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Title: Comparative Method of Marcosocial Phenomena:


1
Comparative-Historical Method in Educational
Research
  • Lecture 3
  • Comparative Method of Marco-social Phenomena
  • Functional Equivalence Perspective

2
The Basic Logic of Comparative Method
  • The Design of comparative research is conditioned
    largely by four rules
  • Comparability Two or more instances of a
    phenomenon may be compared if and only if there
    exists some variable, say V, common to each
    instance.
  • J.S. Millss 1st Cannon (Method of Agreement) No
    second variable, say U, is the cause or effect of
    V, if it is not when V is found.
  • J.S. Mills 2nd Cannon (Method of Difference) No
    second variable U is the cause or effect of V if
    it is found when V is not.
  • Rule of One Variable No second variable U is
    definitely the cause or effect of V if there
    exists a third variable, w, that is present or
    absent in the same circumstances as U.

3
  • Rule of One Variable No second variable U is
    definitely the cause or effect of V if there
    exists a third variable, w, that is present or
    absent in the same circumstances as U.

In order to verify that U and V are
correlated in the design where there are other 2
variables, say W and X, we need at least eight
cases (2x2x2) of the following nature
Case Causes Effect Results
V W X U (Method of Agreement)
1 1 1 1 1 VWX U 2
1 1 0 1 VWX
U 3 1 0 1 1 VWX U
4 1 0 0 1
VWX U (Method of
Difference) 5 0 0 0
0 VWX U 6 0 0 1 0 VWX
U 7 0 1 0
0 VWX U 8 0
1 1 0 VWX
U
4
Charles Ragins Boolean Approach to Comparative
Analysis
A. The operation of the Boolean Algebra
  • Binary data and truth table

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Charles Ragins Boolean Approach to Comparative
Analysis
  • The operation of the Boolean Algebra
  • Binary data and truth table
  • Boolean addition and multiplication

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Charles Ragins Boolean Approach to Comparative
Analysis
  • The operation of the Boolean Algebra
  • Binary data and truth table
  • Boolean addition and multiplication
  • Boolean minimization

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Charles Ragins Boolean Approach to Comparative
Analysis
  • The operation of the Boolean Algebra
  • Binary data and truth table
  • Boolean addition and multiplication
  • Boolean minimization
  • De Morgans Law
  • Identifying prime implicants

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SACABBc
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Charles Ragins Boolean Approach to Comparative
Analysis
  • The operation of the Boolean Algebra
  • Binary data and truth table
  • Boolean addition and multiplication
  • Boolean minimization
  • De Morgans Law
  • Identifying prime implicants
  • Identifying necessary and/or sufficient causes
  • Limitations of the Boolean Approach

21
Why Comparison in Education and Social Sciences?
  • The intrinsic nature of contextuality and
    relativity in social phenomena "There is no such
    a thing as comparative chemistry or contextual
    physics. In the natural sciences, the chain of
    causality is everywhere identical. In
    experimental physics or chemistry discoveries
    have an universal validity. On the contrary, the
    social sciences, because of the diversity and
    idiosyncrasy of human societies, are contextual
    and relativistic The best way to comprehend such
    a biological and social diversity is the
    comparative method." (Dogan, 2006, p. 309)

22
Why Comparison in Education and Social Sciences?
  • Comparing to escape from ethnocentrism In order
    to disenchanted themselves from the processes of
    socialization and acculturation, into which all
    human being are born social scientists are
    obliged to transcend themselves from the social
    midieu that they have got so used to and have
    taken for granted. Therefore, "comparison helps
    to get ride us of inherited fossilized notions,
    obliged us to reconsider the validity of
    undiscussed interpretations, and enlarge our
    visual field." (Dogan and Pelassy, 1984, p. 9)
    "Comparative studies point out and denounced
    ethnocentrism, and in this way they certainly
    contribute to its lessening." (p. 13)

23
Why Comparison in Education and Social Sciences?
  • Comparing to obtain heuristic device for
    macro-social and educational analysis
  • Charles Tilly's conception of Means and Ends of
    Comparison in Macrosociology
  • Reiteration of John S. Mills' warning about the
    limitation of logic of comparative method
  • "If so little can be done by the experimental
    method to determine the conditions of an effect
    of many combined causes, in the case of medical
    science still less is this method applicable to
    a class of phenomena more complicated than even
    those of physiology, the phenomena of politics
    and history. There Plurality of Causes exists in
    almost boundless excess, and effects are, for the
    most part, inextricably interwoven with one
    another." (Quoted in Tilly, 2006, 224)

24
Why Comparison in Education and Social Sciences?
  • Comparing to obtain heuristic device for
    macro-social and educational analysis
  • Charles Tilly's conception of Means and Ends of
    Comparison in Macrosociology
  • Big-Case-Comparison (BCC) as heuristic and
    literary trope
  • "BCC provides a fine heuristic but a logically
    and ontological flawed basis for serious
    explanation of social process. The lining up of
    civilizations, societies, cultures, wars,
    revolutions, and other great chunks of social
    experience for arguments about causes and
    meanings will persist as the heuristic and
    literary trope it has been for hundred of years,
    but will shrivel as a method of systematic
    analysis." (Tilly, 2006, 225-226)

25
Webers Conception of Causal Analysis
  • Essential roles of social carriers in particular
    social fabric and epoch
  • Status groups, political parties, classes
    universal organization, e.g. families, kinship
    groups or clans
  • External structure, e.g. the state bureaucrats,
    military, churches or sects, enterprises,
    professions and other formal associations,
    education institutions
  • The variable intensity of patterned or typical
    actions (Webers conception of four types of
    social action Means-end rational,
    value-rational, affectual, and traditional
    actions)
  • Forces of historical events, technology and
    geography in shaping cultural phenomena and
    changes
  • Power of social carriers in conflict and
    competition among them



26
Historical Events
Technology
Geography
External structure
Typical actions
Social carriers
Intensity
Typical actions
Social carriers
27
Webers Conception of Causal Analysis
  • Adequate causation of concrete historical
    phenomenon rather than nomological causation of
    universal phenomena
  • Degree of causality Distinction between
    facilitating and necessary orientations of
    actions
  • Counterfactual comparison as means in weighting
    degree of causality of a given set of antecedent
    conditions favoring a given effect



28
Webers Conception of Causal Analysis
  • Synchronic and diachronic interaction among
    societal domains
  • Kalbergs conception of societal domains
    designates social carriers such as status group,
    class, family, kinship groups, the state
    bureaucrats, military, profession etc. and also
    institutions such as law, economy, the state,
    rulership, religion, education, etc.
  • Synchronic (within a same point in time)
    interaction among societal domains
  • Diachronic (between different points in time)
    interactions in causal mode
  • Distinction between legacy and antecedent
    conditions
  • Distinction between inter-domain and intra-domain
    diachronic interaction
  • Contextual effects on conjunctural interaction
  • Theoretical framework as ideal type in causal mode



29
Historical Events
Technology
Geography
External structure
Typical actions
Social carriers
Synchronic Interaction
Typical actions
Social carriers
Diachronic Interaction
30
Webers Conception of Ideal Type as Heuristic
Instrument
  • The nature of ideal type
  • Ideal type is a one-sided accentuation of reality
    and not a schema which can completely exhaust
    the infinite richness of a cultural phenomenon
  • Ideal type is value-relevant point of view to
    reality and not an objective and complete vantage
    point to cultural phenomenon
  • Ideal type is dialectic mediator between the
    finite human mind and infinite reality



31
Webers Conception of Ideal Type as Heuristic
Instrument
  • The usage of ideal type
  • Ideal type is used as yardstick to measure and
    compare the pattern-intensity of cultural
    phenomenon and degree of causality between
    phenomena
  • Single Ideal type, e.g. means end rational
    action, bureaucracy, etc.
  • Compound ideal type, e.g. patrimonial bureaucracy



32
Webers Conception of Ideal Type as Heuristic
Instrument
  • The usage of ideal type
  • Ideal type as dynamic model, e.g. bureaucracy,
    patrimonialism, rationalized education system
  • Ideal type as contextual model, e.g. the impact
    of calculable law within the context of the rise
    of capitalism, or the contextual effect of
    stratification principle on education
  • Ideal type as affinity or antagonism model
  • Intra-domain model of antagonistic relationship
    e.g. antagonistic relationship among legitimacy
    bases, e.g. between legal-rational and
    charismatic authority
  • Inter-domain model of antagonistic relationship
    e.g. antagonistic relationship between
    charismatic rulership and rational economy
  • Inter-domain model of affinity e.g. affinity
    between calculable law and rational capitalism,
    between Calvinist worldly ascetic doctrine and
    spirit of capitalism



33
Webers Last Theory of Capitalism A
Methodological Illustration
  • (Randell Collins response to idealistic
    misinterpretation of The Protestant Ethic and the
    Spirit of Capitalism)
  • Essence of Capitalism
  • Rational capital accounting and methodical
    enterprise and production
  • Calculability
  • Predictability and controllability


34
Webers Last Theory of Capitalism A
Methodological Illustration
  • Capitalism, say Weber (1961207-8, 260) is the
    provision of human needs by the method of
    enterprise, which is to say by private businesses
    seeking profit. It is exchange carried out for
    positive gain, rather than forced contributions
    or traditionally fixed gifts or trade. It became
    the indispensable form for the provision of
    everyday wants only in Western Europe around the
    middle of the the nineteenth century. For this
    large-scale and economically predominant
    capitalism, the key is the rational permanent
    enterprise characterized by rational capital
    accounting.

  • (Collins, 1980, p. 927)


35
Webers Last Theory of Capitalism A
Methodological Illustration
  • It is clear that Weber used the term
    rationalism in a number of different senses.
    But for his institutional theory of capitalist
    development, there is only one sense that need
    concern us. The rational capitalist
    establishment, says Weber (1961207) is one
    with capitalist accounting, that is, an
    establishment which determines its income
    yielding power by calculating according to the
    methods of modern bookkeeping and the striking of
    a balance. The key term is calculability it
    occurs over and over again in those pages. What
    is distinctive about modern, large scale,
    rational capitalismin contrast to earlier,
    partial formsis that it is methodical and
    predictable, reducing all areas of production and
    distribution as much as possible to a routine.
    This is also Webers criterion for calling
    bureaucracy the most rational form of
    organization.
  • (Collins, 1980, p. 927)


36
Webers Last Theory of Capitalism A
Methodological Illustration
  • Components of rational capitalism
  • Private appropriation of means of production and
    entrepreneurial organization of capital
  • Rationalized technology
  • Free labor
  • Unrestricted market
  • Calculable law and public administration
  • Weber Causal Chain of the Rise of Capitalism


37
Components of rationalized capitalism
Intermediate conditions
Background conditions
Ultimate conditions
Literate administrators
Entrepreneurial organization of capital
Favorable Transportation communication
Bureaucratic state
Writing record-keeping
Church law bureaucracy
Coinage
Rationalized technology
Calculable law
Centrally supplied weapons
Citizenship
Self-supplied, disciplined army
Free labor
Greek civic cults
Methodical Non-dualistic economic ethic
Judaic prophecy
Unrestricted market
Christian proselytization
Reformation sects
Webers Causal Chain of the Rise of Capitalism
38
Webers General Theory of History
  • Is there an overall pattern in Webers
    Argument? It is not a picture of a linear trend
    toward ever-increasing rationality. Nor is it an
    evolutionary model of natural selection, in the
    sense of random selection of the more advanced
    forms, accumulating through a series of stages.
    For Webers constant theme is that the pattern of
    relations among the various factors is crucial in
    determining their effect upon economic
    rationalization. Any one factor occurring by
    itself tend to have opposite effects, overall, to
    those which it has in combination with the other
    factors. ...
  • (Collins, 1980, p. 934)


39
Webers General Theory of History
  • Weber saw the rise of large-scale capitalism,
    then, as the result of a series of combinations
    of condition which had to occur together. This
    makes world history looks like the result of
    configurations of events so rare as to appear
    accidental. Webers position might well be
    characterized as historicist, in the sense of
    seeing history as a concatenation of unique
    events and unrepeatable complexities. ...(T)he
    full-scale capitalist breakthrough itself was a
    once-only event, radiating outward to transform
    all other institutions and societies. Hence, the
    original conditions necessary for the emergence
    of capitalism were not necessary for its
    continuation. Hence, late-industrializing states
    need not follow the route of classical
    capitalism. Webers account of the rise of
    capitalism, then, is in a sense not a theory at
    all. In that it is not a set of universal
    generalizations about economic change.

  • (Collins, 1980, p. 934)


40
Contemporary Codification Typology of
Comparative-Historical Studies
  • Skocpols codification Typology
  • Parallel demonstration of theory
  • Contrast of context
  • Macro-causal analysis
  • The Triangle of Comparative History and a Cycle
    of Transition


41
(3) Parallel Comparative History
Triangle of Comparative History
theory C C C
(a) Theory/theme applied to each case
(b) concern with explanation
bounded generalization C ? C ? C
theme C ? C
(2) Macro-Analytical Comparative History
(1) Contrast-Oriented Comparative History
(c) comparison across cases intrinsic
42
3. Parallel Comparative History
Cycle of Transition



hypotheses developed into general theory
limits set to overly general theory
2. Macro-Analytical Comparative History
1. Contrast-Oriented Comparative History
contrasts suggest testable hypotheses
43
Contemporary Codification Typology of
Comparative-Historical Studies
  • Typology of BCC Tilly classifies BCC into four
    types by means of two dimensions of comparison,
    namely share of instances (cases or observations)
    and multiplicity of forms (theories or
    propositions)


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Ontological and Epistemological Limitations of
BCC
(Tilly, 1984, p. 144)
46
Functional Equivalence Perspective in Comparative
Studies
  • The concept of function Jurgen Schriewer defines
    function as "the performance achieved for the
    maintenance of whole entities or systems by
    elements of such entities or component parts of
    such system." (Schreiwer, 2003, p. 37)

47
Functional Equivalence Perspective in Comparative
Studies
  • The concept of functional prerequisite According
    to traditional functionalists, such as A,R.
    Radcliff-Brown and Talcott Parsons, function are
    conceived as "necessary conditions of existence"
    of social systems (Kincaid, 2007, p.217). Parsons
    further specifies these functional prerequisites
    of social systems into four (Kincaid, 2007,
    p.217)
  • adaptation ? obtaining resource from the
    environment
  • integration ? maintain coherent relationship
    among their component elements
  • goal attainment ? setting goals and allocating
    resources to achieve them
  • latency ? reproducing organizational structure
    and managing tension between units.

48
Functional Equivalence Perspective in Comparative
Studies
  • The concept of functional equivalence
  • Critique on functional prerequisites
    Functionalists' strong version of defining
    functions as "the prerequisites" and "necessary
    condition of the existence" of social system and
    Parsons' specification of them into four AGIL
    constituents have been criticized as too
    deterministic.

49
Functional Equivalence Perspective in Comparative
Studies
  • The concept of functional equivalence
  • Critique on functional interconnection and
    equilibrium theses G.A. Cohen in his explication
    of the functional explanation thesis in Marxism
    criticizes the functionalists' assumption that
    all constituents in a social system are
    "functionally connected" and "support or
    reinforce one another" and suggests that this
    assumption is not necessary in the logical
    structure of a functional explanation. (Cohen,
    1978, p. 283-285) This implicates that some
    constituents of a social system may be
    dysfunctionally or even antagonistically
    connected with the essential core of a given
    social system. As a result, the thesis of
    totality of functional connection can be forsaken
    and so is the thesis of equilibrium and benign
    stability of the social system.

50
Functional Equivalence Perspective in Comparative
Studies
  • The concept of functional equivalence
  • To relax functionalists' assumptions on the
    functional prerequisite and totality of
    functional interconnection, we may simply
    redefine functions as contributions or benefits a
    given constituent could offer to the maintaining
    of the essential core of the social system.
    Accordingly, the conception of functional
    prerequisite can be replaced by functional
    equivalence. As a result, what we are looking for
    are contributing and beneficial conditions
    instead of necessary conditions (or even
    sufficient condition) for the maintaining of the
    essential core of the social system. Furthermore,
    the strong version of functionalists'
    specification of functional prerequisites into
    AGIL can also be relaxed.

51
Functional Equivalence Perspective in Comparative
Studies
  • Functional equivalence perspective in comparative
    research
  • In comparing societies or particular
    institutions, such as education, in different
    societies, concept of functional equivalence can
    be served as heuristic concept to the issue of
    comparability.
  • From the concept of functional equivalence, we
    may initiate comparative research by posing
    "first that different structures may perform the
    same function, and second, that the same
    structure may perform several different
    functions." (Dogan and Pelassy, 1984, p. 37)

52
Functional Equivalence Perspective in Comparative
Studies
  • Functional equivalence perspective in comparative
    research
  • Conception of dissociation of functions and
    structures
  • "The search for functional equivalences
    passes through this analytical dissociation of
    roles and function. The same performance may be
    accomplished in various countries by different
    organs, and similar or comparable institutions
    may fulfill, in various countries, different
    tasks." (Dogan Pelassy, 1984, p. 37)

53
Functional Equivalence Perspective in Comparative
Studies
  • Functional equivalence perspective in comparative
    research
  • Accordingly, comparative researches may be
    categorized as follows.

54
Perspectives of Functional Equivalence in
Comparative Methods in Education Research
  • Functionalism
  • According to the Parsonsian functionalism, it
    assumes that societies are social systems, which
    are able to maintain most of the time in (A)
    states of adaptive to environments, (G) efficient
    in attaining societal goal in orderly and
    legitimate manner, (I) socially integrated, and
    (L) able to maintain its cultural and
    institutional patterns, in short in equilibrium
    state.
  • As explicated in Lecture 2, functional
    explanations require generalized "consequence
    law" as basis to fulfill it temporal-order
    validity, such as the natural selection theory
    within evolutionism, which serves as the
    "consequence law" of functional explanation in
    biology. Accordingly, in Parsonsian
    functionalism, the "consequence law" underlying
    functional explanation is the equilibrium theory
    of social system.

55
Perspectives of Functional Equivalence in
Comparative Methods in Education Research
  • Functionalism
  • In Parsons' global concept of social system, (A)
    the function of economic institution is to
    fulfill the functional prerequisite of adaptation
    to environment, (G) the function of political
    institution is to attain the functional
    prerequisite of goal-attainment in orderly and
    legitimate ways, (I) social institutions is to
    perform the functional prerequisite of
    integration, and (L) cultural institutions is to
    contribute to the function prerequisite of
    pattern maintenance. Taken together, they will
    achieve the overall equilibrium of the society.

56
Perspectives of Functional Equivalence in
Comparative Methods in Education Research
  • Functionalism
  • As for education institution, Parsons underlines
    that school class performs two essential
    functions to the equilibrium of the social system
    of modern society.
  • Socialization function "School class functions
    to internalize in its pupils both the commitments
    and capacities for successful performance of
    their future adult roles." (Parson, 2004, p. 32)
  • Selection function School class on the other
    hand "functions to allocate these human resources
    within role-structure of the adult society." (p.
    32)

57
Perspectives of Functional Equivalence in
Comparative Methods in Education Research
  • Functional explanation in Marxian perspective
  • The theory of equilibrium as "consequence law" in
    functionalism has been criticized for
    conservative and legitimatizing the status quo
    (Cohen, 1978, p.284 Turner and Maryanski, 1995,
    p.55-56)
  • G.A. Cohen, one of the prominent members of
    Analytical Marxism, in reconstructing historical
    materialism offers a selection theory through
    class struggle as the "consequence law" for his
    functional explanations.

58
Perspectives of Functional Equivalence in
Comparative Methods in Education Research
  • Functional explanation in Marxian perspective
  • In the functional explanation of the relationship
    between force of production and relation of
    production (class relation) Cohen suggests
  • "Classes are permanently poised against one
    another, and that class tends to prevail whose
    rule would best meet the demands of production.
    But how does the fact that production would
    prosper under a certain class ensure its
    dominance? Part of the answer is that there is a
    general stake in stable and striving production,
    so that the class best placed to deliver it
    attracts allies from other strata in society.
    Prospective ruling classes are often able to
    raise support among the classes subjected to the
    ruling class they would displace. Contrariwise,
    classes unsuited to the task of governing society
    tend to lack the confidence political hegemony
    requires, and if they do seize power, they tend
    not to hold it for long." (Cohen, 1978, 292)

59
Perspectives of Functional Equivalence in
Comparative Methods in Education Research
  • Functional explanation in Marxian perspective
  • In the functional explanation of the relationship
    between infrastructure and superstructure, Cohen
    once again suggests
  • "All classes are receptive to whatever ideas are
    likely to benfit them, and ruling classes are
    well placed to propagate ideologies particular
    congenial to themselves. But before an ideology
    is received or broadcast it has to be formed. And
    on that point there are traces in Marx of a
    Darwinian mechanism, a notion that
    thought-systems are produced in comparative
    independence from social constraint, but persist
    and gain social life for ideological service.
    There is a kind of 'ideological pool' which
    yields elements in different configurations as
    social requirements change." (Cohen, 1978, p.291)

60
Perspectives of Functional Equivalence in
Comparative Methods in Education Research
  • Functional explanation in Marxian perspective
  • As for the functional explanation of education
    institution, Marxist conceptions can be
    summarized into two counts
  • Reproduction function As Louis Althuser
    indicates education is part of the ideological
    apparatus of the state, which performs the
    function of reproduction of the prevailing class
    relation of a given society. (Althusser, 1971
    Carnoy, 1982 see also Bowles and Gintis, 1976
    Bourdieu Passeron, 1977 Apple, 1979)
  • Legitimatizing function Bowles and Gintis
    indicate that the highly selective and
    competitive structure of education does not only
    corresponds but in fact legitimatizing the
    inequality found in the class structure of
    capitalist society. )Bowles Gintis, 1976)

61
Perspectives of Functional Equivalence in
Comparative Methods in Education Research
  • Functional explanation of education in Weberian
    perspective
  • Max Weber has rendered a function explanation of
    the relationship between education contents and
    forms of domination in societies. (Weber, 2004)
  • Margret Archer has also expounded that domination
    and assertion among status groups as the primary
    factor contributing to education expansion in
    recent decades.

62
Webers Typology of Education System
63
Perspectives of Functional Equivalence in
Comparative Methods in Education Research
  • In light of these perspectives, the functional
    equivalence comparison framework can be
    elaborated as follow.

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Lecture 3 Comparative Method of Marco-social
Phenomena Functional Equivalence Perspective
End
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