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Page 1: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Lecture -- 1-- Start

Page 2: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Outline

1. Science, Method & Measurement2. On Building An Index3. Correlation & Causality4. Probability & Statistics5. Samples & Surveys6. Experimental & Quasi-experimental Designs7. Conceptual Models8. Quantitative Models9. Complexity & Chaos10. Recapitulation - Envoi

Page 3: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Outline

1. Science, Method & Measurement2. On Building An Index3. Correlation & Causality4. Probability & Statistics5. Samples & Surveys6. Experimental & Quasi-experimental Designs7. Conceptual Models8. Quantitative Models9. Complexity & Chaos10. Recapitulation - Envoi

Page 4: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research

Ismail SerageldinAlexandria

2012

Lecture # 1:Science, Method, and

Measurement

Page 5: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

On Science

Page 6: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

On Science

Page 7: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Science Is Driven by Curiosity About the Natural World

Page 8: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

WHAT IF?

WHAT IF?

WHAT IF?

??

Page 9: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Defining Science

“The organization of our knowledge in such a way that it commands more of the hidden potential in nature ..”

J. Bronowski

Page 10: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Intellectual Activities

NaturalSciences

PhysicsChemistryAstronomy

GeologyBiology

Etc.

HumanSciences

PsychologyEconomics

Political ScienceSociology

HistoryEtc. Applied Fields

TechnologyEducationMedicine

LawEtc.

Humanities

EstheticsEthics

ReligionPhilosophy

Etc.

Sciences

Curiosity

Influence others

Objective

Subjective

Page 11: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Natural Sciences (classical definitions)

• Physical Sciences : Physics, Chemistry

• Life Sciences : Biology (zoology, botany)

• Earth Sciences : Geology, Astronomy, Meteorology

Page 12: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Overlapping Domains in Science

Biochemistry, Paleontology, Molecular Genetics…

Page 13: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Changed Outlook: Process and System Views

Page 14: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Example: Photosynthesis

• Light: the Energy source (physics )

• Photosynthesis : The food productionprocess (chemistry )

• For plants (biology )

Energy…biochemical pathways…cell Biology… plant physiology…

Page 15: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Nature of Scientific Knowledge

• Falsifiable (Popper)• Approximative• Empirical• Replicable

• And so much more…

Page 16: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Karl Popper(1902-1994)

Page 17: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Before scientific thinking can proceed, certain philosophical presuppositions must be made about the nature of the universe:

Page 18: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

• Objective reality exists – there really arethings out there, everything is not simply afigment of the imagination .

• The universe is knowable – no aspects of theuniverse are beyond human understanding .

• The universe’s operation is regular andpredictable – if events occur at random,without any warning or pattern, no amount ofanalysis will uncover any regularity to them .

Philosophical Presuppositions

Page 19: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

• Objective reality exists – there really arethings out there, everything is not simply afigment of the imagination .

• The universe is knowable – no aspects of theuniverse are beyond human understanding .

• The universe’s operation is regular andpredictable – if events occur at random,without any warning or pattern, no amount ofanalysis will uncover any regularity to them .

Philosophical Presuppositions

Page 20: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

• Objective reality exists – there really arethings out there, everything is not simply afigment of the imagination .

• The universe is knowable – no aspects of theuniverse are beyond human understanding .

• The universe’s operation is regular andpredictable – if events occur at random,without any warning or pattern, no amount ofanalysis will uncover any regularity to them .

Philosophical Presuppositions

Page 21: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

• Objective reality exists – there really arethings out there, everything is not simply afigment of the imagination .

• The universe is knowable – no aspects of theuniverse are beyond human understanding .

• The universe’s operation is regular andpredictable – if events occur at random,without any warning or pattern, no amount ofanalysis will uncover any regularity to them .

Philosophical Presuppositions

Page 22: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

On The Scientific Method

Page 23: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Scientific Method

Page 24: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of ScienceOBSERVATION: Sense specific physical realities or events.

HYPOTHESIS: Create a statement about the general REVISEDnature of the phenomenon observed. HYPOTHESIS

PREDICTION: Forecast a future occurrence PREDICTIONconsistent with the hypotheses.

EXPERIMENT: Carry out a test to see if predicted EXPERIMENTevent occurs.

If results DO If results DO NOTmatch prediction, match prediction RECYCLEhypothesis issupported.

Page 25: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of ScienceOBSERVATION: Sense specific physical realities or events.

HYPOTHESIS: Create a statement about the general REVISEDnature of the phenomenon observed. HYPOTHESIS

PREDICTION: Forecast a future occurrence PREDICTIONconsistent with the hypotheses.

EXPERIMENT: Carry out a test to see if predicted EXPERIMENTevent occurs.

If results DO If results DO NOTmatch prediction, match prediction RECYCLEhypothesis issupported.

Page 26: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of ScienceOBSERVATION: Sense specific physical realities or events.

HYPOTHESIS: Create a statement about the general REVISEDnature of the phenomenon observed. HYPOTHESIS

PREDICTION: Forecast a future occurrence PREDICTIONconsistent with the hypotheses.

EXPERIMENT: Carry out a test to see if predicted EXPERIMENTevent occurs.

If results DO If results DO NOTmatch prediction, match prediction RECYCLEhypothesis issupported.

Page 27: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of ScienceOBSERVATION: Sense specific physical realities or events.

HYPOTHESIS: Create a statement about the general REVISEDnature of the phenomenon observed. HYPOTHESIS

PREDICTION: Forecast a future occurrence PREDICTIONconsistent with the hypotheses.

EXPERIMENT: Carry out a test to see if predicted EXPERIMENTevent occurs.

If results DO If results DO NOTmatch prediction, match prediction RECYCLEhypothesis issupported.

Page 28: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of ScienceOBSERVATION: Sense specific physical realities or events.

HYPOTHESIS: Create a statement about the general REVISEDnature of the phenomenon observed. HYPOTHESIS

PREDICTION: Forecast a future occurrence PREDICTIONconsistent with the hypotheses.

EXPERIMENT: Carry out a test to see if predicted EXPERIMENTevent occurs.

If results DO If results DO NOTmatch prediction , match prediction RECYCLEhypothesis issupported.

Page 29: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of ScienceOBSERVATION: Sense specific physical realities or events.

HYPOTHESIS: Create a statement about the general REVISEDnature of the phenomenon observed. HYPOTHESIS

PREDICTION: Forecast a future occurrence PREDICTIONconsistent with the hypotheses.

EXPERIMENT: Carry out a test to see if predicted EXPERIMENTevent occurs.

If results DO If results DO NOTmatch prediction , match prediction RECYCLEhypothesis issupported .

Page 30: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of ScienceOBSERVATION: Sense specific physical realities or events.

HYPOTHESIS: Create a statement about the general REVISEDnature of the phenomenon observed. HYPOTHESIS

PREDICTION: Forecast a future occurrence PREDICTIONconsistent with the hypotheses.

EXPERIMENT: Carry out a test to see if predicted EXPERIMENTevent occurs.

If results DO If results DO NOTmatch prediction, match prediction RECYCLEhypothesis issupported.

Page 31: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of ScienceOBSERVATION: Sense specific physical realities or events.

HYPOTHESIS: Create a statement about the general REVISEDnature of the phenomenon observed. HYPOTHESIS

PREDICTION: Forecast a future occurrence PREDICTIONconsistent with the hypotheses.

EXPERIMENT: Carry out a test to see if predicted EXPERIMENTevent occurs.

If results DO If results DO NOTmatch prediction, match prediction RECYCLEhypothesis issupported.

Page 32: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of ScienceOBSERVATION: Sense specific physical realities or events.

HYPOTHESIS: Create a statement about the general REVISEDnature of the phenomenon observed. HYPOTHESIS

PREDICTION: Forecast a future occurrence PREDICTIONconsistent with the hypotheses.

EXPERIMENT: Carry out a test to see if predicted EXPERIMENTevent occurs.

If results DO If results DO NOTmatch prediction, match prediction RECYCLEhypothesis issupported.

Page 33: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of ScienceOBSERVATION: Sense specific physical realities or events.

HYPOTHESIS: Create a statement about the general REVISEDnature of the phenomenon observed. HYPOTHESIS

PREDICTION: Forecast a future occurrence PREDICTIONconsistent with the hypotheses.

EXPERIMENT: Carry out a test to see if predicted EXPERIMENTevent occurs.

If results DO If results DO NOTmatch prediction, match prediction RECYCLEhypothesis issupported.

Page 34: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of ScienceOBSERVATION: Sense specific physical realities or events.

HYPOTHESIS: Create a statement about the general REVISEDnature of the phenomenon observed. HYPOTHESIS

PREDICTION: Forecast a future occurrence PREDICTIONconsistent with the hypotheses.

EXPERIMENT: Carry out a test to see if predicted EXPERIMENTevent occurs.

If results DO If results DO NOTmatch prediction, match prediction RECYCLEhypothesis issupported.

Page 35: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

No amount of experimentation can ever prove me right; A single experiment can prove me wrong.

Albert Einstein

Page 36: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Scientific Method

• Conjecture• Hypothesis• Testing• Replicability• Falsifiability• Cumulative evidence• Explanatory power• Predictive power

Page 37: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Math

• Logical, consistent, proof is absolute within its own axiomatic rules

• Math is added to, science is replaced• Math is the science of patterns• It is elegant, beautiful and concise• It demands enormous precision in

thinking clearly about abstract objects

Page 38: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Math and Science

• Enormous power for manipulating quantitative results

• Hence questions of measurement are important

• Quantification and qualitative analyses remain important issues

Page 39: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Back To The Social Sciences

Page 40: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Intellectual Activities

NaturalSciences

PhysicsChemistryAstronomy

GeologyBiology

Etc.

HumanSciences

PsychologyEconomics

Political ScienceSociology

HistoryEtc. Applied Fields

TechnologyEducationMedicine

LawEtc.

Humanities

EstheticsEthics

ReligionPhilosophy

Etc.

Sciences

Curiosity

Influence others

Objective

Subjective

Page 41: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Intellectual Activities

NaturalSciences

PhysicsChemistryAstronomy

GeologyBiology

Etc.

HumanSciences

PsychologyEconomics

Political ScienceSociology

HistoryEtc. Applied Fields

TechnologyEducationMedicine

LawEtc.

Humanities

EstheticsEthics

ReligionPhilosophy

Etc.

Sciences

Curiosity

Influence others

Objective

Subjective

Page 42: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Back To The Scientific Method

Page 43: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of Science

Observation

Hypothesis

Prediction

Experiment

Page 44: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Method of Science

Observation

Hypothesis

Prediction

Experiment

Interpretation

Page 45: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

But can we apply that empirical method in the social sciences?

Page 46: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Understanding Society To Design

Social Policies

Page 47: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Policy Counts

Page 48: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Economic Growth and Poverty Reduction

Page 49: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Growth and Poverty Reduction

• Growth is a necessary but not sufficient condition for poverty reduction

• The quality of growth and the nature of the policies matters enormously

Page 50: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

0.0

2.0

4.0

6.0

8.0

10.0

10.08.06.04.02.00.0 12.0

% annual growth in GDP/person

% annual decline in poverty(Headcount

index)

Growth and Poverty Reduction

Page 51: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

0.0

2.0

4.0

6.0

8.0

10.0

10.08.06.04.02.00.0 12.0

% annual growth in GDP/person

% annual decline in poverty(Headcount

index)

Growth and Poverty Reduction

Page 52: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

0.0

2.0

4.0

6.0

8.0

10.0

10.08.06.04.02.00.0 12.0

% annual growth in GDP/person

% annual decline in poverty(Headcount

index)

Jamaica

Costa Rica

India

MalaysiaIndonesia

SingaporeThailand

Taiwan

Sri LankaMexico

Brazil

Bangladesh

Pakistan

Growth and Poverty Reduction

Page 53: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

0.0

2.0

4.0

6.0

8.0

10.0

10.08.06.04.02.00.0 12.0

% annual growth in GDP/person

% annual decline in poverty(Headcount

index)

Jamaica

Costa Rica

India

MalaysiaIndonesia

SingaporeThailand

Taiwan

Sri LankaMexico

Brazil

Bangladesh

Pakistan

Growth and Poverty Reduction

Page 54: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

0.0

2.0

4.0

6.0

8.0

10.0

10.08.06.04.02.00.0 12.0

% annual growth in GDP/person

% annual decline in poverty(Headcount

index)

Jamaica

Costa Rica

India

MalaysiaIndonesia

SingaporeThailand

Taiwan

Sri LankaMexico

Brazil

Bangladesh

Pakistan

Growth and Poverty Reduction

Page 55: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

0.0

2.0

4.0

6.0

8.0

10.0

10.08.06.04.02.00.0 12.0

% annual growth in GDP/person

% annual decline in poverty(Headcount

index)

Jamaica

Costa Rica

India

MalaysiaIndonesia

SingaporeThailand

Taiwan

Sri LankaMexico

Brazil

Bangladesh

Pakistan

Growth and Poverty Reduction

Page 56: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Policies, Inequality and Welfare

Page 57: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Is Inequality Built Into Economic Structure?

• Is movement into knowledge based economy necessarily accompanied by inequality?

• Is US economy intrinsically generating more inequality?

Page 58: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Poverty Observed: US and Selected European Countries, 1991

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Belgium

Canada

Denmark

France

Ireland

Italy

Netherlands

Sweden

UK

USA

% POORSource: Robert Solow, “Welfare: The Cheapest Countr y”’in NYRB, 23 March 2000, p. 20-23

Page 59: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Poverty before Government policy effects

US and Selected European Countries, 1991

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Belgium

Canada

Denmark

France

Ireland

Italy

Netherlands

Sweden

UK

USA

% POORSource: Robert Solow, “Welfare: The Cheapest Countr y”’in NYRB, 23 March 2000, p. 20-23

Page 60: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Policy Effects on Poverty:Pre and Post tax and transfers, 1991

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Belgium

Canada

Denmark

France

Ireland

Italy

Netherlands

Sweden

UK

USA

% POORSource: Robert Solow, “Welfare: The Cheapest Countr y”’in NYRB, 23 March 2000, p. 20-23

Page 61: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Policy Effects on Poverty:Pre and Post tax and transfers, 1991

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Belgium

Canada

Denmark

France

Ireland

Italy

Netherlands

Sweden

UK

USA

% POORSource: Robert Solow, “Welfare: The Cheapest Countr y”’in NYRB, 23 March 2000, p. 20-23

Page 62: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Policy Effects on Poverty:Pre and Post tax and transfers, 1991

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Belgium

Canada

Denmark

France

Ireland

Italy

Netherlands

Sweden

UK

USA

% POORSource: Robert Solow, “Welfare: The Cheapest Countr y”’in NYRB, 23 March 2000, p. 20-23

Page 63: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Policy Effects on Poverty:Pre and Post tax and transfers, 1991

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Belgium

Canada

Denmark

France

Ireland

Italy

Netherlands

Sweden

UK

USA

% POORSource: Robert Solow, “Welfare: The Cheapest Countr y”’in NYRB, 23 March 2000, p. 20-23

Page 64: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Why Quantitative Analysis ?

Page 65: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Importance of Social Research

Page 66: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Much Economic Analysis Erases the Human Factor

Page 67: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

The Need for Social Inputs Into Development Decisions

• Social policy is more than the social consequences of economic policies

• Social goals and policies complement economic ones

• Economic Analysis by itself is insufficient: Social, cultural, political and ethical dimensions must be introduced

Page 68: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Elements Of A Social Policy - I

• To maintain social cohesion• To foster equity

• To reach the ultra poor and other marginalized groups

• To uphold cultural identity (shared universal values and solidarity, not divisive micro -identities)

Page 69: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Elements Of A Social Policy - II

• To promote participation (voice, choice and empowerment through access to knowledge and resources)

• To facilitate social mobility (inter-generational, geographic and occupational)

• To support institutional development• To enable participatory social

research

Page 70: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Participatory Social Research

• Promotes more effective understanding

• Leads to sounder policy and program designs

• Empowers the people participating in the research

Page 71: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Social Research and Decision Making

• Coherent Framework

• Predictive

• Prescriptive

Page 72: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Social Research and Decision Making

• Coherent Framework

• Predictive

• Prescriptive

Page 73: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Social Research and Decision Making

• Coherent Framework

• Predictive

• Prescriptive

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Crisis in the Non -economic Social Sciences

• Absence of theoretical framework for the dynamics of social change

• The negative impact of the post-modern currents

• Confusion about quantitative and qualitative aspects pf research

• The misunderstood role of models

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Crisis in the Non -economic Social Sciences

• Absence of theoretical framework for the dynamics of social change

• The negative impact of the post-modern currents

• Confusion about quantitative and qualitative aspects pf research

• The misunderstood role of models

Page 76: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Crisis in the Non -economic Social Sciences

• Absence of theoretical framework for the dynamics of social change

• The negative impact of the post-modern currents

• Confusion about quantitative and qualitative aspects of research

• The misunderstood role of models

Page 77: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Crisis in the Non -economic Social Sciences

• Absence of theoretical framework for the dynamics of social change

• The negative impact of the post-modern currents

• Confusion about quantitative and qualitative aspects of research

• The misunderstood role of models

Page 78: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Crisis in the Non -economic Social Sciences

• Absence of a theoretical framework for the dynamics of social change

• The negative impact of the post-modern currents

• Confusion about quantitative and qualitative aspects of research

• The misunderstood role of models

Page 79: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Quantitative Social Analyses:Laplace

“Let us apply to the political and moral sciences, the method founded on observation and mathematics that has served so well in the natural sciences.”

-- Pierre Simon de Laplace

(1749-1827)

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Quantitative Social Analyses:Quetelet

“The more advanced the sciences have become, the more they have tended to enter the domain of mathematics, which is a sort of center toward which they converge. We can judge of the perfection toward which a science has come by the facility, more or less great, with which it may be approached by calculation.”

-- Quetelet (1796-1874)

Page 81: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Quantitative Social Analyses:Quetelet

Quetelet (1796 -1874), by the way, invented the notion of the “average man.”

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Quantitative Social Analyses:Boorstin

“Today, the Cassandras of social science speak the language of numbers”.

-- D.J. Boorstin (1914-2004)

Source: Daniel J. Boorstin, Cleopatra , (op.cit., p142)

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Vehement Reactions

• Dehumanizing the humanities• Denies individualism• Treats people like products or

machines• Economics is not the whole story• Etc. etc.

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Serageldin On Reductionist Views

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Serageldin on Reductionist Views

• Three buckets of water and a handful of minerals held together by chemical reactions…

• A society is more than the sum of its economic and financial transactions…

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+

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Page 88: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Serageldin on Reductionist Views

• Three buckets of water and a handful of minerals held together by chemical reactions…

• A society is more than the sum of its economic and financial transactions…

Page 89: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Page 90: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Conclusions

• We need more, not less, sophisticated approaches…

• Clever word games are not helpful to either explain social realities or to help formulate polices and interventions that improve the well-being of people

Page 91: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

But we need quantitative analysis to understand, and to

measure and to devise appropriate Social policies

Page 92: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Quantitative Analysis complements Qualitative

analysis and frequently under-girds it.

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On Measurement

Page 94: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Measurement counts

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Measurement Is Important

• We treasure what we measure• Prescription and dosage depend

upon accurate estimation of magnitudes

• Establishing trends is as – or more --important than snapshots of magnitudes

• Monitoring of progress over time

Page 96: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Measurement Is Important

• We treasure what we measure• Prescription and dosage depend

upon accurate estimation of magnitudes

• Establishing trends is as – or more --important than snapshots of magnitudes

• Monitoring of progress over time

Page 97: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Measurement Is Important

• We treasure what we measure• Prescription and dosage depend

upon accurate estimation of magnitudes

• Establishing trends is as – or more --important than snapshots of magnitudes

• Monitoring of progress over time

Page 98: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Measurement Is Important

• We treasure what we measure• Prescription and dosage depend

upon accurate estimation of magnitudes

• Establishing trends is as – or more --important than snapshots of magnitudes

• Monitoring of progress over time

Page 99: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Measurement Is Important

• We treasure what we measure• Prescription and dosage depend

upon accurate estimation of magnitudes

• Establishing trends is as – or more --important than snapshots of magnitudes

• Monitoring of progress over time

Page 100: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

143/xxx

On Measurement

• Accuracy & Precision

• Resolution & Randomness

• Types of Scales

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144/xxx

On Measurement

• Accuracy & Precision

• Resolution & Randomness

• Types of Scales

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Accuracy in Measurement

• Using the right tool• The quality of the tool is important• How carefully we measure with it is

also important• Let’s use a ruler to measure the

length of a piece of wood…

Page 103: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Accuracy in Measurement

• Using the right tool• The quality of the tool is important

Page 104: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Accuracy in Measurement

• Using the right tool• The quality of the tool is important• How carefully we measure with it is

also important

Page 105: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Accuracy in Measurement

• Using the right tool• The quality of the tool is important• How carefully we measure with it is

also important• Let’s use a ruler to measure the

length of a piece of wood…

Page 106: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Accuracy & Precision

• Accuracy : how close the measured value is to reality (i.e. what it ought to be) -- So if the ruler is defective and two rulers yield different results that is an error of accuracy

• Precision : is a measure of the reproducibility of the measurement,

Page 107: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Accuracy & Precision

• Precision : is a measure of the reproducibility of the measurement, our confidence that uncertainty of measurement has been reduced to a minimum.

• Sometimes the problem is instrumental precision (level of resolution) or the randomness of the event being measured.

Page 108: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

On Measurement

• Accuracy & Precision

• Resolution & Randomness

• Types of Scales

Page 109: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Resolution vs. Randomness

• We do not re -measure the piece of wood 100 times and take the average.

• Assuming the wood was measured carefully, the error here is due to the resolution of the ruler, not the randomness of the event being measured.

Page 110: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Resolution of the tool

• So, instead of a ruler use higher resolution instrument s like precision Verniercalipers:

Page 111: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

But that is very different from dealing with random events

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Random events

Page 113: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Random events/outcomes require a probabilistic treatment

Page 114: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Social Science studies of events/outcomes usually require a statistical probabilistic treatment

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Here multiple measurements and probabilistic techniques are used

Page 116: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

We will get back to Probabilities Later

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On Measurement

• Accuracy & Precision

• Resolution & Randomness

• Types of Scales

Page 118: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

What kind of scale do we use in Measurement?

Page 119: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Four Kinds (Types) of Scales

• Nominal

• Ordinal

• Interval

• Ratio

Page 120: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Types of Scales:I. Nominal Scales

Numbers are used to name, identify or classify.

The onlypermissible arithmetical

procedures are counting and

statistical techniques based

on counting. Level Limitations Example

163

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Social Science Examples of Nominal Scales

• Marital Status: Married, Unmarried• Nationality: Chinese, American,

European, Egyptian• Religion: Muslim, Christian, Jewish,

Buddhist, …• Ethnic or tribal group • Race: Black, white• P/F Evaluation: Pass/Fail

Page 122: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Types of Scales:II. Ordinal Scales

Numbers indicate rank or order.

Ranking methods and other statistical techniques based on

interpretations of “greater than” or “less than” are

permissible.

Level Limitations Example

165

Page 123: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Social Science Examples of Ordinal Scales

• Grading of interpersonal skills

• Evaluating managerial skills

• You can say greater than, but you cannot really quantify the amount or degree objectively.

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Types of Scales:III. Interval Scales

The intervals or distances between each number and the next are equal, but it is not known how far any of them is from zero.

Addition and subtraction and statistical

techniques based on these two operations are

permissible. Multiplication and di-

vision are not permissible.

Level Limitations Example

167

Page 125: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Natural Science Examples of Interval Scales

• Temperature:– Two days: 20 and 40 degrees Celsius– Difference between them is 20

• Cannot say twice as hot because zero could be:– Celsius scale– Fahrenheit scale– Kelvin scale

Page 126: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Social Science Examples of Interval Scales

• Grading school exams: • Say two students took a test: results

score was 20 and 40 points (difference is 20 points) but should not say twice as much.

• BUT…teacher could have added a few easy questions that would have obtained each student 10 more points

• Results would have been 30 and 50 .

Page 127: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Social Science Examples of Interval Scales

• Height or weight of people:– Say two persons 1.6 m and 1.80 m– Or two persons weigh 60kg and 80 kg

• Note:– No one is really 0.0 height or weight

Page 128: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Types of Scales:IV. Ratio Scales

Each number can be thought of as a distance measured from zero

There are no limitations. All arithmetical operations and all statistical techniques are permissible

Level Limitations Example

171

Page 129: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Social Science Examples of Ratio Scales

• Income and expenditure • Years of schooling• Number of respondents selecting

something• Number of respondents who have a

particular cardinal quality (e.g. married, unmarried)

• Etc.

Page 130: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Social Science Examples of Ratio Scales

• Income and expenditure • Years of schooling• Number of respondents selecting

something• Number of respondents who have a

particular cardinal quality (e.g. married, unmarried)

• Etc.

Page 131: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

It is important that not all relationships or all mathematical operations can be applied to all

scales.

Page 132: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Now let’s move on to some descriptors of groups

Page 133: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

What Is An Average?

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We say: I examined 20 students and the average score was x

Page 135: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

What is the meaning of the word “average”?

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Average?

• Mean: usually add up the values for all the observations and divide them by the number of observations

• Median: the number at which half the observations are smaller and the other half are bigger

• Mode: the number that appears most frequently in the distribution of observations.

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Average?

• Mean: usually add up the values for all the observations and divide them by the number of observations

• Median: the number at which half the observations are smaller and the other half are bigger

• Mode: the number that appears most frequently in the distribution of observations.

Page 138: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Lets take 20 observations

• 1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 6, 6, 6, 6, 7, 7, 8, 10, 10, 20

• What is the Mean ? • The Median ? • The Mode?

Page 139: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Lets Find the Mean

• 1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 6, 6, 6, 6, 7, 7, 8, 10, 10, 20

• Mean =Total / number of observations

• Total = 1+2+3+…. + 10+10+20 = 120• Mean = 120 / 20 = 6

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Formula for the Mean

n = ���⋯���

183

Page 141: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Lets Find the Median

• 1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 6, 6, 6, 6, 7, 7, 8, 10, 10, 20

• Median = 5

Page 142: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Lets Find the Mode

• 1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 6, 6, 6, 6, 7, 7, 8, 10, 10, 20

• Mode = 4

Page 143: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

So for these Observations

• 1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 6, 6, 6, 6, 7, 7, 8, 10, 10, 20

• Mean = 6• Median = 5• Mode = 4

Page 144: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Lets Change one Observation

• 1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 6, 6, 6, 6, 7, 7, 8, 10, 10, 1000

• Mean = 1100 / 20 = 55

• Median = 5• Mode = 4

Page 145: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Introducing: The Normal Curve(The Bell Curve, The Gaussian Distribution)

Page 146: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Mean, Median, Mode

Page 147: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Average?

• Mean: usually add up the values for all the observations and divide them by the number of observations

• Median: the number at which half the observations are smaller and the other half are bigger

• Mode: the number that appears most frequently in the distribution of observations.

Page 148: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Mixing between these is one of the most common fallacies in

reporting social statistics

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Page 150: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

We will come back to the Normal Curve(The Bell Curve, The Gaussian Distribution)

many times in this course

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But that will be for later…

Page 152: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

SO…

Page 153: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Let’s make sure that we keep our heads above water!

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I want you all to be swimming, not drowning!

Page 155: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Then we will all learn to fly…

Page 156: Lecture -- 1-- Start - University of Pittsburghsuper7/51011-52001/51331.pdf · Quantitative Techniques for Social Science Research Ismail Serageldin Alexandria 2012 Lecture # 1: Science,

Thank You