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School of Public Administration

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Title: School of Public Administration


1
????????
  • School of Public Administration Policy
  • Dr. Kaifeng Yang

2
  • When I think about a scientist, I think of ____
  • If I were going to be a scientist, I should like
    to be the kind of scientist who ___
  • If I were going to be a scientist, I should not
    like to be the kind of scientist who ___
  • When I think of a social scientist, I think of ___

3
  • Is Public Administration a science?

4
Scientific Inquiry Characteristics
  • Empirical verification
  • Non-normative
  • Transmissible
  • General
  • Explanatory
  • Probabilistic
  • Provisional

5
  • Thou shall not kill
  • Al Gore received more popular votes in the 2000
    presidential election than G.W.Bush
  • The death penalty deters crime
  • All people are created equal
  • There will always be some people living in
    poverty no matter how hard government tries to
    eliminate it
  • Catholics are more likely to vote than
    Protestants
  • People in the Middle East would be far better off
    if they lived under democratic governments

6
Scientific Reasoning
  • Induction
  • Bottom up
  • Probabilistic and uncertainty
  • Degree of match
  • Validity and generalizability
  • Deduction
  • Top down
  • Valid or invalid
  • Alternative theories or biased evidence

7
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  • Three main concerns as the researcher narrows in
    on researchable questions
  • What entities (individual, people, groups,
    formal organizations, nations) are to be studied
  • What aspects or characteristics of these entities
    are of interest
  • What kinds of relationships among the
    characteristics are anticipated.

11
Units of Analysis
  • The entities (objects or events) under study
  • Include individual people, social groupings,
    social artifacts
  • The research is to compare the units of analysis
    The data or the variable is about the units of
    analysis
  • It is important to identify accurately the unit
    of analysis since confusion over units may result
    in false conclusions about research findings

12
Unit of Analysis
  • The entity about whom or which the researcher
    gathers information.
  • Not The entity from which the researcher
    gathers
  • information.
  • Rather the information about what?
  • It is the analysis you do in your study that
    determines what the unit is.
  • The unit is simply what or who to be described or
    analyzed

13
Units of Analysis Examples
  • If you are comparing the children in two
    classrooms on achievement test scores, the unit
    is the individual child because you have a score
    for each child.
  • On the other hand, if you are comparing the two
    classes on classroom climate, your unit of
    analysis is the classroom, because you only have
    a score for the class as a whole and not for each
    individual student.

14
  • Related issues
  • The use of aggregate data combining information
    about individuals to describe the social unit to
    which they belong.
  • U.S. News rankings, individual students- college
    as a whole.
  • Ecological fallacy
  • This occurs when relationships between
    properties of groups or geographic areas are used
    to make inference about the individual behaviors
    of the people within those groups or areas.
  • Misleading to draw conclusions about
    individual-level processes from aggregate or
    group-level data.

15
Conceptualization
  • The process we specify what we mean when we
    use particular terms. It involves describing the
    essential features of the terms. Sometimes, it
    involves indicators well be using to measure our
    concept and the different aspects of the concept
    (dimensions).
  • Indicator a sign of the presence or absence of
    the concept
  • Dimension a specifiable aspect of a concept

16
How to Conceptualize Religiosity?
  • A religious person A
    non-religious person
  • ...
    .. ..

A Template The concept of _____is defined as the
extent to which ____exhibit the characteristic of
_________________
The concept of religiosity is defined as the
extent to which individuals exhibit the
characteristic of attending religious services.
17
Variables
  • There are two types of explanatory variables
    dependent and independent
  • 1) Dependent variable (DV)
  • the one the researcher is interested in
    explaining and predicting
  • variation in the dependent variable is thought
    to depend on or to be influenced by certain other
    variables
  • 2) Independent variable (IV)
  • independent variable refers to variables that
    influence or explain the dependent variable
  • if we think in terms of cause and effect, the IV
    is the presumed cause and the DV the presumed
    effect.

18
IV DV
  • Presumed cause
  • Stimulus
  • Predicted from
  • Antecedent
  • Manipulated
  • Predictor
  • Presumed effect
  • Response
  • Predicted to
  • Consequence
  • Measured outcome
  • Criterion

19
Variables (4)
  • 3) Antecedent variable
  • the one that occurs prior in time to both
    independent and dependent variable
  • 4) Intervening variable
  • the one that is an effect of the IV and a cause
    of the DV

Antecedent
Independent
Dependent
Independent
Intervening
Dependent
Independent
20
Variables
  • 5) Control variable
  • the one that is held constant, or prevented from
    varying, during the course of observation or
    analysis to limit the focus of the research or to
    test hypotheses pertaining to specific subgroups
  • a means of ruling out variables that are not of
    immediate interest but that might otherwise
    explain part of the phenomenon that the
    investigator wishes to understand
  • 6) Quantitative vs. Qualitative variable
  • quantitative- if values or categories consist of
    numbers
  • qualitative- has discrete categories, usually
    designed by words or labels

21
Relationships
  • Features of relationships in social science
  • they always involve two or more entities.
  • 2) the pairs or combinations of things usually
    occur and change together.
  • the manner in which the variables change or vary
    together will depend on whether the variables are
    qualitative or quantitative.
  • 3) four properties of relationships strength,
    directionality, linearity, and statistical
    significance.

22
Relationships
  • Relationships among quantitative variables
  • we can measure not only the strength of the
    relationship but also two other aspects of
    relationship direction and linearity
  • positive (direct) vs. negative (inverse)
    relationship
  • linear vs. non-linear relationship

Variable Y
Linear Relationships
Variable X
Variable Y
Curvilinear Relationships
Variable X
23
Relationships
  • Measure of strength and direction of relationship
  • correlation coefficient (r)
  • a common statistical measure of the strength and
    direction of linear relationships between two
    quantitative variables
  • ranging from -1.00 to 1.00
  • the signs indicate the direction of the
    relationship
  • the magnitude of the coefficient, ignoring the
    sign, indicates the strength of association

24
Relationships
  • Causal relationships in social science
  • 1) association
  • variables must be associated in a statistical
    sense
  • meaningful causal relationship, not necessarily
    perfect association
  • 2) direction of influence
  • a cause must precede its effect
  • at least direction of influence should be from
    cause to effect
  • 3) non-spuriousness (elimination of rival
    hypotheses)
  • spurious relationship occurs when a correlation
    has been produced by a third factor and neither
    of the variables involved in the correlation has
    influenced the other.

25
Stating Problems and Hypotheses
  • Hypotheses
  • Tentative answers to research questions.
  • More formally, expected but unconfirmed
    relationship between two or more variables.
  • While stated in a variety of ways, all
    hypotheses should speculate about the nature and
    form of relationship.
  • Include two aspects
  • 1) which variable causes, explains, or predicts
    the other
  • 2) how changes in one variable are related to
    changes in the other

26
Stating Problems and Hypotheses
  • Forms of expressing testable hypotheses
  • 1) If-then (conditional) statements
  • 2) Mathematical statements
  • 3) Continuous statements
  • 4) Difference statements
  • It is important to know which variable is
    presumed to cause the other
  • How a hypothesis is expressed in a given study
    will depend on several factors
  • Researchers discretion, the present state of
    knowledge about research problem, and whether
    qualitative or quantitative variables are
    involved.
  • Regardless the form of expression, it should
    indicate at least the form of the relationship
    between variables and, ideally, should specify
    the causal linkage between variables.

27
Hypothesis Templates
  • In comparing units of analysis, those having
    one value on the independent variable will be
    more likely to have one value on the dependent
    variable than will those having a different
    value on the independent variable.
  • E.g. In comparing individuals, those who
    are women will be more likely to favor a
    handgun ban than those who are men.
  • Another Template the more/lessthe more/less
  • E.g. The more intelligent a person is, the
    more likely he or she is to support civil
    liberties.

28
Pitfalls
  • Affirmative vs. question
  • Do democratic nations provoke wars?
  • Democracies are less likely to provoke wars with
    other nations than dictatorships
  • Evaluative statement
  • Democracy is the best form of government
  • Comparative value statement
  • Swedes are less moral than Americans
  • Prescriptive Value Statement
  • The campaign finance laws should be changed

29
Pitfalls
  • Compound Hypotheses
  • The poor and alienated are unlikely to vote
  • Tautology
  • Liberal members of the House of Representatives
    receive high ratings from liberal interest groups
  • Narrow Hypotheses
  • Northern Ireland has experienced conflict because
    of religious differences

30
How about These?
  • In comparing individuals, some people are more
    likely to donate money to political candidates
    than are other people.
  • In comparing individuals, gender and abortion
    attitudes are related.
  • Because of important cultural changes that began
    in the 1960s, many current political conflicts
    are based on generational differences.
  • Should people support gun-control?
  • Are there more democrats than republicans in
    Florida?

31
must transform questions into hypotheses
  • Do peoples attitudes toward the environment vary
    by income?
  • People with higher incomes have stronger
    pro-environment attitudes than people with lower
    incomes
  • The lower ones income, the more one cares about
    the environment
  • Peoples environment attitudes are not related to
    their income

32
Group Practice Identifying variables and UOA
  • Tone of campaign advertising
  • closeness of election
  • Voter turnout
  • Interest in politics
  • Perceived difference b/t major parties
  • Turning out to vote

33
Group Practice Evaluating the articles
  • For the chosen article
  • Why do you like it most?
  • Identify IV, DV
  • Identify unit of analysis and evaluate whether it
    is appropriate
  • Identify hypotheses and evaluate whether they are
    well-written and make sense

34
Groups Design Assignment????
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