ENGLISH 202MARCH  15TH, 2010
agendaWelcome backTipping Point Chapter 8 and AfterwardsOur next book chapters: Covering ch 1 and 2Next step in your research: MethodologyBook Reviews and lit reviews are due this Wednesday. Make sure you proofread your letters. Perhaps we can send your reviews to Gladwell at the end of this semester
Announcement“Please come and join the Food and Nutrition Department and the Student Dietetic Association in celebrating National Nutrition month with the Theme of "FROM THE GROUND UP" on Wed. March 17th in the HUB Atrium, Susquehanna and Monongahela Rooms from 10 to 3 pm.” For more information contact Dr. Nicole Clark at nclark@iup.edu.
What have we learned from the Tipping Point?Social Change is possible if ….One is a good observerOne values research and attempts to understand human behavior through the act of researchOne looks carefully to the small details of lifeOne can reach few special people to shape the course of social epidemics (e.g. Law of the Few)We are always influenced by our environments and the individuals around us.Examples of Salesman, connectors, Blue’s clues, New York subway cleanup, Fundamental Attribution error tell us a lot about what it means to be human
In-class bloggingGladwell says “What underlies successful epidemics, in the end, is a bedrock belief that change is possible, that people can radically transform their behavior or beliefs in the face of the right kind of impetus” What type of social change you, a contributing member of your society, would like to bring in your community? How do you think you can help tip this social epidemics? (Think about your own social action research project)The act of reading is shaped by the reader. In your view, which chapter was most influential? Why did you find that chapter more interesting than others?Discuss one idea that you will take with you after reading The Tipping Point. How do you think you can apply that idea in your academic and personal life?
FROM MEDIA: GLADWELL INTERVIEWS CNN INTERVIEWS: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QCt1Wc8Kx4Uhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nf3NalDYIT8&feature=relatedSTUDENT PROJECTS http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jq89Hlcn-98http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5BzhNqSSpU&feature=related
Moving ahead with your research projectsIn your groups, please discuss the following questions:What you have gained so far from doing library search and the literature review?How did you organize your literature review?How did you begin your literature review?What are some of the “action verbs” you used in your review? What transitional devices did you use to connect the different sources?How did you end your literature review?
What is the next step in your research?Now that you have your ‘evolving’ introductions, have developed a ‘working’ knowledge for your topic,  read widely on your topics, wrote a literature review (background) of your social action research projects. The next step will include:Deciding your methods of inquiry (e.g. case study, surveys, ethnography)looking for a research site for your field work.Looking for participants.
Next step in your research: METHODS OF INQUIRYMethodology: The way researchers collect dataHow do a researcher collect his/her data?—Interviews, surveys, taking pictures, reading library archives etc.How can a researcher construct effective interview or survey questions that will help answer the researchers’ questions?  Who are your participants? (e.g. college students, high school teachers, women of color in workplace, minority students in a Freshman course) How would you describe them?(e.g. ethnicity, age, nationality, gender etc.)Why did you focus on this group of people? What is your rationale in your “purposeful sampling”?
THE PURPOSE OF SOCIAL ACTION RESEARCH IS TO…Understand a social phenomenonTo understand how people view world differently To construct and reconstruct reality through your participants’ eyes…
AGENDA (March 17th)Happy St. Patrick's Day! PEER-REVIEWS ON LITERATURE REVIEWSCONTINUE WITH OUR DISCUSSION ON METHODOLOGYDON’T FORGET TO SUBMIT YOUR LIT. REVIEWS AND BOOK REVIEWS AT THE END OF THE CLASS.ASSIGNMENTS
Research MethodsQualitative Methods(e.g., Ethnography, Auto-ethnography, Life History, Narratives, case studies)The goal is to understand individual’s cultural worlds.Relying on observations, interviews, field notes.Researcher spends a long time in the research contextsQuantitative Methods (e.g., Statistical AnalysisSurveys)Relying on counting the themes, survey results etc. (frequency counts) Quantifying the data Allows you to see patterns of language use.“ The more a theme appears the more warranted is your claim”Without some qualitative analysis, the numbers are meaningless!
Qualitative Methods of Data CollectionPeople’s words and actions represent the data of qualitative  method of inquiry and this requires methods that allow the researcher to capture language and behavior. The data come from various sources:Observation – both participant and direct In-depth interviews Group Interviews The collection of relevant documents Photographs and Video Tapes
Qualitative versus Quantitative http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDo7jwikqqI&feature=related
Interviews: some initial research activities As your participants’ permission  for her or him to participate in this study. Remember this is a volunteer participation. Set the interview time and location with your participants (the people you will be investigating)Prepare your interview questions (what do you need to know?)Keep your questions open ended.Decide how to record your interviews
Soliciting participantsBegin looking for participantsAsk their permission to be a part of your study. Describe your studyDescribe the purposeGive your participants some information about the background.Schedule your InterviewsBegin your interviews (USE A DIGITAL RECORDER TO RECORD YOUR INTERVIEWS)
Question categories	Opening questionsCould you please describe…?Can you tell me about…?Please discuss…I am interested in….What can you tell me about this subject?Follow-up QuestionsReally? How so? Can you elaborate on X point?Probing QuestionsCan you tell me more about…? Could you please give me an example…?
Class Activity on Interview Find out what your classmate did in her spring break. Research Question: How do U.S. college students spend their spring breaks? Come up with at least 5 questions that can best answer this large research questionConduct a 5 minutes long interview.After your interview,  write one paragraph about your participant’s views/experiences on spring break.
ASSIGNMENTS Literature reviews DUE on Wednesday, March 17th . Be prepared for a peer-review activity.Book Reviews are DUE on Wednesday, March 17th  (Feel free to submit it earlier)Read Writing at the University Chapter 8 and 9.Methodology section of your paper is DUE on Monday, March 22nd–Send it electronically to lisyaseloni@gmail.comNEXT WEEK: INDIVIDUAL DATA COLLECTION WEEK. NO CLASS MEETINGS.
What have you achieved so far?Talked about social diversity issuesDiscussed your own definitions of social diversity.Read, discussed, blogged , and wrote  book reviews on The book Tipping Point.Conducted library search.Analyzed several research articles.Found a good topic that is relevant to social and cultural issues.Narrowed down out topics.Wrote an “evolving” introduction.Came up with good research questionsLearnt how to write an annotated bibliography.Learnt how to write a literature review.Did various peer-review activities.

English 202 March15 & 17

  • 1.
  • 2.
    agendaWelcome backTipping PointChapter 8 and AfterwardsOur next book chapters: Covering ch 1 and 2Next step in your research: MethodologyBook Reviews and lit reviews are due this Wednesday. Make sure you proofread your letters. Perhaps we can send your reviews to Gladwell at the end of this semester
  • 3.
    Announcement“Please come andjoin the Food and Nutrition Department and the Student Dietetic Association in celebrating National Nutrition month with the Theme of "FROM THE GROUND UP" on Wed. March 17th in the HUB Atrium, Susquehanna and Monongahela Rooms from 10 to 3 pm.” For more information contact Dr. Nicole Clark at [email protected].
  • 4.
    What have welearned from the Tipping Point?Social Change is possible if ….One is a good observerOne values research and attempts to understand human behavior through the act of researchOne looks carefully to the small details of lifeOne can reach few special people to shape the course of social epidemics (e.g. Law of the Few)We are always influenced by our environments and the individuals around us.Examples of Salesman, connectors, Blue’s clues, New York subway cleanup, Fundamental Attribution error tell us a lot about what it means to be human
  • 5.
    In-class bloggingGladwell says“What underlies successful epidemics, in the end, is a bedrock belief that change is possible, that people can radically transform their behavior or beliefs in the face of the right kind of impetus” What type of social change you, a contributing member of your society, would like to bring in your community? How do you think you can help tip this social epidemics? (Think about your own social action research project)The act of reading is shaped by the reader. In your view, which chapter was most influential? Why did you find that chapter more interesting than others?Discuss one idea that you will take with you after reading The Tipping Point. How do you think you can apply that idea in your academic and personal life?
  • 6.
    FROM MEDIA: GLADWELLINTERVIEWS CNN INTERVIEWS: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QCt1Wc8Kx4Uhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nf3NalDYIT8&feature=relatedSTUDENT PROJECTS http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jq89Hlcn-98http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5BzhNqSSpU&feature=related
  • 7.
    Moving ahead withyour research projectsIn your groups, please discuss the following questions:What you have gained so far from doing library search and the literature review?How did you organize your literature review?How did you begin your literature review?What are some of the “action verbs” you used in your review? What transitional devices did you use to connect the different sources?How did you end your literature review?
  • 8.
    What is thenext step in your research?Now that you have your ‘evolving’ introductions, have developed a ‘working’ knowledge for your topic, read widely on your topics, wrote a literature review (background) of your social action research projects. The next step will include:Deciding your methods of inquiry (e.g. case study, surveys, ethnography)looking for a research site for your field work.Looking for participants.
  • 9.
    Next step inyour research: METHODS OF INQUIRYMethodology: The way researchers collect dataHow do a researcher collect his/her data?—Interviews, surveys, taking pictures, reading library archives etc.How can a researcher construct effective interview or survey questions that will help answer the researchers’ questions? Who are your participants? (e.g. college students, high school teachers, women of color in workplace, minority students in a Freshman course) How would you describe them?(e.g. ethnicity, age, nationality, gender etc.)Why did you focus on this group of people? What is your rationale in your “purposeful sampling”?
  • 10.
    THE PURPOSE OFSOCIAL ACTION RESEARCH IS TO…Understand a social phenomenonTo understand how people view world differently To construct and reconstruct reality through your participants’ eyes…
  • 11.
    AGENDA (March 17th)HappySt. Patrick's Day! PEER-REVIEWS ON LITERATURE REVIEWSCONTINUE WITH OUR DISCUSSION ON METHODOLOGYDON’T FORGET TO SUBMIT YOUR LIT. REVIEWS AND BOOK REVIEWS AT THE END OF THE CLASS.ASSIGNMENTS
  • 12.
    Research MethodsQualitative Methods(e.g.,Ethnography, Auto-ethnography, Life History, Narratives, case studies)The goal is to understand individual’s cultural worlds.Relying on observations, interviews, field notes.Researcher spends a long time in the research contextsQuantitative Methods (e.g., Statistical AnalysisSurveys)Relying on counting the themes, survey results etc. (frequency counts) Quantifying the data Allows you to see patterns of language use.“ The more a theme appears the more warranted is your claim”Without some qualitative analysis, the numbers are meaningless!
  • 13.
    Qualitative Methods ofData CollectionPeople’s words and actions represent the data of qualitative method of inquiry and this requires methods that allow the researcher to capture language and behavior. The data come from various sources:Observation – both participant and direct In-depth interviews Group Interviews The collection of relevant documents Photographs and Video Tapes
  • 14.
    Qualitative versus Quantitativehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDo7jwikqqI&feature=related
  • 15.
    Interviews: some initialresearch activities As your participants’ permission for her or him to participate in this study. Remember this is a volunteer participation. Set the interview time and location with your participants (the people you will be investigating)Prepare your interview questions (what do you need to know?)Keep your questions open ended.Decide how to record your interviews
  • 16.
    Soliciting participantsBegin lookingfor participantsAsk their permission to be a part of your study. Describe your studyDescribe the purposeGive your participants some information about the background.Schedule your InterviewsBegin your interviews (USE A DIGITAL RECORDER TO RECORD YOUR INTERVIEWS)
  • 17.
    Question categories Opening questionsCouldyou please describe…?Can you tell me about…?Please discuss…I am interested in….What can you tell me about this subject?Follow-up QuestionsReally? How so? Can you elaborate on X point?Probing QuestionsCan you tell me more about…? Could you please give me an example…?
  • 18.
    Class Activity onInterview Find out what your classmate did in her spring break. Research Question: How do U.S. college students spend their spring breaks? Come up with at least 5 questions that can best answer this large research questionConduct a 5 minutes long interview.After your interview, write one paragraph about your participant’s views/experiences on spring break.
  • 19.
    ASSIGNMENTS Literature reviewsDUE on Wednesday, March 17th . Be prepared for a peer-review activity.Book Reviews are DUE on Wednesday, March 17th (Feel free to submit it earlier)Read Writing at the University Chapter 8 and 9.Methodology section of your paper is DUE on Monday, March 22nd–Send it electronically to [email protected] WEEK: INDIVIDUAL DATA COLLECTION WEEK. NO CLASS MEETINGS.
  • 20.
    What have youachieved so far?Talked about social diversity issuesDiscussed your own definitions of social diversity.Read, discussed, blogged , and wrote book reviews on The book Tipping Point.Conducted library search.Analyzed several research articles.Found a good topic that is relevant to social and cultural issues.Narrowed down out topics.Wrote an “evolving” introduction.Came up with good research questionsLearnt how to write an annotated bibliography.Learnt how to write a literature review.Did various peer-review activities.