SOCIOLOGY 313: SOCIOLOGICAL RESEARCH METHODS
SOCIOLOGY 313: SOCIOLOGICAL RESEARCH METHODS
W 4:00pm – 6:50pm (61481)
FALL 2013
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Professor: Dr. Emir Estrada
Office: HSH 221
Office Hours: Wednesday 2:00-4:00 or by appointment
Email: emir.estrada@usc.edu
Course Description
In this course you will be introduced to the research methodologies most frequently employed in sociological research. You will learn to develop research questions and understand the principles of conceptualization, measurement, sampling, and causality. This intensive course provides introductory training in data collection, management, and processing. Students will develop their own survey, analyze existing survey data, conduct ethnographic observations, and collect in-depth interview data. By the end of the course, students will be better prepared to conduct their own sociological research and evaluate existing research.
Class Policies
As with any class, students should behave in a professional and respectful manner. Below are the class policies.
1. Arrive on time. Excessive tardiness is a major disruption and will decrease your class attendance grade.
2. Cell phones should be turned completely off. Texting is prohibited and will decrease your class participation grade.
3. Computers should be used only for taking notes. If you use a computer it should be employed for taking course notes only. In other words, Facebooking, tweeting, shopping on Amazon, watching sports highlights, and email checking are not allowed. Repeated incidents of Facebooking, emailing, and web surfing will result in a low attendance/participation grade as it is distracting to other students and disrespectful to the professor. The repeat, unauthorized use of computers will lower your class participation grade and ultimately, your cumulative grade. If this causes problems I will ask you to leave class.
4. Talking with other students during class and other disruptive behavior will not be tolerated—it is disrespectful to your classmates and the Professor, and detracts from our goal of mastering course material. Incessant chatter will decrease your class participation grade.
5. Respect others’ opinions and comments. Respect is integral to the class as this course deals with controversial topics about which people have strong views and assumptions. This course is about facts, theories, and arguments drawn from cutting edge, peer-reviewed research. I welcome discussion but I expect you to be courteous, respectful, and professional in your conduct at all times. I will work to make sure that all students enjoy a distraction-free, civil, and supportive environment in which to learn and express their ideas—this means listening to others’ ideas and addressing them respectfully. You will be asked to leave class if you are disrespectful to the professor or your colleagues.
Academic Integrity
Academic honesty is fundamental to the activities and principles of a university and this class. The professor is required to uphold and enforce the rules against cheating, dishonest conduct, plagiarism and collusion (working secretly in groups). Students who submit work that is not entirely their own or that is improperly cited will be subject to the University’s academic dishonesty policies. The guide for avoiding plagiarism can be found here: . Please read the guide so that you are aware of what counts as academic honesty and plagiarism, and/or ask the Professor for clarification.
Communication
It is the student’s responsibility to frequently check their e-mail and Blackboard for any class communications. Do not contact me via email with last minute questions about exams and assignments or other matters relating to the class. Such matters should be resolved during office hours. We will not answer substantive questions related to tests or assignments via email. Absolutely no assignments will be accepted via e-mail.
Course Requirements
Attendance and active in-class participation in seminar discussion………………..….10%
In-class pop quizzes (4)………….……………………..……….………….……….....20%
Assignment 1: Research Proposal……………………………………………………....8%
Assignment 2: Field Notes………………………………………………………..…….5%
Assignment 3: One Transcribed Interview………………………………………..…...10%
Interview guide must be approved prior to conducting the interview…..2%
Class Presentation: ………………………………………………………………...……5%
In-class midterm…….……….………….………….………………………………….20%
Final Empirical Research Paper………….………..…….…………………………….20%
Attendance and In-Class Participation – This class is based on active student participation in class discussions. You are expected to attend every class meeting prepared to discuss the assigned reading. Attendance, in-class participation and presentations account for 10% of your grade and include: (1) active and informed in-class participation that demonstrates a thoughtful reading of the course material; (2) a short presentation (co-facilitation style) of an assigned article. It is your responsibility to read all course materials prior to class. Attendance will be taken at the beginning of each class. It is your responsibility to make sure you sign the roll sheet. Do not sign the roll sheet for your classmates. You will not receive full attendance points if you are tardy, if you sign the role sheet late, or you are not present for the entire class.
Do not overlook the importance of participation and attendance in calculating your grade. This grade is based on the number of class meetings you attend and will increase or decrease depending on your active participation and/or behavior in class. You are allowed two excused absences. Beyond this, absences totaling 3 meetings will result in a direct penalty of one point off of your participation grade and 4 meetings will result in a penalty of two points off of your grade, and so on. Absences totaling more than two weeks’ worth of meetings will undermine the participation/attendance mark, resulting in a severe reduction in the final grade. Absences in excess of three weeks' worth of classes will not only further reduce the final grade but may well necessitate withdrawal from the course, since at that point it is unlikely that benefit may be derived from the class.
In-Class Quizzes – Five in-class pop quizzes will be administered randomly and will test your knowledge of the week’s readings. They will be given at the start of class and no make-ups will be allowed. You may not receive credit for a pop quiz if you arrive late to class after the quiz has begun. The lowest grade will be dropped.
Assignments – All assignments are to be uploaded to Blackboard via Turnitin, which will generate an originality report to guard against plagiarism. A hard copy is also required. All assignments are to be double-spaced (excluding the interview transcript) with one-inch margins, 12 point font and stapled. All assignments should have your name, email, student ID and assignment title in the heading. Include page numbers. Hard copies may be printed front and back in order to save paper. Deviating from these specifications will result in point deductions. More details are provided at the end of the syllabus.
In-Class Presentation of Research Findings
You will give a ten-minute presentation of your research project and findings. The purpose of this activity is to have you practice how sociological research is presented at professional conferences such as the American Sociological Association (ASA) or the Pacific Sociological Association (PSA). More details are provided at the end of the syllabus.
In-class Midterm
The midterm will be some combination of multiple choice, definition, short answer and essay. The exam is closed book, in-class exams for which you will need a blue book and scantron form. There will be no makeup midterm unless you have a documented medical reason, or some other (verifiable) emergency, or unless the dates conflict with a religious holiday, or military service. Please notify Prof. Estrada two weeks in advance to reschedule due to religious holiday or military service.
Final Empirical Research Paper
The final will consist of a15-20 page report of your original research. You must follow the traditional journal format which includes the following sections: 1) Abstract, 2) Introduction, 3) Literature review, 4) Methodology, 5) Findings, 6) Conclusion, 7) Bibliography. This will be an on-going project that you will start putting together from the first day of class. You will receive more details on how to complete your final empirical research paper at every class meeting.
Note: Please be aware that any papers, assignments or exams handed in after the due date will not be accepted or graded.
***Nitpicking over points is discouraged as this reflects the prioritization of the grade over learning. No late assignments are accepted.
Grade Rubric
95%-100%=A 87%-89=B+ 77%-79%=C+ 67%-69%=D+
83%-86%=B 73%-76%=C 63%-66%-=D
90%-94%=A- 80%-82%=B- 70%-72%=C- 60%-62%=D-
Appealing Your Grade
If you feel that an evaluation of an assignment or exam does not fairly reflect its quality and you wish for the professor to reconsider it, you will need to submit: 1) your graded assignment and 2) a typed letter explaining point by point why you believe the grade you received does not accurately reflect the quality of your work given the requirements of the assignment. You must submit these items to the professor’s mailbox within one week of the date the graded assignment was handed back. The letter must be date stamped. Please note that if you ask the professor to reevaluate your work, your new grade may be lower than the original. Keep all returned work in the event that you have a grade dispute. If you cannot provide a copy of the returned work, the grade in the grade book stands.
Additional things that will bring down your grade are disruptive behavior; disrespect towards your professor or peers; comments that reveal a lack of preparation; sleeping in class; excessive tardiness, texting, facebooking, excessive absences, web surfing, and any other unprofessional or distracting behaviors. Excessive absences and constant disruptive behavior will result in a failing class participation grade. Do not assume that you will receive full participation credit merely for showing up to class. You must also thoughtfully participate in class discussions.
Extra Credit – There will be extra credit opportunities announced over the course of the semester. These typically include attending campus events related to immigration issues.
You must sign in at the event and write a 1 page summary of the event and how it relates to the class. Your write-up is due in my mailbox by one week after the event. Each event can earn you 1 point of extra credit and you can only earn a total of two extra credits.
JEP Service Learning Opportunity & LURN Internship Learning Opportunity
These are two separate extra credit opportunities. Students cannot get extra credit for both. Students who become JEP volunteers or LURN interns will write a three-page report of their experience. Your report is due at the beginning of the last day of class. Based on the recommendation of the JEP and LURN supervisor and your report, you will receive a grade increase. For example, if you earned a final grade of a B- for the class, your JEP service will boost your grade to a solid B. More details are provided on blackboard.
Required Books: All books are available at the USC bookstore
Chambliss, Daniel and Russell K. Schutt (2013). Making Sense of the Social World:
Methods of Investigation (4th Edition). Los Angeles: Sage.
Emerson, Robert M., Rachel I. Fretz, and Linda L. Shaw (1995). Writing Ethnographic
Fieldnotes (2nd Edition). Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Readings marked with an * are available on blackboard.
Weekly Reading Schedule
The following illustrates the weekly subjects/topics and the required readings. Readings should be completed prior to the class lectures and discussion sections (i.e. preferably before Monday of each week – so that you are prepared for your discussion section). All dates are approximates and subject to change. Students will be adequately informed should any scheduling changes occur.
|Week 1: Introduction to Sociological Research Methods |Due Dates |
|August 28 |Reading: Chambliss and Schutt. Ch. 1 | |
| | | |
| |Class expectations and objectives | |
| |Syllabus | |
| |Assignments | |
| |Workshop: Ideas for research projects | |
|Week 2: Research and Ethics and Research Proposal |
|September 4 |Readings: |Research Topic Due |
| |Chambliss and Schutt. Ch. 3 | |
| |*Allen (2009) | |
| |Chambliss and Schutt. Ch. 12 (264-271) | |
| | | |
| |Lab: CITI Certification | |
|Week 3: Research Design and Reading Social Research |
|September 11 |Readings: |Draft of Research Proposal Due: Bring|
| |Chambliss and Schutt. Ch. 2 |5 copies to share with classmates |
| |Chambliss and Schutt. Ch. 4 | |
| | | |
| |Workshop: Research Proposal | |
|Week 4: Survey Research |
|September 18 |Readings: |Guest Speaker: |
| |Chambliss and Schutt. Ch. 7 |Katharin Peter, Sociology Librarian |
| |*Fink, Arlene, et al. (2003). | |
| | | |
| |Lab: Create On-line Survey | |
|Week 5: Sampling |
|September 25 |Readings: |Final Research Proposal Due |
| |Chambliss and Schutt. Ch 5 | |
| |*Reeves (2010): Gatekeepers | |
| | | |
| |Workshop: Discuss entering your site | |
| |Documentary: Super Size Me | |
|Week 6: Traditions in Qualitative Field Research |
| |Readings: | |
| |Chambliss and Schutt. Ch 9 | |
| |*Hurts (1991): Extended Case Method | |
| |* Charmaz (2001): Grounded Theory: | |
| | | |
| |Lab: Coding exercise | |
|Week 7: Semi-Structured Interview Questions |
|October 9 |Readings: |Bring earphones and digital recorder |
| |*Rubin and Rubin. (2012) Ch 5, 6 & 7 | |
| |*Gonzalez-Lopez (2004) | |
| | | |
| |Lab: Create face sheet and interview guide / Transcribe part of | |
| |an interview | |
|Week 8: Midterm |
|October 16 |Midterm (one hour) |Interview Guide Due |
| |15 minute coffee break | |
| | |Bring 5 copies of your interview |
| |Workshop: Interview Guide |guide |
|Week 9: Ethnography |
|October 23 |Readings: | |
| |Emerson et al. (1995). Ch. 1, 2 and 3 | |
| | | |
| |Lab: Create IRB form / Consent form | |
|Week 10: Ethnography / Fieldnotes |
|October 30 |Readings |Fieldnotes Exercise: Bring |
| |Emerson et al. (1995). Ch 4, 5 and 6 |comfortable shoes a small notepad and|
| | |a pen. |
| |Field Work: Observing, jotting and taking field notes in the | |
| |cafeteria | |
|Week 11: Becoming a Critical Researcher: Reflexivity, Standpoint, and Power |
|November 6 |*Barber (2008) |Interview transcript or field notes |
| |*Flores (2011) |Due |
| |*Baca Zinn (2001) | |
| | |Bring 5 copies of your transcribed |
| |Workshop: Code your interviews or field notes |interviews or field notes |
|Week 12: Doing Research with Vulnerable Populations |
|November 13 |*Estrada (2013) |Interview transcript or field notes |
| |*Thorne (2001) |Due |
| | | |
| |Workshop: Discuss how to present a paper | |
|Week 13: Student Presentations |
|November 20 |In-class presentations |Printout of power point presentation |
| | |due. |
| | |Bring your power point presentation |
| | |on a flash drive. |
|Week 14: Holiday |
|November 27 |Thanksgiving |No class |
|Week 15: / Student Presentations |
|December 4 |In-class presentations |Bring your power point presentation |
|The final research paper is due on December 11 at 10:00a.m. |Final Examination |
|You must upload your final via TURNITIN and also place a time-stamped hard copy in my mailbox by the due date and time. Both of |
|these conditions must be met in order to receive a grade. Late exams will not be accepted or graded. NOTE: This due date may change|
|depending on the final exam schedule. |
|*I reserve the right to amend this syllabus* |
Assignment 1: Research Proposal
The main purpose of this assignment is for you to start developing a PLAN to conduct your own original research. What is it you plan to investigate? Why are you interested in this research? What are you research questions? Why is it important to conduct this study? What do you think you will find? How will you conduct your study? What research methods will you use? These are some of the questions you will address in this assignment. You will also need to provide a review of the literature. You will have an opportunity to workshop your proposal in class before the due date.
Assignment 2: Field Notes
For this assignment, you will need to go to your research site and take at least one hour of field notes. One hour of observations can produce at least 5 single spaced pages of notes. I will require a minimum of three single spaced pages and no more than 5 pages.
Please include the following:
A. Header
Your Name (This is an individual assignment)
Name of Field Site (give it a name) Example: Sorority Meeting
Date you conducted the observations
Time in the field
Total time in the field
B. Research Questions
Write down your research questions from your proposal.
C: Body
The body of your field notes should include the following:
1st Paragraph: Arranging the visit. Describe how you arranged the visit to your site. Who was the gatekeeper or contact person? Were they hesitant? Did they ask you any questions? Was it difficult or easy to gain access? Why? What ethical procedures did you follow?
2nd Paragraph: Describe the place. Show what you see do not tell what you see.
D: Reflections
Identify themes that relate to your research questions and start making theoretical and empirical connections. Were your assumptions confirmed or were you surprised by anything you saw or heard during your fieldwork experience?
If you do NOT have a site: Some of you might not have a site to conduct observations. If this is the case, you have the following options.
1. Go back to the student union and take field note for an hour. Theoretically sample for the themes and concepts we discussed in our previous class. Follow the same format as described above. Instead of writing down the research questions state what you are theoretically sampling for.
2. You can also volunteer to help take notes for someone in class who does have a research site. This will give you experience in taking notes and will fulfill the assignment requirement. Most importantly, it will produce more data for the student with a research site.
Assignment 3: One Transcribed Interview
The draft interview guide will be worth 2% of your grade, and must be cleared by the professor before you can conduct the interview. You must also list the name (a pseudonym is fine), age, generational status, national origin and your sampling method (how you obtained your interview) of the person you are interviewing. The draft schedule is due at the start of class on the date indicated in the course outline. You must also attend the in-class workshop schedule on week 8.
Once accepted, you will use your interview guide to interview at least 5 respondents for 30-90 minutes. Request permission to tape the interview. Do not use a cell phone to record the interview, but a tape recorder. Explain that the interview is confidential – no one other than you will know their name. Type up the entire interview. On the first page, list all demographic information about your respondent (age, national origin, education, occupation, education of parents, occupation of parents, etc.). Write one paragraph describing your experience and 1-2 paragraphs analyzing some of the most interesting parts of the interview using at least two class theories and concepts. Then launch into the transcription. The interview transcript, a CD or thumb drive containing the voice file of your interview (clearly label your sound file with your name and ID number, place in an envelope, and staple to your assignment), along with your one page data analysis, is due at the start of class, on the date indicated in the course outline. You must upload the interview transcript and reflection via the Turnitin link on Blackboard AND place a hardcopy in my mailbox before class begins on the date indicated in the course outline OR bring your assignment to class. Please note that no late assignments will be accepted. Although I expect you to transcribe all of the interviews, I will only require one transcript for this assignment.
**PLEASE NOTE: Even if you receive a high grade on your interview guide, this does not mean that you will conduct an A+ interview. The questionnaire is A GUIDE and it is up to you to make your respondent feel comfortable and to get your respondent to open up by probing thoughtfully and asking follow-up questions to unearth the mechanisms that illuminate the three main themes.
Evaluation: The interview transcription and reflection is worth a total of 10 points. The demographic profile and transcription is worth 5 points. You will be evaluated on your demographic profile, how well you thought out your questionnaire, how well you gathered information from the respondent (that is, providing them with a pleasant interview experience that also provides lots of data), and how well you probed and followed up for information. The remaining 5 points are allotted for the one page response. You must correctly apply at least two theories/concepts from your literature review. You will be evaluated on how well you analyze the data you have collected and whether you integrate class concepts and theories correctly.
Class Presentation
Class presentations will take place in alphabetical order. You must be ready to present on week 13. If your name is skipped because you are not ready or you are absent, you will automatically be deducted 2 points. The purpose of this in-class presentation is to learn how sociological research is presented. It is also a good opportunity to receive feedback from the professor and your peers before your final paper is due. You will only have 15 minutes for your presentation. This is standard time for most sociological conference presentations.
Your presentation should include the following:
Slide 1: Title Page
Title of your article
Name of the researcher
Name of the institution (USC)
Date of the presentation
Slide 2: Background/ Literature Review
What are the gaps in the literature or the theory you are using?
What have other scholars studied and how does your study contribute to that
specific body of literature?
Slide 3: Research Questions
What are your research questions? (I am not asking for your interview guide)
Slide 4: Methodology
What methods did you use to answer your research questions?
How did you get access?
Slide 5, 6, 7:Findings
Share two or three key findings
Slide 8: Concluding Remarks
Limitations of your study
Contributions to the literature or theory
You will give me a printout of your power point in order to receive a grade on the date indicated on the class schedule. When you print your power point, make sure you print six slides per sheet. Do not print in color.
Final Empirical Research Paper
The final will consist of a15-20 page report of your original research. You must follow the traditional journal format which includes the following sections: 1) Abstract, 2) Introduction, 3) Literature review, 4) Methodology, 5) Findings, 6) Conclusion, 7) Bibliography. This will be an on-going project that you will start putting together from the first day of class. All of the assignment are designed to help you advanced your research paper. You will receive more details on how to complete your final empirical research paper at every class meeting. Below is a general outline you should follow:
Abstract (one page)
Mention the body of literature or theory that you are addressing. What is your sample size? Who did you interview and how many people did you interview? What methods did you use ( Interviews, participant observations, surveys)? What are your key findings? Mention at least three key findings.
Introduction (one page)
Start your essay with a hook. You can use a vignette from your interview or field observation, an interesting statistic or you can identify a gap in the field. Make sure you state your research questions. In a couple of sentences tell the reader what methods you will use. (Ex: In order to answer these questions I conducted 10 interviews and 20 hours of participant observations with…. )
Literature Review (3-4 pages)
What have other scholars written about your research topic? Cite at least five studies.
Methodology (3-4 pages)
Tell the reader how you conducted your study. Unlike the abstract and the introduction, this is the section where you need to be more specific about your methodology. How many interviews did you conduct? How and where did you conduct them? Did you conduct participant observation? How many hours? How did you take notes? What method did you use to code your notes? Did you conduct surveys? How many did you send out, how many did you get back? How did you administer the surveys? In person, on-line, mail, phone. What kind of questions did you ask? How did you enter the field? How did you recruit your respondents? Describe your sample (age, gender, profession, how do they look, dress, talk etc.) Describe your site (look at your field notes). Be reflexive of your own position and stance. How can you assure reliability and validity of your study? You must cite at least five readings from our class.
Findings (5-6 pages)
Organize your finding by themes. Remind the reader of your research questions. Tell us what you found! Make sure you ground your study.
Conclusion (1-2 pages)
Remind the reader why your study is important. Summarize your findings. What are the limitations of your study? What should other scholars explore next?
Bibliography
Include at least 10 references. Five articles must be from class and five articles from your own literature review. Feel free to include more references. You must follow ASA style.
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