Exam 6: How Can Researchers Enumerate and Examine Broad Patterns in Social Life Quantitative Research
Exam 1: What Is Social Research a Particular Way of Knowing90 Questions
Exam 2: What Principles and Standards Guide Research Research Ethics84 Questions
Exam 3: How Do Researchers Identify and Evaluate Social Concepts Measurement94 Questions
Exam 4: How Do Researchers Select the People, Places, and Things to Study Sampling94 Questions
Exam 5: How Can Researchers Understand Meaning, Process, and Experience in the Social World Qualitative Research95 Questions
Exam 6: How Can Researchers Enumerate and Examine Broad Patterns in Social Life Quantitative Research94 Questions
Exam 7: Where Do Principles and Practice Meet in Research Study Design93 Questions
Exam 8: How Do Researchers Study Patterns That Span Populations and Categories of Experience Questionnaires and Structured Interviews93 Questions
Exam 9: How Do Researchers Learn About Peoples Perspectives and Lives Qualitative Interviewing94 Questions
Exam 10: How Can Researchers Study the Patterns of Peoples Lives Participant Observation and Ethnography95 Questions
Exam 11: How Do Researchers Study the Ways Meanings Are Communicated in Everyday Life Content Analysis95 Questions
Exam 12: How Can Researchers Learn From Information Collected by Others Existing Data91 Questions
Exam 13: How Do Researchers Develop Inductive Findings Qualitative Data Analysis94 Questions
Exam 14: How Do Researchers Develop Deductive Findings Quantitative Data Analysis90 Questions
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__________ is a collection of standardized questions and response items that respondents complete without the aid of an interviewer.
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is not a challenge that quantitative researchers face when developing useful measures?
(Multiple Choice)
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Outline the main steps of quantitative research. Utilize Legewie and Fagan's research to support your answer.
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When a researcher finds a positive correlation, that means that
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following does not describe the generalizability of Font et. al's findings?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is not a feature of the qualitative approach?
(Multiple Choice)
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How did Pearman and Swain study neighbourhood gentrification? What did they find? Did they establish a causal relationship? Why or why not?
(Essay)
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What is causality? What is required in order to determine a causal relationship? Use a research study mentioned in the chapter to support your answer.
(Essay)
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What role did quantitative research play in the early development of social science?
(Essay)
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According to Weinstein, statistics should be seen as a tool for understanding the social world and it is up to the researcher to ensure that they are using this tool appropriately.
(True/False)
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What is a measurement strategy? Give an example from the chapter. Why is precise measurement important in quantitative research?
(Essay)
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Quantitative studies understand the meaning of social life by quantifying patterns and frequencies.
(True/False)
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Which of the following best explains what Pearman and Swain meant by "reverse causality?"
(Multiple Choice)
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