Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Malone Special ;)
100

The scientific study of society, including how society shapes individual people and groups, as well as how individual people and groups shape society.

What is sociology

100

an observed event that its existence draws inquiries

What is Phenomenon

100

Research conducted with the goal of examining a topic that is new, unstudied, or understudied.

What is exploration research

100

A situation wherein research subjects are made aware of procedures for and potential risks and benefits associated with a research study.

What is informed consent

100

Dr. Malone attended this university

What is Texas A&M University

200

An empirical approach to gathering data about the world around us that relies on testing hypotheses using systematically collected data, resulting in potential theories that explain observed patterns

What is the Scientific Method

200

This scholar coined the term "sociology"

Who is Auguste Comte

200

This type of data that is already numerical or data the can be represented by numbers. 


What is quantitative data

200

This study dealt with recruitment of African American men to study health impacts of untreated syphilis from 1932-1972.

What is the Tuskegee Study

200

Dr. Malone's dissertation centered around this theory

What is Merton's Status Exchange Theory

300

When many researchers look at the social world and compare and contrast their findings in order to ascertain the consistencies and inconsistencies across their findings.

What is intersubjectivity

300

a system of plausible ideas intended to explain social phenomena, particularly based on principles independent of the social phenomena.

What is theory

300

A process that academic journal articles go through before publication, in which they are evaluated by experts on the topic. 


What is Peer Review

300

This study set out to examine the psychological effects of authority and powerlessness in a prison environment

What is the Stanford Prison Experiment

300

Specifies that research does not harm the individual, and that is maximizes possible benefits and minimizes possible harms.

What is Beneficence

400

These are 3 of the four primary shortcuts our brains do when getting information

What are Overgeneralization, Selective or inaccurate perception, Illogical reasoning, Resistance to change.


400

These are the components of theory

What are proposition/statement, concept, and scope

400

This type of thing data is being collected about in research. Also, what is the most common in sociology

What are Unit of analysis and individuals 

400

Researcher reproduces what they have published previously, but present it as new, original research—without citing their previous work.

What is self-plagiarism
400

This was Dr. Malone's first major in college

What was electrical engineering

500

These are the steps of the Scientific Method

Define the problem, review the literature, formulate hypothesis, research design, findings, conclusion, and future research ideas.

500

This is inductive and deductive reasoning

What is inductive reasoning deals with questions that result from specific observations of facts that a researcher thinks might point to a general tendency. Deductive reasoning starts with a theoretical premise that a researcher hopes to verify by examining specific observations in the social world.

500

The two types of applied research

What are program evaluation and community-based research

500

These are three big principles of the Belmont Report

What are Respect for Persons, Beneficence, and Justice

500

Dr. Malone's dissertation was _______ methodology

What is quantitative methodology