Methods
Sociology
Ethics
Research Styles
Theory
100

research techniques that are designed to capture life as participants experience it, rather than in numbers of quantifiable data

What is Qualitative Methods?
100

The study of society, social behavior, and human relationships.

What is sociology?

100

committees established to review and approach research studies; ensure researchers meet ethical standards and regulations, especially those involving human participants

What is IRB?

100

The process of systematically finding and reviewing existing research, studies, and scholarly articles on a specific topic.

What is literature search?

100

What is a set of ideas or a system meant to explain something, usually based on general principles rather than the specific thing itself?

What is a theory?

200

Conversations with participants to gather insights, opinions, or experiences.

What are interviews?

200

Shared understanding between people; how meaning is co-created in interaction.

What is intersubjectivity?

200

Formal applications researchers submit to the IRB explaining their study design, risks, and protections for participants.

What are IRB Proposals?

200

A logical process that starts with a general statement or premise and arrives at a specific, certain conclusion. If the premises are true, the conclusion must also be true.

What is deductive reasoning?

200

What is the perspective that reality and knowledge are created through social interactions and shared meanings, emphasizing context and subjectivity?

What is social constructionist perspective?

300

The process of systematically finding and reviewing existing research, studies, and scholarly articles on a specific topic.

What is a literature review?

300

The reciprocal communication and exchange between two or more individuals or between humans and their environment

What is human interaction?

300

What is the practice of keeping information secret or private?

What is confidentiality?

300

A logical process of moving from specific observations to broader generalizations or conclusions. This form of reasoning creates a probable conclusion, but one that is not guaranteed to be true, as it is based on patterns observed in specific instances.

What is inductive reasoning?

300

What is the philosophy that says only statements that can be scientifically tested or logically/mathematically proven are meaningful, rejecting metaphysics and theism?

What is positivism?

400

Facilitate discussions for brainstorming and gathering diverse perspectives

What are focus groups?

400

The process of exchanging information, ideas, thoughts, feelings, and messages between individuals or groups through speaking, writing, or using some other medium

What is communication?

400

Research areas that may cause emotional, social, or legal risks for participants (e.g., trauma, sexuality, illegal activity).

What are sensitive topics?

400

A clear, focused, and open-ended interrogative that guides the entire research process by defining the specific problem or topic to be investigated.

What is a research question?

400

What is the study of knowledge, including how we know things, how valid our beliefs are, and what separates true understanding from mere opinion?

What is epistemology?

500

Systematic study of texts, media, or documents to identify themes or patterns. (The previous three definitions are types of qualitative analysis)

What is content analysis?

500

A sociological perspective focusing on how people create meaning through symbols and everyday interactions.

What is symbolic interactionism?

500

children, elderly, people with disabilities, people dealing with sensitive topics

What are special populations?

500

the researcher does not fully disclose their intentions or the true nature of their activities to the subjects

What is deceptive research?

500

What ethical principle says you should treat people as ends in themselves and never just as a means to an end?

What is cartesian imperative?