Top Banner
DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE
22

DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Jan 02, 2016

Download

Documents

Ellen Wade
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE

Page 2: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Politics & Science

1. What is politics?

2. What is science?

3. What is Political Science? • Testable hypothesis• Systematic and rigorous research• Empirical evidence

• Observation, logic, knowledge, evidence

• Replicable results¤

Page 3: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Subfields of Political Science

American•Institutions•Behavior•Policy•Administration•Law

Comparative•Institutions•Behavior•Policy•Development

Int’l Relations•Theory•Transnational issues•Policy•Global economy•Conflict & Security

Theory•-Isms•Time frames•Schools of thought

Page 4: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Hypotheses & Variables

Political Science•Have a theory about something•Testable hypothesis•Systematic and rigorous research•Replicable results¤

Page 5: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

PROVE

Page 6: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

HypothesisWhat is it?

•Suspect relationship between 2+ things

• Technically called ‘alternative hypothesis’

• Being a Republican increases the likelihood of supporting legalizing Marijuana.

• Null hypothesis is the default position

• Party affiliation does not have an impact on views on Marijuana.

•Assumption about something

¤

Page 7: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Testing Hypothesis

Use methodology

• Qualitative

• Quantitative

• Combo of both

¤

Page 8: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Hypothesis?

Page 9: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Variables

Variables = Factors in the hypothesis• Dependent (DV)

• What you’re trying to explain

• Independent (IV)• What you think explains the phenomenon

¤

Page 10: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Identify the Variables

• The higher the GPA of the students in this class, the more likely they are to get an A• DV=what determines a grade• IV= GPA

• The children of smokers are more likely to smoke than those of non-smokers• DV=who smokes• IV= parental influence

¤

Page 11: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Identify the Variables• Regularly watching television cartoons and music videos negatively affects attention span.• DV=what affects attention span• IV= regularly watching cartoons; regularly watching music videos

• How does familial support influence body image in teenage girls? • DV=what influences body image• IV= familial support¤

¤

Page 12: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Identify the Variables

• What is the relationship between GDP and female literacy rates?• DV= none- not a hypothesis• IV= ditto

• Happiness is increased by participating in charitable activities and identifying with a religion. • DV=what affects happiness• IV= doing charity; religious affiliation

¤

Page 13: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Operationalization

To operationalize a definition = To provide a way to measure something

• Set limits for variables

Hypothesis: Democratic countries are less likely to go to war with one another.

What needs to be operationalized? • War, democracy

¤

Page 14: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Operationalize the Hypothesis

What impact does the increase of Type 2 diabetes have on U.S. healthcare costs?

1.Identify the DV and IV(s)• DV= U.S. healthcare costs• IV= Type 2 diabetes

2.What needs to be operationalized?• Healthcare ‘costs’, ‘increase’ of the disease

¤

Page 15: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Operationalize the Hypothesis

The higher the level of education, the higher the level of voter turnout expected

1.Identify the DV(s) and the IV(s)• DV= who votes• IV= education level

2.What needs to be operationalized?• Voter turnout, education level

¤

Page 16: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Operationalize the HypothesisHow do the number of nongovernmental organizations in a country affect a country’s sovereignty?

1.Identify the DV and IV(s)• DV= sovereignty• IV= # of NGOs

2.What needs to be operationalized?• Sovereignty, NGOs

3.What other possible IVs are there?• Level of development, sense of nationalism, etc.

¤

Page 17: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Operationalize the Hypothesis

What is the correlation between economic benefits and European Union membership?

1.Rephrase into a hypothesis

2.Identify the DV and IV(s)

3.What needs to be operationalized?

¤

Page 18: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Good Research?

Two Princeton University researchers analyzed data from web searches to conclude that Facebook will lose most of its users by 2017.

Facebook staffers riposted with “proof” that, based on search data, Princeton itself is on the verge of dying out.

¤

Page 19: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Good Research?• How reliable are the results?

• Keys• Build on existing research• Replication of study

• Will another test get the same results?• More times results confirmed, increased validity

• Note- not prove, confirm

¤

Page 20: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Research Results

Most published research findings are false• Research bias• Bad judgment• Incompetence • Sloppy research design• Misinterpretation

¤

Page 21: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Jumping the Gun

Problem•One sensational outcome gets attention

• Cell phones cause brain cancer•Media, policymakers, public hear results•Tend to focus on one sensationalized study

• Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

• More studies = greater likelihood of accuracy

¤

Page 22: DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE. Politics & Science 1. What is politics? 2. What is science? 3. What is Political Science? Testable hypothesis Systematic and.

Recap

Political Science = Theories Hypothesis Test with variables using method Confirmed hypothesis or null hypothesisReplicate or investigate¤