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3.3: The Takeaway

  • Page ID
    324826
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    Methods constitute the way in which sociologists gather information—information that will become evidence for substantiating the thesis of their work. The three general methods most all social scientists use are qualitative, quantitative, and comparative; and for this chapter they were characterized as three different ways of telling the same story. Where qualitative methods tell stories through thick and descriptive narratives, quantitative methods use numerical expressions and statistical analysis to tell that same story. Finally, comparative methods have the option of using qualitative, quantitative, or both, in an effort to draw similarities and differences about that same story, as well.


    This page titled 3.3: The Takeaway is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Salvador Jiménez Murguía.

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