Session 2 - Methods For Social Research: Quantitative Methodology
Session 2 - Methods For Social Research: Quantitative Methodology
1. Quantitative methodology
a. Types of quantitative methods
b. Experimental method
c. Strengths and limitation of quantitative methodology
d. Mixed methods
2. Qualitative methodology
a. Qualitative research process
b. Types of qualitative methods
c. Focus groups
d. Strengths and limitation of qualitative methodology
3. Ethical considerations
4. Summary
Social psychology has different methods for conducting empirical tests of hypotheses. There are two
broad types of method:
1. Experimental (Quantitative)
2. Non-experimental (Qualitative)
each of them has advantages and disadvantages. The choice which method to take depends on the
nature of the investigation.
Confidence in the validity of a hypothesis is enhanced if the hypothesis has been confirmed a number
of times by different research teams using different methods.
Quantitative methodology
“Quantitative methods infer evidence or a theory through the measurement of variables that
produce numeric outcomes.” (Field, 2005)
Empirical test can falsify hypothesis (investigator rejects the hypothesis, revises it)
Empirical test might support hypothesis (generate more finely tuned hypotheses)
e.g. if we find that ballet dancer do indeed perform better in front of an audience, we might then hypothesis
that this only occurs when the dancer already well-rehearsed
Important feature of a scientific research: replication (guards against fraud & that finding is tied to the
circumstances in which a test was conducted)
-dogma and rationalism (understanding based on authority)
1A. Types of quantitaive methods
Experimental methods Non-experimental methods
Experimental Research (cause & Correlation Research (link between two variables)
effect) (involves manipulation of -e.g. knowledge test scores, psychological tests
one or more IVs)
-e.g. in a laboratory in the field
(natural setting, e.g. shopping
mall)
Survey Research
-structured interviews (open-ended or closed-ended
-e.g. questionnaires
-large amount of data but subject to experimenter
bias; poorly constructed questionnaires
Archival Research
-e.g. collections of data, reports (of a company)
-allows you to look at a specific social (large-scale)
phenomenon (e.g. why a company keeps making bad
managerial decisions)
-used to make comparisons between cultures, nations
regarding mental health, suicide etc.
e.g. Test the hypothesis that violent television programmes increase aggression in Confounding
young children. It is important that there are not any differences among the Where two or more
participants (e.g. age, sex, background). If there were, these factors would be independent variables covary
confounded (durcheinanderbringen) with the independent variables. in such a way that it is
Important to avoid Confounding: the conditions must be identical in all respects impossible to know which
except for those represented by the manipulated independent variable. has caused the effect
Strength: Strength:
Easier to replicate + control of IVs (independent Reflects more “real” behaviour
variable)
Limitation: Limitation:
Artificial setting = unnatural behaviour Less control of extraneous variables
=> low external validity => high external validity
External validity: (Mundane realism)
similarity between circumstances surrounding an experiment and circumstances encountered in
everyday life
Researchers want to know if listening to fast paced music helps students remember better
Variables:
-Independent variable (IV): type of music (fast, slow) -> cause of the effect
-Dependent variable (DV): the memory test (affected by changes in the independent variable)
The experimental method is a way to isolate and identify the cause of something.
observe, describe, hypothesize – test it (hypothesizes) & compare wiggeling and non-wiggeling
condition (control and experimental conditions) – conclusion
=> Everything in a control condition is the same as the experimental conditions except that the
independent variable is absent or held constant.
Disadvantages
Qualitative methodology
Qualitative methodology is interested in interpreting meaning (looking at non-numerical data –
texts).
-locates the observer in the world
-consists of interpretive, material practices that make the world visible
-turn the world into a series of representations
-interpretive naturalistic approach
“Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted”
-Qualitative method as constructivist approach and anti-positivist
-Deals best with complexity, depth and meaning
-Question before method
In the past, a lot of experiments (quantitative methodology) but nowadays more qualitative
methodology
Research objectives?
Target population?
Who to include or exclude?
Budget and timescale?
Data collection methods?
Interview length?
Participant recruitment?
Participant recruitment process?
Disadvantages
Ethical considerations
Physical/psychological harm
-e.g. use of electric shocks; telling participants that they have done badly
Abuse of power
Privacy, anonymity and confidentiality (informed consent) – participant always has the last
word
Deception (cannot lie about your participants about what you are studying; you can be
vague in order not to mislead the results) e.g. Migram’s obedience studies
Use and misuse of data
Debriefing
-participants should be fully debriefed after taking part in an experiment
-should make that people leave the laboratory with a respect and understanding towards
social psychology
Summary
Originally, Social psychology only used experimental methods to observe behaviour
Experimental method is objective, replicable and controllable and has external validity
Qualitative method is subjective and explore people’s point of view of the world / of a
certain topic
Quant answers “what” vs. qual answers “why” questions
Whatever method you choose for your research, you must ensure that it is done ethically