Term
|
Definition
describe some aspect of society and advance our understanding of it |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
directly address some problem or need in society |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the effort to bring the findings of both basic and applied sociological research to a broader nonacademic audience |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
evidence that can be observed and/or documented using the human senses (quantitative or qualitative data) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a data collection technique (most common in sociol) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the target group of the study |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
part of the population that represents the whole (the studied sample) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
every element of the population has an equal chance of being chosen |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
describe large-scale patters based on sample findings |
|
|
Term
intensive interview (qualitative research) |
|
Definition
data gathering technique that uses open-ended questions during somewhat lengthy face-to-face sessions |
|
|
Term
focus groups (qualitative research) |
|
Definition
interviews of a group over a specific topic |
|
|
Term
field research (qualitative research) |
|
Definition
the researcher observes some aspect of social life in its natural setting |
|
|
Term
participant observation (qualitative research) |
|
Definition
the researcher both observes and actively takes part in the setting or community being studied |
|
|
Term
secondary data analysis (qualitative research) |
|
Definition
uses data previously collected by other researchers |
|
|
Term
content analysis (qualitative research) |
|
Definition
a variety of techniques that enable researchers to systematically summarize and analyze the content of various forms of communication- written, spoken, pictorial |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the researcher manipulates an IV under controlled conditions to determine if change in an IV produces change in DV, thereby establishing a cause and effect relationship |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
used lines and a group of actors to show how one will conform to an obviously wrong answer in order to fit in |
|
|
Term
confederates (the asch experiments) |
|
Definition
an experiment participant who is aware of the experiment |
|
|
Term
group think (the asch experiments) |
|
Definition
group pressure to conform despite individual misgivings (or when a group reaches an illogical conclusion together for the same reasons) |
|
|
Term
in-group (the asch experiments) |
|
Definition
those considered to belong to a group |
|
|
Term
out-group (the asch experiments) |
|
Definition
group composed of those who are excluded from the in-group and it's collective knowledge |
|
|
Term
as group cohesiveness increases... |
|
Definition
so does conformity (the asch experiments) |
|
|
Term
social status affects the likelihood of... |
|
Definition
conformity (the asch experiments) |
|
|
Term
appearance of unanimity... |
|
Definition
affects the likelihood of conformity (the asch experiments) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-nazi soldiers on trial: civilized -claimed to be following orders -conformity |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
1961 at Yale -obedience to authority (will a subject "teacher" willingly hurt another subject "student" when authority tells him to?) -usually, yes -led to rethinking experimental ethics |
|
|
Term
The Standford Prison Experiments |
|
Definition
Zimbardo, Stanford 1971 -subject prisoners vs. subject guards -guards took on roles, prisoners took on roles -shut down due to startling results |
|
|