Sociology in action: A comparative study of embedded Interventions for improved research and writing in the introduction of sociological research methods - Weaver & Petrie
Similar a Sociology in action: A comparative study of embedded Interventions for improved research and writing in the introduction of sociological research methods - Weaver & Petrie
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Sociology in action: A comparative study of embedded Interventions for improved research and writing in the introduction of sociological research methods - Weaver & Petrie
1. Sociology in Action:
A comparative study of embedded interventions for improved research and writing in
the introduction of sociological research methods
Kari D. Weaver, Instructional Design Librarian, University of Waterloo Libraries, Waterloo, ON,
Canada, and Doctoral Candidate, School of Education, University of South Carolina,
kdweaver@uwaterloo.ca
AND
Dr. Michelle Petrie, Associate Professor of Sociology and Director of the Honors Program,
University of South Carolina Aiken, Aiken, SC, USA, MichelleP@usca.edu
5. Research Methods Courses in Sociology
Image from: The Institute of Public Health, Bengaluru (2017)
6. This Study - A Tale of Two Labs
Image from: Public Domain Pictures (2018)
7. Reflective Prompt 1
Lab 1
Describe the process you have been engaged in to develop your research question. Have you been able
to narrow your broad topic into a manageable research question? If so, how did you accomplish this? If
not, what steps are you planning to take to help yourself? What are your plans for the
next several weeks to move the paper along? What support do you need or want?
Lab 2
Let’s suppose you are interested in employing survey research methods to learn more about your
research topic. What type of population would your survey address? How would you develop a sample to
address this population? What method of survey administration would you choose and why? How would
you ensure an adequate response rate for your study? What types of survey questions would you include
and how would they help you address your research question?
8. Reflective Prompt 2
Lab 1
Describe the process you have been engaged in to search for sources and organize your literature review.
What has been most successful? What has not worked as well? What are your feelings about your
progress? Do you have concerns? Where, specifically, have you been to search for information? What
are your plans for the next several weeks to move the paper along? What support do you need or want?
Lab 2
Suppose you are interested in employing qualitative research methods to learn more about your research
topic. What qualitative methodology would you choose and why? What type of population would your
survey address? How would you develop a sample to address this population? How would you ensure an
adequate response rate for your study? What type of analysis would you conduct on the data to address
your research question?
9. Reflective Prompt 3
Lab 1
Describe the process you have been engaged in to develop your literature review. What are your feelings
about your progress? Have you spoken to anyone about your work? If so, how have they been able to
help you? What are your plans to move the paper from the current draft to the final version? What
support do you need or want? How are you staying motivated to keep up momentum on the
project?
Lab 2
Thinking about your research question, what types of secondary data sources might you use to address
your question? Where might you locate this information/these sources? How would you develop a
sample? What sort of analysis would you conduct? What strengths and limitations exist in these types of
data sources you selected?
10. Final Common Reflective Prompt
Describe the process you engaged in this semester to write your literature review.
Now that you have completed it, what are your feelings about the final product?
What went well?
What would you do differently if you had it to do over again?
14. References and Recommended Readings
Caravello, P. S., Kain, E. L., Kuchi, T., Macicak, S., & Weiss, G. L. (2008). Information literacy: The partnership of sociology
faculty and social science librarians. Teaching Sociology, 36(1), 8-16.
Chittooran, M. M. (2015). Reading and writing for critical reflective thinking. New Directions for Teaching and Learning,
2015(143), 79-95.
Cole, N. L. (2018, Jan. 30). How Emile Durkheim made his mark on sociology. Retrieved from
https://www.thoughtco.com/emile-durkheim-relevance-to-sociology-today-3026482
Earley, M. A. (2014). A synthesis of the literature on research methods education. Teaching in Higher Education, 19(3),
242-253.
Grauerholz, L. (1999). Creating and teaching writing-intensive courses. Teaching Sociology, 310-323.
Grauerholz, L., Eisele, J., & Stark, N. (2013). Writing in the sociology curriculum: What types and how much writing do we
assign? Teaching Sociology, 41(1), 46–59.
Harris, K. R., Santangelo, T., & Graham, S. (2010). Metacognition and strategies instruction in writing. In H. S. Waters, & W.
Schneider (Eds.), Metacognition, strategy use, and instruction (pp. 226-256). New York, NY: Guilford.
Hudd, S. S., Smart, R. A., & Delohery, A. W. (2011). “My Understanding Has Grown, My Perspective Has Switched” Linking
Informal Writing to Learning Goals. Teaching Sociology, 39(2), 179-189.
Insua, G. M., Lantz, C., & Armstrong, A. (2018). In Their Own Words: Using First-Year Student Research Journals to Guide
Information Literacy Instruction. Portal: Libraries & The Academy, 18(1), 141-161.
15. References Continued
Massengill, R. P. (2011). Sociological writing as higher-level thinking: Assignments that cultivate the sociological
imagination. Teaching Sociology, 39(4), 371-381.
Moon, J. A. (2006). Learning journals: A handbook for reflective practice and professional development. London, UK: Taylor
Francis.
Picca, L. H., Starks, B., & Gunderson, J. (2013). “It Opened My Eyes” Using Student Journal Writing to Make Visible Race,
Class, and Gender in Everyday Life. Teaching Sociology, 41(1), 82-93.
Shostak, S., Girouard, J., Cunningham, D., & Cadge, W. (2010). Teaching graduate and undergraduate research methods:
A multipronged departmental initiative. Teaching Sociology, 38(2), 93-105.
Sitko, B. M. (1998). Knowing how to write: Metacognition and writing instruction. In D. J. Hacker, J. Dunlosky, & A. C.
Graesser (Eds.) Metacognition in educational theory and practice (pp. 93-115). New York, NY: Routledge.