mass media and society: introduction to research

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Mass Media and Society Introduction to Research Methods April 2, 2014

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Page 1: Mass Media and Society: Introduction to Research

Mass Media and Society

Introduction to Research Methods

April 2, 2014

Page 2: Mass Media and Society: Introduction to Research

Introduction to research methods

• Lule pages 50-52• Media theories provide

framework for approaching questions about media effects

Page 3: Mass Media and Society: Introduction to Research

Research methods• Content analysis• Archival research• Surveys• Social role analysis• Depth interviews

Page 4: Mass Media and Society: Introduction to Research

Research methods• Rhetorical analysis• Focus groups• Experiments• Participant observation

Page 5: Mass Media and Society: Introduction to Research

‘Basics of Social Science Research’

• Earl Babbie, author• Agreement reality: Things

we “know” as part of culture we share

• Epistemology: Science of knowing; systems of knowledge

Page 6: Mass Media and Society: Introduction to Research

Research basics• Methodology: Science of

finding out; procedures for scientific investigation

• Theory: Systematic explanation for observations that relate to a particular aspect of life

• Theory, not philosophy or belief

Page 7: Mass Media and Society: Introduction to Research

Causal relationships• Attributes or values are

characteristics or qualities that describe an object: a person

• Variables are logical sets of attributes: male/female, occupation, etc.

• Variables, attributes are foundation for research

Page 8: Mass Media and Society: Introduction to Research

Variables• Independent: Taken as

simply given• Dependent: Assumed to

be depended on or be caused by another; for example, income is partly a function of formal education

Page 9: Mass Media and Society: Introduction to Research

Purposes of research

• Describing state of affairs• Explaining phenomena• Exploring phenomena• Pure research: knowledge

for sake of knowledge• Applied: Research seeks

to make a difference

Page 10: Mass Media and Society: Introduction to Research

Dialectics of research

• Qualitative data are numerical (rating scale, for example); quantitative are not (open-ended survey, for example)

• Both are useful for research purposes

Page 11: Mass Media and Society: Introduction to Research

Quantitative vs. qualitative

• Quantitative involves statistical analysis of numerical data

• Qualitative more typically includes field research (interviews, questionnaires) and can generate theories

Page 12: Mass Media and Society: Introduction to Research

Avoiding the illogical• In everyday life, we

sometimes reason illogically; researchers seek to avoid this by being careful and reasoning deliberately in observations

• Avoiding generalizing and jumping to conclusions