Title: WAYS OF KNOWING
1WAYS OF KNOWING
2 How do we find out things about the world? How
do we know the things we know?
3Personal Observation
- Direct/personal experience
- Appealing to our senses
- Experiential reality (Babbie, 2001)
- Pitfalls
- Tend to be casual - not deliberate or systematic
- Prone to errors
- How things are seen, understood and reported will
normally be affected by personal biases
4Tradition
- the accepted way of thinking or doing things
- Cumulative body of knowledge and understanding
that is passed on from generation to generation - In every society there is agreement reality
(Babbie, 2001). Things are considered to be true
because people in the society accepts them to be
true. (Bush tea will a cure colds.) - Traditional knowledge very tenacious but
sometimes totally or partially inaccurate.
Influenced by factors such as prejudice
5Authority
- Learn from parents, teachers, experts/
professionals, media, textbooks etc. - Tradition can be viewed as a form of authority
- Common and highly recommended source, but
accuracy not guaranteed. Example - Authorities may speak on topics they know
little about. - The media often project cultural biases and
stereotypes - When 2 authorities disagree on the same subject,
who do we believe? - Over-reliance on this source may make us too
dependent on the opinions and judgments of others.
6Common sense
- Relying on ordinary and sometimes faulty
reasoning. What makes sense. - Using street smart reasoning as a basis for
providing answer to question, often no attention
to rules of logics. - The casual and non-systematic use of the
inductive and deductive approaches to knowing,
understanding and solving problems
7Problems with these approaches
- These ways of finding out things about the world
tend to be done in a casual and often haphazard
manner, rather than in a deliberate and
systematic way - There are no mechanisms to to ensure the accuracy
of the information produced - As a consequence, the knowledge generated by
these methods often contains errors
8Common errors of these approaches
- Inaccurate observation - make mistakes about
what is observed and what is reported - Overgeneralization taking too few events as
evidence of the general pattern - Inadequate understanding Our interpretations
and conclusions are limited by our personal
experiences - Selective observation - narrow focus on specific
individuals or events - Illogical reason no relation between evidence
and conclusion e.g. the exception proves the
rule
9Errors (cont.)
- Premature closure you think you have all the
answers so you terminate inquire - Make up information Ex-post facto hypothesizing
trying to explain away contradictions without
further inquiry. - Halo effect we give greater value to the ideas
of people with the stronger reputation, paying
little regard to the ideas of the less famous - Ego involvement we protect our ego at the
expense of the quality of our work - Ecological fallacy- erroneously drawing
conclusions about an individual based on
observations of a group
10How to avoid these problems?
- Take the strengths of all these methods
- Incorporate them into a very structured and
deliberate technique - Include mechanisms and rules to prevent or
minimize errors and to protect the parties
involved in the process - - All these are achieved through the Research
approach to understanding reality - Research -
11Research
- Research is a collection of methods used in the
creation of scientific knowledge about the
natural or social world (Grosof Sardy, 1999) - It is a process involving the use of the
scientific method to provide answers to questions
(Robertson, 2000) - It is an approach by which we attempt to find
out, systematically, with the support of
demonstrable facts and standards, how the world
and its components work. ( Babbie, 2002) - It is a collection of methods which facilitates
the search for objective answers to questions and
the resolution problems (Khan, 1975)
12Key Concepts in definitions
- Process a series of linked activities
requires order in execution - Systematic deliberate and methodical. Following
established procedures, orderly, structured.
Disciplined - Standards principles of expected or required
behaviour. Code of conduct. Ideals. Norms - Demonstrable facts verifiable data. Empirical
evidence. Logically verifiable. - Objective answers based on verifiable evidence,
free from the biases of the researcher
13Key Concepts in definitions (cont.)
- The scientific method an approach to creating
knowledge that can be defined in terms of all the
concepts defined above. - This approach is process oriented, it is
systematic, it produces objective answers from
demonstrable facts, while adhering to certain
standards. - Social researchers use the scientific method to
ensure the accuracy of the knowledge they produce
and safety of the persons involved.
14The scientific method
- A cyclical process used by researchers to
collect, analyze and interpret data, in their
search for new, useful and accurate knowledge - The body of knowledge is referred to as science.
- Persons who use this method are Scientists
- The approach is commonly referred to as
Scientific Research - There is Scientific Research and Non-Scientific
methods of knowing such as tradition and
authority
15Some Principles of Scientific Research
- Empiricism - An approach to research relying
heavily on observation and measurement. - Objectivity - A dispassionate unbiased approach
to analyzing the world and presenting information - Systematic observation - A structured and
organized way of investigating
16Some Principles of Scientific Research (cont)
- Replication
- The process of repeatedly conducting studies that
test and confirm a hypothesis. - Direct replication the researcher duplicates
the design - Conceptual/indirect replication- providing
additional confirmation by measuring the
behaviour in a different way, using different
participants or using a different design
17Attitude of the Scientist
- Open-minded - any approach may be correct, any
answer may be true - Uncertain - no one has all the answers, no one
already knows - Skeptical - Any approach may be wrong, any
answer may contain errors - Cautious - Not all conclusions are facts
- Ethical - Research should not harm others
18Norms of the Scientific Community
- Universalism Irrespective of who conducts the
research it should be judge on scientific merit. - Organised Scepticism All evidence should be
scrutinised and challenged/ questioned. Must
ensure that the methods used are reliable and
valid. - Disinterestedness scientist should be neutral,
receptive and as impartial as is humanly
possible. They should accept and even search for
evidence that runs counter to their position.
19Norms of the Scientific Community (cont)
- Communalism Scientific knowledge is for the
common good of mankind, it should be shared - Honesty Cheating in scientific research is a
major taboo. No fabrication of the data no
addition, no omission. Logical conclusions
20WHY DO WE NEED TO DO RESEARCH?