Deck 2: Doing Sociology: Research Methods

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Question
Riding in unmarked police cars to collect data on drug dealers is using:

A) a longitudinal survey.
B) a laboratory experiment.
C) participant observation.
D) a semi-structured interview.
E) secondary observation.
Use Space or
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Question
Which of the following is a statement of causality?

A) Rural areas have fewer services than urban areas.
B) This sociology course is difficult.
C) Poverty produces low self-esteem.
D) Mean income in New York is higher than mean income in Florida.
E) On average, more persons are murdered in Texas than Arizona.
Question
Failure to achieve a representative sample is known as:

A) researcher bias.
B) sampling error.
C) subjectivity.
D) stratified sampling.
E) all of the above
Question
Social class background is a good predictor of achievement in school. In this statement, achievement in school is the:

A) independent variable.
B) dependent variable.
C) significant variable.
D) control variable.
Question
When two variables are related but one does not cause the other, researchers term the situation:

A) a validity.
B) an association.
C) a bias.
D) a reliability.
E) an establishment.
Question
Sociologists utilizing the Census, the FBI statistics, or statistics from the Department of Labor would be engaged in which type of data collection method?

A) participant observation
B) survey research
C) experiments
D) secondary analysis
Question
Using a structured interview:

A) might allow useful information to be ignored or lost.
B) guarantees that useful information will not be lost.
C) guarantees that researchers bias will not affect the study.
D) provides results that are valid.
E) provides the only true method of achieving reliability.
Question
People are selected from a group in such a way that every person has the same chance of being selected. The people who are selected make up what type of sample?

A) representative
B) random
C) stratified
D) cross-sectional
E) unintentional
Question
A major drawback of open-ended interviews is that:

A) some interviews may not cover topics important to the research project.
B) information obtained will be somewhat different for each subject, and therefore unreliable.
C) researchers continuously have to make up new questions.
D) analysis of the information is a complex and time-consuming process.
E) respondents do not like open-ended interviews.
Question
In the early 1960s, sociologist Herbert Gans moved into a newly developed suburb in New Jersey where he lived for two years, observing and interviewing his neighbors. In research terms, Gans conducted a _____ study.

A) documentary
B) experimental
C) survey
D) participant observation
E) secondary analysis
Question
Cigarette smoking has been shown to be related to lung disease. This proposition includes:

A) a statement of bias against smoking.
B) a statement of association.
C) no independent variable.
D) all of the above
E) none of the above
Question
Bob grew up in the church, where he proposed to study ethics in church finance. He found it difficult to say anything negative or critical about the people who were part of his community, even when he discovered some financial manipulations by members of the congregation. Which of the following is a potential problem in this study?

A) a high degree of subject object conflict
B) unintentional bias created by the emotional attachment of the researcher to subjects
C) a frequent inability to get at the subtleties and nuances of social interaction
D) differences between generations in experience
E) Selecting what to report as significant is normal, so there is no problem.
Question
In what type of interview does the investigator ask a list of questions, but is free to vary them or make up new questions on topics that take on importance during the course of the interview?

A) a structured interview
B) an open-ended interview
C) an invalid experiment
D) a participant observation
E) subject to interviewer bias
Question
Which of the following research designs is least used by sociologists?

A) survey research
B) participant observation
C) controlled experiment
D) structured interview
E) secondary analysis
Question
On average, the taller a person is, the more she or he is likely to weigh. The evidence for this statement would most likely be:

A) a statement causality.
B) random insight.
C) an examination of the first ten persons walking into a classroom in a non-biased way.
D) a statement of association.
E) a firm biological relationship.
Question
In a recent national survey, it was learned that the grade point average of college seniors was correlated with their class attendance. In that study, the independent variable was:

A) class attendance.
B) class rank, e.g., senior status.
C) grade point average.
D) the national survey.
Question
A variable is:

A) anything that can change.
B) a testable statement about the relationship between two or more hypotheses.
C) a factor that always remains constant.
D) a statement of association.
E) a fact given a definition in a research process.
Question
Men who live in cities are more likely to marry young than men who live in the country. In this hypothesis, the dependent variable is the:

A) place of residence (city or country).
B) marital status (single or married).
C) age at marriage.
D) sex.
E) There is no dependent variable in this example.
Question
The main advantage of experiments in social research is that:

A) people tend to act more naturally in laboratory settings.
B) researchers have control over the variables of the study.
C) interactions of large groups can easily be studied.
D) it is the least expensive form of research design.
E) subjects respond most honestly.
Question
In research, a sample is defined as:

A) all the people who share a particular characteristic of research interest.
B) two or more people who share the same values.
C) the portion of the total population chosen for study.
D) the one case or person that best represents a particular social category.
E) a small group of volunteers for the study.
Question
You just read a study which reports that marijuana use leads to heroin addiction. After a careful examination of the literature, you are unable to find any other researcher who has been able to duplicate these results. You may conclude that this study lacks:

A) reliability.
B) representation.
C) cohesiveness.
D) validity.
E) legality.
Question
Select the appropriate group to create a stratified random sample of students at your school.

A) 300 students selected at random
B) all the low-income students enrolled in the college
C) all racial and religious groups represented in proportion to their numbers at the college
D) every fifth student selected from an alphabetical listing of names
E) blind picking of students standing outside of a student union building
Question
Knowing the source of the information in a statistical table can help you:

A) identify other references of the same data.
B) determine if the data collection agent had a background in sociology.
C) determine of the data has been previously used elsewhere.
D) determine other ways to collect the same data.
E) decide if the information is reliable.
Question
Validity refers to:

A) the quality of consistency in measurement.
B) the extent to which the researcher measured what she had planned to measure.
C) the manner in which the researcher has operationalizing variables.
D) the sum of independent and dependent variables.
E) the lack of researcher bias which can be demonstrated statistically.
Question
Objectivity requires a social researcher to:

A) assume a completely neutral stance toward the issue under investigation.
B) recognize and attempt to control for bias.
C) manipulate the research subjects as if they were inanimate objects.
D) disguise any personal bias that they might have.
E) sign statements agreeing to remove all personal bias from their research.
Question
You just proved a research hypothesis false. As a sociologist, how should you treat this?

A) When a hypothesis is false, you should double check your sample for errors.
B) Hypothesis testing is flawed by nature, so you should try again until things fit.
C) False hypotheses are rare, so this finding is itself worth keeping.
D) Proving a hypothesis false helps to eliminate wrong answers and clarify research.
E) A hypothesis that is false in one sense may be true in another.
Question
Find the mean of the following quiz scores: 12, 24, 36, 47, 57, 100.

A) 24
B) 100
C) 46
D) 87
E) 57
Question
In a research study, investigators at one of the study sites are not told what is actually being tested, nor are they told who the research subjects are. This is an example of:

A) double-blind technique.
B) random sampling.
C) poor research design.
D) biased research techniques.
E) a controlled experiment.
Question
Find the mode of the following quiz scores: 45, 77, 65, 67, 51, 98, 51, 77, 79, 69, 86, 83, 77, 99, 98, 54, 68, 77, 93, 94, 72, 77.

A) 68
B) 77
C) 68.5
D) 72
E) 79.4
Question
Find the mode of the following quiz scores: 92, 84, 76, 92, 87, 100.

A) 84
B) 87
C) 76
D) 92
E) 100
Question
Which measure of central tendency is most useful when there is a relatively narrow range of figures?

A) median
B) mode
C) mean
D) mentor
E) merit
Question
_____ refers to consistency of results in research; _____ refers to the appropriateness of a measure to the phenomenon being studied.

A) Reliability; validity
B) Validity; reliability
C) Representative; validity
D) Reliability; objectivity
E) Neutrality; validity
Question
Max Weber argued that sociologists need to:

A) become more personally involved in their research.
B) rely on their morals to decide which scientific findings should be accepted as true.
C) clearly state their personal values before beginning their research study.
D) refrain from including their personal values into the research process.
E) take on research for those social causes for which they are certain to help society s powerless persons who have no other spokesperson.
Question
You are reading a statistical table. What part of that table would help you make a decision as to the reliability of the table s information?

A) source
B) title
C) footnotes
D) column and row labels
E) publication date
Question
The use of blind or double-blind investigators in a study is done to avoid:

A) sampling error.
B) sample bias.
C) uncontrollable variables.
D) researcher bias.
E) random error.
Question
You would like to do a study of household size among the population of the state of Illinois. Which type of study method would be appropriate?

A) unstructured interviews
B) cross-sectional study
C) longitudinal study
D) scientific experiment
E) participant observation
Question
The midway point in a series of scores or figures resulting in half of the scores being above and half being below is called the:

A) mean.
B) median.
C) mode.
D) meridian.
E) moderate.
Question
What type of research did Emile Durkheim depend on in his classic study on suicide?

A) primary research
B) public research
C) qualitative research
D) secondary research
E) Durkheim did analysis, not research.
Question
Find the median of the following quiz scores: 14, 5, 5, 4, 4, 18, 12, 7, 14, 10, 6.

A) 5
B) 7
C) 10
D) 14
E) 18
Question
This measure of central tendency is commonly referred to as the average .

A) median
B) mode
C) mean
D) mentor
E) merit
Question
It is clear that a large survey is an appropriate method for a study of marriage patterns among college students. What will the researcher need to do to insure that the research sample is random?

A) Ask as many people as possible.
B) Ask more than one group of people; try to get all the groups in.
C) Set up the experiment to include a control sample to test the research sample.
D) Distribute the surveys in a non-biased manner.
E) Make sure that everyone eligible to participate has an equal chance of being selected.
Question
Which of the following represents an advantage of social surveys?

A) There is often a low response rate.
B) The laboratory setting creates an artificial social environment.
C) Findings are open to interpretation and can support researcher bias.
D) Data can be quantified and comparisons between groups can be made.
E) There is no likelihood of flawed data.
Question
Longitudinal research investigates characteristics of a population over time.
Question
A student decided to experiment with what happens when normal expectations are broken. He took some items from another person s basket and counted them on the floor. He then wrote down how the other person responded. What is the student s method of finding data?

A) questionnaire distributed after the research act
B) observation
C) action research
D) scientific small experiment
E) controlled experiment
Question
The first step in the research process is to develop one or more hypotheses.
Question
The researcher engaged in secondary data analysis may use the same data for a new study and a different purpose.
Question
Ethical considerations that must be part of a sociologist s research include:

A) striving to protect the rights and privacy of participants.
B) promising anonymity to investigators.
C) ensuring that participants accept all findings.
D) ensuring that results will support the hypothesis.
E) promising to present all theoretical ideas on a subject.
Question
Researcher bias is the tendency to select data that supports the researcher s hypothesis.
Question
A survey of employed women must include people of different ages. To make sure the results of such a survey are representative of all employed women in the society, you should use which of the following?

A) a stratified sample
B) longitudinal data
C) interviews with union and non-union employees
D) a sample based on high school placement records
E) a pure random sample
Question
Searching for the definition of love by comparing cultural definitions helps to:

A) prevent people from giving false information or the wrong answer.
B) point the way to the proper sample of lovers for study.
C) create multiple categories of definitions of the term love that can fit in one study.
D) call into question whether love actually exists.
E) establish an empirical definition for research.
Question
An open-ended interview is often more flexible than other forms of survey data because the format can be varied, changed, or modified while it is in progress.
Question
A dependent variable changes in response to changes in the independent variable.
Question
Which of the following represents an advantage of participant observation research?

A) Questionnaires can be used for large numbers of people.
B) It is easy to replicate.
C) Data can be quantified and comparisons made.
D) It allows people to be observed in their natural environments.
E) There is no likelihood of flawed data.
Question
In the hypothesis poverty produces low self-esteem, poverty is the dependent variable.
Question
Secondary data analysis is used when the researcher has collected data for the second time.
Question
Random sampling is a technique where a random number of people are selected from any size group by a researcher in a particular geographic location.
Question
Which of the following represents an advantage of a secondary analysis?

A) Questionnaires can be used for large numbers of people.
B) The laboratory creates an artificial social environment.
C) It is time-consuming
D) It saves time and money.
E) There is no likelihood of flawed data.
Question
Dr. Tom is doing research about the vampire in American society. What is the first problem he must solve before he selects a research design method?

A) People have such strong reactions to vampires that an objective index will be hard to write.
B) Vampires do not exist, so how can this be an empirical study?
C) Can a big enough selection of cases related to vampires be identified for research?
D) How many variables are related to vampires?
E) What is the operational definition of a vampire in this research?
Question
Social scientists regard deception of research participants as:

A) unimportant unless the research participant protests.
B) only an issue if the participants are children.
C) a practice to avoid if at all possible.
D) nothing to worry about.
E) only an issue if the participants are senior citizens.
Question
Independent and dependent variables are found in statements of causality; however, they are not necessary for statements of association.
Question
Secondary analysis cannot be used as the basis for a longitudinal study.
Question
Blind investigations are a standard method for dealing with researcher bias.
Question
A discovery made by accident and not accounted for in the original research design must be placed aside and not reported. This protects the integrity of the original design.
Question
Research is reliable when the same technique produces the same results on a consistent basis.
Question
After starting a research project and gaining consent from your subjects, you discover that the machine you are using to project social party sounds for interpretation can damage the subjects hearing. You must stop the study right away.
Question
In a random sample, every element sampled has an equal chance of being either selected or not selected.
Question
The mean, or average, becomes a valuable measure of central tendency when the data include extreme figures or scores.
Question
The ethical research guidelines regulate Internet-based surveys because they are so popular.
Question
Internet researchers do not need to follow the same guidelines for protecting human subjects because everything is virtual.
Question
During a double-blind investigation, both the investigators and their subjects are unaware of the hypothesis being tested.
Question
Participant observers attempt to get to know as much as possible about all members of the group being studied.
Question
Current federal regulations require that social researchers obtain informed consent from people who volunteer to be part of a research project.
Question
The mode is the number that occurs most often in a data set.
Question
Once informed consent is given, a volunteer subject cannot withdraw from the study.
Question
Row and column labels tell you exactly what information is contained in a table.
Question
It is acceptable to hide the purpose of your study from potential subjects if they will give you more information that way.
Question
Representative samples have strong advantages over many other forms of sampling in allowing researchers to generalize their findings to larger populations of people they are studying.
Question
The way to ensure that a sample is representative of the population being studied is to try to incorporate as many members of the population as possible.
Question
If only information that supports the research hypothesis is published, researcher bias has occurred.
Question
The median is the number that occurs most often in a data set.
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Deck 2: Doing Sociology: Research Methods
1
Riding in unmarked police cars to collect data on drug dealers is using:

A) a longitudinal survey.
B) a laboratory experiment.
C) participant observation.
D) a semi-structured interview.
E) secondary observation.
C
2
Which of the following is a statement of causality?

A) Rural areas have fewer services than urban areas.
B) This sociology course is difficult.
C) Poverty produces low self-esteem.
D) Mean income in New York is higher than mean income in Florida.
E) On average, more persons are murdered in Texas than Arizona.
C
3
Failure to achieve a representative sample is known as:

A) researcher bias.
B) sampling error.
C) subjectivity.
D) stratified sampling.
E) all of the above
B
4
Social class background is a good predictor of achievement in school. In this statement, achievement in school is the:

A) independent variable.
B) dependent variable.
C) significant variable.
D) control variable.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
When two variables are related but one does not cause the other, researchers term the situation:

A) a validity.
B) an association.
C) a bias.
D) a reliability.
E) an establishment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Sociologists utilizing the Census, the FBI statistics, or statistics from the Department of Labor would be engaged in which type of data collection method?

A) participant observation
B) survey research
C) experiments
D) secondary analysis
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Using a structured interview:

A) might allow useful information to be ignored or lost.
B) guarantees that useful information will not be lost.
C) guarantees that researchers bias will not affect the study.
D) provides results that are valid.
E) provides the only true method of achieving reliability.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
People are selected from a group in such a way that every person has the same chance of being selected. The people who are selected make up what type of sample?

A) representative
B) random
C) stratified
D) cross-sectional
E) unintentional
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
A major drawback of open-ended interviews is that:

A) some interviews may not cover topics important to the research project.
B) information obtained will be somewhat different for each subject, and therefore unreliable.
C) researchers continuously have to make up new questions.
D) analysis of the information is a complex and time-consuming process.
E) respondents do not like open-ended interviews.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
In the early 1960s, sociologist Herbert Gans moved into a newly developed suburb in New Jersey where he lived for two years, observing and interviewing his neighbors. In research terms, Gans conducted a _____ study.

A) documentary
B) experimental
C) survey
D) participant observation
E) secondary analysis
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Cigarette smoking has been shown to be related to lung disease. This proposition includes:

A) a statement of bias against smoking.
B) a statement of association.
C) no independent variable.
D) all of the above
E) none of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Bob grew up in the church, where he proposed to study ethics in church finance. He found it difficult to say anything negative or critical about the people who were part of his community, even when he discovered some financial manipulations by members of the congregation. Which of the following is a potential problem in this study?

A) a high degree of subject object conflict
B) unintentional bias created by the emotional attachment of the researcher to subjects
C) a frequent inability to get at the subtleties and nuances of social interaction
D) differences between generations in experience
E) Selecting what to report as significant is normal, so there is no problem.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
In what type of interview does the investigator ask a list of questions, but is free to vary them or make up new questions on topics that take on importance during the course of the interview?

A) a structured interview
B) an open-ended interview
C) an invalid experiment
D) a participant observation
E) subject to interviewer bias
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Which of the following research designs is least used by sociologists?

A) survey research
B) participant observation
C) controlled experiment
D) structured interview
E) secondary analysis
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
On average, the taller a person is, the more she or he is likely to weigh. The evidence for this statement would most likely be:

A) a statement causality.
B) random insight.
C) an examination of the first ten persons walking into a classroom in a non-biased way.
D) a statement of association.
E) a firm biological relationship.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
In a recent national survey, it was learned that the grade point average of college seniors was correlated with their class attendance. In that study, the independent variable was:

A) class attendance.
B) class rank, e.g., senior status.
C) grade point average.
D) the national survey.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
A variable is:

A) anything that can change.
B) a testable statement about the relationship between two or more hypotheses.
C) a factor that always remains constant.
D) a statement of association.
E) a fact given a definition in a research process.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Men who live in cities are more likely to marry young than men who live in the country. In this hypothesis, the dependent variable is the:

A) place of residence (city or country).
B) marital status (single or married).
C) age at marriage.
D) sex.
E) There is no dependent variable in this example.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The main advantage of experiments in social research is that:

A) people tend to act more naturally in laboratory settings.
B) researchers have control over the variables of the study.
C) interactions of large groups can easily be studied.
D) it is the least expensive form of research design.
E) subjects respond most honestly.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
In research, a sample is defined as:

A) all the people who share a particular characteristic of research interest.
B) two or more people who share the same values.
C) the portion of the total population chosen for study.
D) the one case or person that best represents a particular social category.
E) a small group of volunteers for the study.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
You just read a study which reports that marijuana use leads to heroin addiction. After a careful examination of the literature, you are unable to find any other researcher who has been able to duplicate these results. You may conclude that this study lacks:

A) reliability.
B) representation.
C) cohesiveness.
D) validity.
E) legality.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Select the appropriate group to create a stratified random sample of students at your school.

A) 300 students selected at random
B) all the low-income students enrolled in the college
C) all racial and religious groups represented in proportion to their numbers at the college
D) every fifth student selected from an alphabetical listing of names
E) blind picking of students standing outside of a student union building
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Knowing the source of the information in a statistical table can help you:

A) identify other references of the same data.
B) determine if the data collection agent had a background in sociology.
C) determine of the data has been previously used elsewhere.
D) determine other ways to collect the same data.
E) decide if the information is reliable.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Validity refers to:

A) the quality of consistency in measurement.
B) the extent to which the researcher measured what she had planned to measure.
C) the manner in which the researcher has operationalizing variables.
D) the sum of independent and dependent variables.
E) the lack of researcher bias which can be demonstrated statistically.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Objectivity requires a social researcher to:

A) assume a completely neutral stance toward the issue under investigation.
B) recognize and attempt to control for bias.
C) manipulate the research subjects as if they were inanimate objects.
D) disguise any personal bias that they might have.
E) sign statements agreeing to remove all personal bias from their research.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
You just proved a research hypothesis false. As a sociologist, how should you treat this?

A) When a hypothesis is false, you should double check your sample for errors.
B) Hypothesis testing is flawed by nature, so you should try again until things fit.
C) False hypotheses are rare, so this finding is itself worth keeping.
D) Proving a hypothesis false helps to eliminate wrong answers and clarify research.
E) A hypothesis that is false in one sense may be true in another.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Find the mean of the following quiz scores: 12, 24, 36, 47, 57, 100.

A) 24
B) 100
C) 46
D) 87
E) 57
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
In a research study, investigators at one of the study sites are not told what is actually being tested, nor are they told who the research subjects are. This is an example of:

A) double-blind technique.
B) random sampling.
C) poor research design.
D) biased research techniques.
E) a controlled experiment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Find the mode of the following quiz scores: 45, 77, 65, 67, 51, 98, 51, 77, 79, 69, 86, 83, 77, 99, 98, 54, 68, 77, 93, 94, 72, 77.

A) 68
B) 77
C) 68.5
D) 72
E) 79.4
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Find the mode of the following quiz scores: 92, 84, 76, 92, 87, 100.

A) 84
B) 87
C) 76
D) 92
E) 100
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Which measure of central tendency is most useful when there is a relatively narrow range of figures?

A) median
B) mode
C) mean
D) mentor
E) merit
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
_____ refers to consistency of results in research; _____ refers to the appropriateness of a measure to the phenomenon being studied.

A) Reliability; validity
B) Validity; reliability
C) Representative; validity
D) Reliability; objectivity
E) Neutrality; validity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Max Weber argued that sociologists need to:

A) become more personally involved in their research.
B) rely on their morals to decide which scientific findings should be accepted as true.
C) clearly state their personal values before beginning their research study.
D) refrain from including their personal values into the research process.
E) take on research for those social causes for which they are certain to help society s powerless persons who have no other spokesperson.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
You are reading a statistical table. What part of that table would help you make a decision as to the reliability of the table s information?

A) source
B) title
C) footnotes
D) column and row labels
E) publication date
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35
The use of blind or double-blind investigators in a study is done to avoid:

A) sampling error.
B) sample bias.
C) uncontrollable variables.
D) researcher bias.
E) random error.
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36
You would like to do a study of household size among the population of the state of Illinois. Which type of study method would be appropriate?

A) unstructured interviews
B) cross-sectional study
C) longitudinal study
D) scientific experiment
E) participant observation
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37
The midway point in a series of scores or figures resulting in half of the scores being above and half being below is called the:

A) mean.
B) median.
C) mode.
D) meridian.
E) moderate.
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38
What type of research did Emile Durkheim depend on in his classic study on suicide?

A) primary research
B) public research
C) qualitative research
D) secondary research
E) Durkheim did analysis, not research.
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39
Find the median of the following quiz scores: 14, 5, 5, 4, 4, 18, 12, 7, 14, 10, 6.

A) 5
B) 7
C) 10
D) 14
E) 18
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40
This measure of central tendency is commonly referred to as the average .

A) median
B) mode
C) mean
D) mentor
E) merit
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41
It is clear that a large survey is an appropriate method for a study of marriage patterns among college students. What will the researcher need to do to insure that the research sample is random?

A) Ask as many people as possible.
B) Ask more than one group of people; try to get all the groups in.
C) Set up the experiment to include a control sample to test the research sample.
D) Distribute the surveys in a non-biased manner.
E) Make sure that everyone eligible to participate has an equal chance of being selected.
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42
Which of the following represents an advantage of social surveys?

A) There is often a low response rate.
B) The laboratory setting creates an artificial social environment.
C) Findings are open to interpretation and can support researcher bias.
D) Data can be quantified and comparisons between groups can be made.
E) There is no likelihood of flawed data.
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43
Longitudinal research investigates characteristics of a population over time.
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44
A student decided to experiment with what happens when normal expectations are broken. He took some items from another person s basket and counted them on the floor. He then wrote down how the other person responded. What is the student s method of finding data?

A) questionnaire distributed after the research act
B) observation
C) action research
D) scientific small experiment
E) controlled experiment
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45
The first step in the research process is to develop one or more hypotheses.
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46
The researcher engaged in secondary data analysis may use the same data for a new study and a different purpose.
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47
Ethical considerations that must be part of a sociologist s research include:

A) striving to protect the rights and privacy of participants.
B) promising anonymity to investigators.
C) ensuring that participants accept all findings.
D) ensuring that results will support the hypothesis.
E) promising to present all theoretical ideas on a subject.
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48
Researcher bias is the tendency to select data that supports the researcher s hypothesis.
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49
A survey of employed women must include people of different ages. To make sure the results of such a survey are representative of all employed women in the society, you should use which of the following?

A) a stratified sample
B) longitudinal data
C) interviews with union and non-union employees
D) a sample based on high school placement records
E) a pure random sample
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50
Searching for the definition of love by comparing cultural definitions helps to:

A) prevent people from giving false information or the wrong answer.
B) point the way to the proper sample of lovers for study.
C) create multiple categories of definitions of the term love that can fit in one study.
D) call into question whether love actually exists.
E) establish an empirical definition for research.
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51
An open-ended interview is often more flexible than other forms of survey data because the format can be varied, changed, or modified while it is in progress.
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52
A dependent variable changes in response to changes in the independent variable.
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53
Which of the following represents an advantage of participant observation research?

A) Questionnaires can be used for large numbers of people.
B) It is easy to replicate.
C) Data can be quantified and comparisons made.
D) It allows people to be observed in their natural environments.
E) There is no likelihood of flawed data.
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54
In the hypothesis poverty produces low self-esteem, poverty is the dependent variable.
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55
Secondary data analysis is used when the researcher has collected data for the second time.
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56
Random sampling is a technique where a random number of people are selected from any size group by a researcher in a particular geographic location.
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57
Which of the following represents an advantage of a secondary analysis?

A) Questionnaires can be used for large numbers of people.
B) The laboratory creates an artificial social environment.
C) It is time-consuming
D) It saves time and money.
E) There is no likelihood of flawed data.
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58
Dr. Tom is doing research about the vampire in American society. What is the first problem he must solve before he selects a research design method?

A) People have such strong reactions to vampires that an objective index will be hard to write.
B) Vampires do not exist, so how can this be an empirical study?
C) Can a big enough selection of cases related to vampires be identified for research?
D) How many variables are related to vampires?
E) What is the operational definition of a vampire in this research?
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59
Social scientists regard deception of research participants as:

A) unimportant unless the research participant protests.
B) only an issue if the participants are children.
C) a practice to avoid if at all possible.
D) nothing to worry about.
E) only an issue if the participants are senior citizens.
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60
Independent and dependent variables are found in statements of causality; however, they are not necessary for statements of association.
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61
Secondary analysis cannot be used as the basis for a longitudinal study.
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62
Blind investigations are a standard method for dealing with researcher bias.
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63
A discovery made by accident and not accounted for in the original research design must be placed aside and not reported. This protects the integrity of the original design.
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64
Research is reliable when the same technique produces the same results on a consistent basis.
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65
After starting a research project and gaining consent from your subjects, you discover that the machine you are using to project social party sounds for interpretation can damage the subjects hearing. You must stop the study right away.
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66
In a random sample, every element sampled has an equal chance of being either selected or not selected.
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67
The mean, or average, becomes a valuable measure of central tendency when the data include extreme figures or scores.
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68
The ethical research guidelines regulate Internet-based surveys because they are so popular.
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69
Internet researchers do not need to follow the same guidelines for protecting human subjects because everything is virtual.
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70
During a double-blind investigation, both the investigators and their subjects are unaware of the hypothesis being tested.
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71
Participant observers attempt to get to know as much as possible about all members of the group being studied.
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72
Current federal regulations require that social researchers obtain informed consent from people who volunteer to be part of a research project.
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73
The mode is the number that occurs most often in a data set.
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74
Once informed consent is given, a volunteer subject cannot withdraw from the study.
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75
Row and column labels tell you exactly what information is contained in a table.
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76
It is acceptable to hide the purpose of your study from potential subjects if they will give you more information that way.
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77
Representative samples have strong advantages over many other forms of sampling in allowing researchers to generalize their findings to larger populations of people they are studying.
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78
The way to ensure that a sample is representative of the population being studied is to try to incorporate as many members of the population as possible.
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79
If only information that supports the research hypothesis is published, researcher bias has occurred.
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80
The median is the number that occurs most often in a data set.
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