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Syllabus and Instructor Page- SOC 382: Intro to Social Research
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Keywords

Research Methods
Methodology
Engaged Reading
Action Assignments
Problem Centered
Scaffolding
Spiral Curriculum
Learning Teams
Social Research
Qualitative
Quantitative
Pass Fail Grading
In-Class Reading
Collaborative Learning
Pedagogy
Seven Practices
Teaching Sociology
Teaching and Learning

How to Cite

Davis, Daniel. 2012. “Syllabus and Instructor Page- SOC 382: Intro to Social Research”. TRAILS: Teaching Resources and Innovations Library for Sociology, February. Washington DC: American Sociological Association. https://trails.asanet.org/article/view/syllabus-and-instructor-page-soc-382-intro-to.

Abstract

This syllabus offers an alternative approach to teaching research methods for undergraduates. On one hand this course seeks to accomplish many traditional learning outcomes for a research methods course (e.g. understanding qualitative vs quantitative methods, ability to apply theory to method, ability to operationalize variables, increasing oral and...

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Details

Subject Area(s):
Research Methods
Resource Type(s):
Syllabus
Class Level(s):
College 300
Class Size(s):
Medium

Usage Notes

Usage notes in-full can be found in the Instructor Page included with this syllabus resource.

This syllabus is designed for a semester long course, meeting twice a week for 110 minutes each. However, it certainly could be adapted for other formats of sufficient duration.

The following 7 practices are what separate this approach from most...

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Learning Goals and Assessments

Learning Goal(s):

  1. Students will learn how to more discriminately consume and personally organize the steps towards producing original social science research, both qualitative and quantitative.
  2. Instructors will be offered seven learning-centered pedagogical practices useful for transforming a course commonly viewed with trepidation or boredom, into one that is engaging and less time-consuming- while equally as rigorous.

Goal Assessment(s):

  1. A final research project proposal is the final evidence, in both written and presentation forms. This is an excellent link to a capstone project or senior thesis.
  2. Further, when the instructor is not buried in tedious grading there is less time-lag between performance and feedback, increasing feedback effectiveness.

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