Place for Section 101 and 114 to post reading memos, practice quiz questions, or study tools.
Monday, November 29, 2010
Chapter 3 Question
Chapter 3 Question
Chapter 3
a. The Exxon employees were forced to participate in an experiment which would help the company find a way to increase profit
b. Participants of a household survey were going to be cross-examined in regards to what they answered on the confidential survey
c. University students were forced to participate in a mock prison experiment in which participants were harmed physically and mentally
d. Interviews of the Valdez family were published despite the fact that they were promised confidentiality
Answer: B. Details about this case are on page 65 under the title of Confidentiality.
Chapter 3
A) Invasion of privacy in the name of science
B) Disclosing their tearoom activities
C) Pretending to be a voyeur-participant
D) Both A and B
E) Both A and C
ANSWER: E
A) Correct but C is also correct.
B) Incorrect. This did not happen, he was being careful as to not harm his subjects.
C) Correct but A is also correct. This was considered unethical because of the deceit involved.
D) Incorrect. See above.
E) Correct. See above.
Babbie, Ch. 3 Question
a) The issue of harm towards participants
b) The issue of whether ethics and politics hinge on an ideological view
c) The issue of analysis and reporting
d) The issue of anonymity and confidentiality
Answer: b)
Babbie writes that both ethics and politics necessarily hinge on ideological points of view — that what is considered acceptable from one view will be considered acceptable from another point of view. (pg. 74)
Chapter 3:The Ethics and Politics of Social Research
A) to interrogate the subjects in a study
B) to find out something personal about the subjects in the study
C) to interview the subject to learn about the participants experience in the study
D) to learn about what the liked or disliked
E) none of the above
The correct answer is C.
It is the correct answer because in a debriefing we want to know what their experience was and what it could have caused, like if the participant could have suffered damage due to the study they were exposed to. This helps the experimenter learn about what is not working and what needs to be changed. The experimenter doesn't need to learn about anything personal in regards to the participant nor what the subject likes or dislikes and they don't want to interrogate the subject. The purpose of a study and the use of participants is to make them feel safe and interrogating them is not going to help them cooperate. It cannot e none of the above because C is the correct answer.
Ethics and Stanley Milgram
a) subjects were physically harmed in the study by the administered electro-shocks.
b) the results of the respondents' surveys were not kept anonymous or confidential.
c) subjects were deceived into thinking they were causing extreme physical harm to another.
d) participation in the study by the subjects was involuntary.
Answer:
a) Incorrect - in the study, no subjects were physically harmed. However, participants were deceived into thinking they were physically harming someone.
b) Incorrect - this study was an experiement and did not involve surveys.
c) Correct -The study involved a situation where the subjects were "teachers" who were to punish a "student" whenever he answered a question incorrectly by administering electro-shocks. Really, the "student" only feigned the pain and the electro-shocks were not real, but the subjects believed they were truly harming the individual.
d) Incorrect - Milgram's subjects were all voluntary and consisted of 40 men within ages 20 to 40 from the New Haven, CT area.
sources: Milgram Experiment video (http://www.myspace.com/video/vid/5512184), Babbie Ch 3 pg 73-74
Quiz question for chapter 3
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Chapter 11: ways to avoid misclassifying errors
1)Select random cases from each category if possible.
2)Give three examples for each claim you make
3)Have others review your analytic interpretations
4) Report inconsistencies. Few social patterns are completely consistent.
Monday, November 22, 2010
Unobtrusive Research (Chapter 11)
a) Investigating written documents
b) Looking at statistical numbers available on webpages
c) Going to field to observe kids play soccer
d) Studying historical records (e.g., patterns that occur in different epochs)
Answer: a, b, and d, for there's direct interference in letter c.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Ch. 11 Reading Question
Babbie, Ch. 11 Question
a) It is an inexpensive method of research
b) It allows for the study of processes occurring over a long period of time
c) Errors found in the study are easily fixed
d) Problems of validity are unlikely
Answer: d
Problems of validity are in fact likely to occur in content analysis.
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Critical Language Scholarship Deadline Approaching! NOV 15
Check out and apply for this govt sponsored scholarship: www.clscholarship.org
2011 Spring Internship -- Consumer Financial Protection w/ the gov
The U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Domestic Finance is currently working to execute the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act by implementing plans to “stand up” the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). The CFPB Implementation Team is now seeking
several undergraduate and graduate volunteer interns for the Spring 2011 semester.
Description:
This is an exciting and unique opportunity to participate in the ground-up construction of a brand
new federal regulatory agency. Candidates should be comfortable managing multiple complex
tasks in a fast-paced environment. Past intern projects have included: summarizing, researching,
and analyzing consumer protection legislation; conducting legislative and regulatory research;
researching pressing issues in the field of consumer finance, such as mortgage and credit card
disclosure policies; drafting talking points and memos; as well as providing administrative
support to our growing policy team.
Qualifications:
Prior knowledge of consumer financial issues and/or law is helpful, but not mandatory.
Candidates must be enrolled in a degree-granting academic program, have excellent analytical
and writing skills, and must be comfortable using Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.
Candidates able to make a full-time commitment are preferred.
Interested candidates should submit a resume and cover letter to
consumerintern@do.treas.gov by Monday, November 15, 2010.
The U.S. Treasury Department is an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Quiz Question (Cracks in the Pavement)
Quiz Question: Inter-/Intra-group(ethnic) Relations in "Cracks in the Pavement"
a) Mom and pop stores increased conflict within groups (ethnicities).
b) Mom and pop stores decreased conflict within groups.
c) Mom and pop stores increased conflict between groups.
d) Mom and pop stores decreased conflict between groups.
e) Mom and pop stores increased integration between groups.
Monday, November 8, 2010
Mom and Pop Store Legitimacy Sanchez-Jankowski
(1) Supplying provisions and owner's willingness to allow space for social interaction Sanchez-Jankowski argues that the substance, strength, and quantity of these interactions were very important to the resident's everyday lives.
(2) Those of ethnicity, economic status, gender and age, none of which can be understood in isolation.
Quiz Question: Uses of Gossip from Cracks in the pavement
Cracks in the Pavement - True/False Question
-
a) The number of establishments in a neighborhood is a good indicator of a neighborhood's health.
b) In an enterprise establishment, the store owner scolds people for loitering and tells people to leave the establishment if they are not going to buy anything.
c) When mom and pop stores close, this does not necessarily lead to social disorganization.
d) All of the above are true.
e) All of the above are false.
ANSWERS
a) FALSE. "Whether or not a neighborhood is structured and healthy depends on the functional quality, not quantity, of its establishment's institutional contents" (265).
b) True. "In building an enterprise type of establishment, the owner's first strategy was to limit, and ultimately remove, goup relations and social exchanges in the store" (264).
c) True. "The disappearance of mom and pop stores does not produce social disorganization; it merely initiates a reconfiguration of the social structure and order" (265),
d) There is a false answer.
e) There are two true answers.
"Cracks in the Pavement" Memo
How does a mom-pop shop achieve neighborhood institutional status and why does it play a pivotal role in the neighborhoods in the study?
According to the article a mom-pop shop achieves institutional status and integrates itself into the subculture of the neighborhood by meeting certain criteria. There are three things that must be present, the history of the store ownership, the reinforcement of ethnic groups’ taste in food products, and social interaction that facilitate the creation of a status system. The mom-pop shops are pivotal to the community because they support ethnic cultures and facilitate networking for the lower class social class of these ethnic groups.
"Cracks in the Pavement" question & memo
a. thefts
b. government taxes
c. store merchants wanting more profit
d. continuous bankruptcies
Answer: a) page 269 in the reader, a graph is provided to demonstrate the increase in average prices that follow after robberies at the stores studied in an average 12-month period.
memo:
Related to the increase in prices, customer credit was eliminated because of increased robberies, higher insurance payments, diminished business due to customer apprehension. (page 269)
The article studied the changes in the mom-and-pop stores in 5 different neighborhoods and their implications in the structure of their neighborhoods. They provided social and material support for their community. Provided meeting areas, helped incorporate new people into the existing social structure, order and helped reinforce the divisions of the neighborhoods. Loss of these institutions for various reasons created a strain on the neigborhoods. Sanchez-Jankowski argued it was a short-term strain, not somethin that promoted an ultimate decay.
Martin Sanchez-Jankowski: Quiz Question
A. imperialist
B. holdout
C. trailblazer
D. indigenous
E. colonial
ANSWER: C. trailblazer
An "imperialist" establishment was one where "the store's owner, who is neither a resident nor an ethnic compatriot and has no socioeconomic connection to the neighborhood, views it as a means to make a decent living and accumulate capital and equity for socioeconomic mobility."
A "holdout" type was one where "the owner had bought and run the store back when ethnic groups that now no longer live in the neighborhood were the residents."
A "trailblazer" is the one mentioned above. It is the type of mom-and-pop store acquired by someone who saw an emerging business opportunity from the neighborhood's changing population dynamics.
An "indigenous" was one where "the store owner currently lived in the neighborhood or had lived there in the past and was a member of one of the dominant ethnic groups.
"Colonial" was made up and is not a type of mom-and-pop store.
Thursday, November 4, 2010
When forming a question/survey
Make sure the question is short and precise. This allows the reader to understand the question and answer quickly.
Avoid negative items such as the words "impossible", "not" or "didn't"
Avoid charged terms like "welfare"
Don't survey with threatening questions
Make sure the survey is spread out and uncluttered
Don't put more than one question on a line
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Chapter 9 Survey Research
a) starting with quick-to respond questions
b) fucusing on the subject matter as soon as possible
c) starting with quick-to respond questions and being polite
d) offering some type of reward at the end of the survery
e) both b and d
Answer c) is the more appropriate one, for first impression always matters.
Chapter 10: Research Tradition
William Foote Whyte’s ethnography of Cornerville, is one of the earliest illustrations of which research tradition?
a) Ethnomethodology
b) Grounded theory
c) Case studies
d) Naturalism
e) Institutional ethnography
Answer: D
Naturalism approaches field research assuming that social realities exist which can be observed and reported accurately. William Foote Whyte decided to become an insider during his study to actually get all the information about the social life on the streets that he wanted and to get the most out of it. His reports on the people were made through the experience of being one of the people in the community not an outsider.
Babbie, Ch 10 Study Question
Babbie Ch. 10- Qualitative Field Research Paradigms
a. naturalism is the approach to field research based on the assumption that an objective social reality exists and can be observed and reported accurately
b. grounded theory is a deductive approach to the study of social life that attempts to use a theory to make comparable observations
c. ethnomethodology is the method of studying social life that involves intentionally breaking agreements that are usually unspoken as a way of revealing their existence
d. participatory action research is the approach to social research where the people being studied are given control over the purpose and procedures of the research
e. all of the above are correct definitions of different field research paradigms
b. CORRECT. the definition provided above is the definition of hypothesis testing; grounded theory is an inductive approach to the study of social life that compares unfolding observations in attempt to generate a theory;
Babbie Chapter Ten Extended Case Method
The extended case method is used to strengthen existing theories.
Answer: False
"Extended case method has the purpose of discovering flaws in, and then modifying existing social theories." (Babbie 298)
This is different from grounded theory, where theorists seek to enter the study without preconceived notions and "generate theory from the constant comparing of unfolding observations." (Babbie 296)
Extended case study seeks to "lay out as coherently as possible what we expect to find before entry." (Babbie 298)
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Babbie Chp. 10: Strengths and Weaknesses of Qualitative Field Research Quiz Question
A) An advantage of field research is the depth of understanding it can provide.
B) An advantage of field research is its inexpensiveness.
C) An advantage of field research is its flexibility.
D) Field research measurements generally have more validity.
E) Field research measurements generally have more reliability.
A) True! Other research methods are often seen as "superficial," but field research escapes this fault.
B) True! Other research methods often require costly equipment or expensive personnel, but field research cna be done by one researcher with pen and paper.
C) True! You can modify a field research design at any time. You're also always prepared to engage in field research which does not always occur with surveys or experiments.
D) True! There is more validity with field research because you are actually there at the scene where the subject of the matter is taking place.
E) False! (correct answer) Field research measurements generally have less reliability, because others would not necessarily make the same observations as you.
Monday, November 1, 2010
Internal Validity Resource
Nine threats to internal validity are described, followed by an example and a contrasting nonexample as applied to the hypothetical experiment. An explanation is included of why the example represents a threat to internal validity and why the nonexample is not a threat.
Then there's a quiz where you can test yourself.
Who Are the Europeans- Fligstein quiz question
According to Diez Medrano and Gutierrez what are NOT the mechanisms by which individuals are able to hold seemingly contradictory identities
A. In smaller groups, individuals will likely feel more control than in larger groups
B. In smaller groups, smaller groups are more desirable and therefore more common.
C. Larger groups, under the right conditions, will be able to provide positive identities for individuals.
D. Larger group’s identity comes into play under circumstances where it can prove useful
E. All of the above are true
The correct answer is B. This is a made up statement. All the others explain how it is that people can hold up different identities and therefore be used to explain hoe Europeans can handle so may different identities at once. Pg 173 of reader.