Title: Geography 237 Geographic Research: Methods and Issues
1Geography 237Geographic Research Methods and
Issues
- Introduction Science and Social Science
- (Babbie, Chapter 1)
- Syllabus and course overview
- Science and everyday enquiry
- Social science
- Errors of enquiry
- Criticism of social science
- Forms of reasoning
- Types of explanation
- Methods
2Science, Social Science, and Everyday Enquiry
- What is Science?
- Differentiate everyday and scientific enquiry.
- What is Social Science?
3Are Polls Social Science?
- http//www.gallup.com/poll/multimedia/video/segmen
ts/vr040721.ram
4Is this Web Survey Social Science?
- http//3sc.environics.net/surveys/3sc/main/3sc.asp
5Science General Characteristics
- Search for knowledge/truth
- Sparked by curiosity (a question)
- Culminates in discovery
6Distinguishing Everyday from Scientific Enquiry
- Everyday Enquiry
- Evidence largely anecdotal or based on appeals to
authority - C Assertions often causal ("A" does cause "B")
- C Non-systematic
- C Based on past experience and/or short-term
enquiries - C Logical?
- C Prediction without understanding
- Scientific Enquiry
- Evidence from controlled observation
- Assertions usually probabilistic ("A"
often/usually leads to/associated with "B") - Systematic data collection and analysis
- Based on long-term enquiries
- Logical
- Prediction with understanding
7Social Science
- The study of (human) social phenomena through
controlled, logical, systematic data collection
and analysis with a view to explaining what?
and/or why?
8Second-Hand Knowledge and Everyday Human Enquiry
- Tradition
- inherited knowledge - often culturally defined
- advantage cumulative wisdom
- disadvantage difficult to challenge
- Authority
- knowledge from experts
- advantage trust during controversy
- disadvantage experts speaking outside area of
expertise - disadvantage experts make mistakes
9Common Errors of Inquiry
- Inaccurate Observation
- observing incorrectly
- solutions systematize have a methodology
- Overgeneralization
- conclusions from too few cases
- solutions sampling, replication
- Selective Observation
- e.g., racism
- select only cases that fit existing theory
- solutions systematize, randomize
- Poor Logic
- e.g., gamblers fallacy
- solution peer review
10What is and why as Opposed to What Ought to Be
- Which is better, capitalism or socialism?
- Which is more important, geography or history?
- Who is the fastest human?
- What role for social values?
11The Role of Values/CriteriaWho is the fastest
human?
- What criteria?
- 100m? 200m?
- top speed?
- average speed?
- 100m
- Ben Johnson 9.79 (1988 Olympics)
- Donovan Bailey 9.79 (1996 Olympics)
- Maurice Greene 9.79
- 200m
- Michael Johnson 19.32
- another view
- http//www.runnersweb.com/running/fastestm.html
12Common Criticisms of Social Science
- Triviality
- everyone knows that
- even apparently trivial theories can be misguided
- e.g., fairness and promotions in military (see
chapter) awarding high marks - Exceptions
- e.g., though men generally earn more than women,
some women earn more than men - patterns are probabilistic not causal per se
- Interference
- study subjects consciously change behaviour to
alter results - e.g., conservative who votes NDP
- rare
13Forms of Reasoning
- Deduction
- moves from the general to the particular
- start with theory and apply it to the real world
- e.g., evolution - applies to all species
- e.g., distance decay - applies to rents in all
cities? - Induction
- moves from the particular to the general
- start with the real world - then develop
concepts/theories based on what is observed - e.g., evolution - from finch morphology to the
theory of evolution - e.g., distance decay - from Chicago land values
in late 1960s to theory of rent distance decay
(bid-rent curves)
14Types of Explanation
- Idiographic
- an exhaustive explanation of some
phenomenon/individual - all causes sought
- particular to cases studied
- Nomothetic
- partial explanation of some phenomenon/group of
individuals - most important causes parsimony
- generalizable
15Theory and Method
- Theory
- a set of concepts plus a characterization of
their interrelationships that, when taken
collectively explains a given phenomenon or set
of phenomena - used to make sense of/simplify the world
- more than a mere description
16Methods
- the procedures/mechanisms for doing research
which includes specific instruments/tools for
data collection - List as many social science methods as you can
think of - E.g, to answer the question Why do some people
recycle and others do not?
17Examples of Social Science Methods
- Secondary Data - e.g., statistically analyse
municipal data - Content/Textual Analysis - e.g., newspaper/media
coverage on recycling - Observation - e.g., observe recycling behaviours
from a distance - Participant Observation - e.g., join, and observe
recycling advocacy group - In-Depth Interviews - e.g., meaning of
recycling/not recycling - Surveys - e.g., reasons for recycling/not
recycling in large sample of people