard Nevarez's fieldnotes, March 19, 2003.

 

ETHICAL ISSUES IN STUDYING PEOPLE AT FIRST-HAND

April 2

Fieldwork exercise due.

Assigned reading:

Carroll, Aaron E. 2016. "Did Infamous Tuskegee Study Cause Lasting Mistrust of Doctors Among Blacks?" New York Times, June 17.

Adler, Emily Stier and Roger Clark. 2003. "Ethics and Social Research." Pp. 39-68 in How It's Done: An Invitation to Social Research. Belmon, CA: Thomson Wadsworth.

open vs. closed setting

covert research

voluntary participation

informed consent

honest reporting

 

April 7

Assigned reading:

Fischer, Claude. 2014. "Slumming It." Boston Review (blog), December 9.

Tilley, Susan A. 2016. "Representation: Writing Up/Down." Pp. 176-201 in Doing Respectful Research. Hallifax, CA: Fernwood.

spoiling the field

studying up vs. studying down

 

GENERALIZABLE TO WHOM? SAMPLING

April 9

Assigned reading:

Ali, Saba. 2019. "Homeless population in Dutchess County growing, remaining homeless longer." Poughkeepsie Journal, January 23.

Schutt, Russel K. 1996. "Sampling." Pp. 147-185 in Investigating the Social World. Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge.

sample

population

elements

probability vs. nonprobability sampling methods

sampling frame

availability sample

snowball sample

purposive sample

stratified random sample

 

SPECIAL EVENT: Saturday, April 11, 10:00-2:00 pm

Survey day in Poughkeepsie.

Training workshop at 10:00 am at Family Partnership Center, followed by door-to-door surveying for Hudson River Housing. More information and sign-up on this Facebook event.

 

EXPLAINING RACIAL PENALTY USING SOCIAL EXPERIMENTS

April 14

Assigned reading:

Leavitt, Fred. 2001. "Experimenting: Two Groups." Pp. 90-107 in Evaluating Scientific Research. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Pager, Marked: Introduction, chaps. 1-3.

experiment

treatment

experimental vs. control group

field experiment

pretest vs. posttest measures

internal vs. external validity

posttest distortion

Hawthorne effect

Solomon four-group design

posttest-only control group design

 

April 16

Assigned reading:

Pager, Marked: chaps. 4-5.

 

SPECIAL EVENT: Saturday, April 18, 10:00-2:00 pm

Survey day in Poughkeepsie.

Training workshop at 10:00 am at Family Partnership Center, followed by door-to-door surveying for Hudson River Housing. More information and sign-up on this Facebook event.

 

April 21

Poughkeepsie survey essay due.

Assigned reading:

Pager, Marked: chaps. 6-8.

 

April 23

Class cancelled. Instead, make a 10-minute office hour appointment this week to discuss your progress on the research proposal.

 

STUDYING PEOPLE UNOBTRUSIVELY: CONTENT ANALYSIS

April 28

Assigned reading:

Berg, Bruce L. 2001. "An Introduction to Content Analysis." Pp. 238-67 in Qualitative Research Methods for the Social Sciences. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.

content analysis

manifest vs. latent content

intercoder reliability

 

EXAMINING RACIAL REPRESENTATIONS WITH CONTENT ANALYSIS

April 30

Research proposal due.

Assigned reading:

Dixon, Travis L. 2017. "A Dangerous Distortion of our Families: Representations of Families, by Race, in News and Opinion Media." Color of Change.

 

May 5

Last day of class.

 

Tuesday, May 12 (last day of Study Period)

Take-home final due.