Exam 2: What Principles and Standards Guide Research Research Ethics
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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Which of the following is not an example of a power differential in social research?
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Covert research would be the most necessary for studying which group?
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What does González-Lopez mean by "mindful ethics"? Why was this important in her research?
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A framework for collecting and analyzing data which outlines the researcher's approach and goals is called
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Discuss some of the concerns that researchers have about the IRB process. What are its limitations? Does approval from the IRB mean that all ethical considerations have been accounted for? Why or why not?
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What are reactive effects? What are the arguments for and against using deception as a way of mitigating these effects? Use Milgram's experiment as an example to make the arguments.
(Essay)
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Which of the following is not one of the three main ethical principles outlined in the Belmont Report?
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The Belmont Report replaced the Common Rule as the system used to ensure protection of human research participants.
(True/False)
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Regnerus' study on the impact of same-sex relationships on children is an example of the ways that research have political consequences because
(Multiple Choice)
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Generally, it is impossible to avoid reactive effects in research.
(True/False)
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Discuss the ways that researchers need to consider ethics throughout the research process. How might ethical concerns arise during the data collection or analysis process? What about in the reporting process?
(Essay)
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González-Lopez's research on incest in Mexico highlights the ways that researchers must be continuously aware of and reflective about the ways that risks could arise in the research process for respondents.
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Which of the following groups would be competent to make an informed consent?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is the most important consideration when it comes to research ethics?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following statements about the ethics of internet research are true?
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The men in the Tuskeegee Syphilis experiment were denied treatment even after it was discovered that penicillin was an effective treatment for the disease.
(True/False)
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The way in which the social and structural context impacts a person's identity, status, and perspectives, affecting the amount of power and authority someone holds in an interaction is known as
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is the best argument in support of Humphrey's research?
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Venkatesh's research was not problematic because he was able to get informed consent from all the participants.
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