1 / 11

Context, aims and outcomes

Sociology students’ responses to pragmatic teaching of quantitative and qualitative research methods Denise Hale and Harshad Keval Canterbury Christ Church University. Context, aims and outcomes. Our Sociology Programme The L5 Research Skills Module: aims, strategies, content and assessment

brandi
Download Presentation

Context, aims and outcomes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sociology students’ responses to pragmatic teaching of quantitative and qualitative research methodsDenise Hale and Harshad KevalCanterbury Christ Church University

  2. Context, aims and outcomes • Our Sociology Programme • The L5 Research Skills Module: aims, strategies, content and assessment • Student responses to the module: work patterns; specific likes and dislikes; attitudes; attainment • Comparisons with some data from a control group

  3. Relevance and effects of context • Characteristics of our Sociology Programme • Research interests of staff • Introduction of research modules at L4 and L5 • Debates aboutthe design and delivery of the L5 Research Skills Module

  4. Module aims and assessments • understanding of the nature of quantitative and qualitative methods • practical competence in obtaining and preparing social data for analysis • understanding of a range of basic methods of quantitative and qualitative data analysis • awareness of the role of software in analysing various types of data • ability to interpret and draw conclusions from data analyses and to present findings formally, both orally and in writing. • awareness of how to obtain primary and secondary data • ability to read social science research papers • ability to formulate a variety of social science research questions and match them to appropriate analytical techniques • competence in presenting arguments based on quantitative and qualitative information, using appropriate computer systems for analysis and display • ability to work independently on a small project involving the identification of research questions; data gathering; data analysis, such as correlation or thematic qualitative analysis; and the production of a brief report • a clear awareness of the ethical issues and requirements of research.

  5. Teaching strategy, content & assessment

  6. Students’ reactions during the module

  7. Students’ final comments and evaluation More • suggestions for project topics • help with project design • time on qualitative analysis • statistics content • opportunities to practice writing Less independent study

  8. Students’ attitudes: rating scale data A questionnaire based on items from the Payne, Hodgkinson & Poade (2008) survey on attitudes toward quantitative methods Respondents were students from 2 modules within Sociology • Research Skills (n=10) • Social Psychology: Groups and Minds (n=10)

  9. Student attainment Outcomes for the class test and project: Number of students by class of degree

  10. Comparisons with performance on other modules

  11. Our conclusions Free choice of research topics is not conducive to learning at L5 • most students experience anxiety and failure at the outset • tutors are overloaded • students become insular, with minimal peer support/learning • the team-work experience of real research is absent There is merit in traditional methods: lectures & worksheets • students can work effectively at different paces • there are more opportunities for review and support A greater proportion of taught sessions is needed to support students on a demanding module during the ‘sophomore slump’

More Related