Chapter 1 - Introduction
Chapter 1 - Introduction
SSU1013
Natural world
ready made environment
only partly amenable to change & control
• Social world
That has been shaped by previous generations
That is reshaped by each new generation
Spontaneous Generation
Observation
Formulate a problem or question
Collection and classification of more facts
Generalization
Formulate a hypothesis
Testing the hypothesis
Does it fit all similar sets of facts or situations?
Retest and reformulate the theory
Example of the scientific method
OBSERVATION: Every swan I've ever seen is white.
HYPOTHESIS: All swans must be white.
TESTING THE HYPOTHESIS: A random sampling of swans from each continent
where swans are indigenous produces only white swans.
"My global research has indicated that swans are always white, wherever
they are observed."
• RETEST AND VERIFY: Every swan any other scientist has ever observed in
any country has always been white.
THEORY: All swans are white.
PREDICTION: The next swan I see will be white.
The experimental method
Do you agree?
Science is a very powerful word
Develop a hypothesis
Draw conclusions
Social Science Research Methods and
Approaches
Historical
Case study
Comparative/cross cultural
Surveys
Participant – observation
Experiment
Statistics
Mathematics
Common sense
The interdisciplinary approach
Note that…
Often, social scientists will use a combination of
research methods
Different social science disciplines favour different
methods
None of the research methods available to social
scientists is 100% effective or foolproof
Difficulties are compounded by problems of
subjectivity, logistics and the unpredictability of
human behaviour, the number of variables.
The task of social science