Degree | Type | Year |
---|---|---|
2500262 Sociology | FB | 1 |
You can view this information at the end of this document.
No pre-requirements.
It is a subject located in the second semester of the first year and focuses on the initiation of students in the terminology and practices of academic and scientific research. Likewise, the course aims to reflect on what it means to research in the social sciences. These routines and approaches that will be essential to be able to take in the second year the subjects of Quantitative Methods of Social Research and Qualitative Methods of Social Research.
The main interests of the subject are oriented towards the clarification of the basic requirements of the scientific methodology, the understanding of the concepts and basic instruments of the applied research to the analysis of the social reality and the routines and basic instrumental abilities that allow To develop the research activity correctly within the academic world. The central objective of the subject will be oriented, then, to make explicit what are the central elements that allow to do research and to transmit to the students the knowledge that they do that is able to formulate a subject to investigate and to prepare the corresponding research design. In this sense, it is essential to know the main sources of information and scientific documentation, acquire the basic habits of research in the social sciences, and learn a rigorous work style, able to combine the use of collaborative work with personal creativity.
Block I. Basic Concepts
1. Common knowledge and scientific knowledge. Basic aspects of scientific knowledge.
2. Research traditions in sociology.
3. The object of study and the research subjects.
4. The stages of the research process.
Block II. The social research process
5. The choice of the topic, the initial question and the exploration.
6. The theoretical framework: state of the art and conceptual framework.
7. The analysis model: Structuring concepts. Formulation of research hypotheses.
8. The analysis design.
Title | Hours | ECTS | Learning Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|
Type: Directed | |||
Exam preparation | 18 | 0.72 | 2, 3, 4, 6, 5, 1, 9, 8, 7, 10, 12, 11 |
Lecture sessions | 30 | 1.2 | 15, 2, 3, 4, 5, 1, 9, 8, 7, 10, 12, 11, 13 |
Practical sessions | 22 | 0.88 | 15, 4, 6, 5, 9, 8, 10, 16, 13, 18 |
Type: Supervised | |||
Scheduled group tutorials | 6 | 0.24 | 15, 14, 4, 6, 5 |
Type: Autonomous | |||
Group project | 40 | 1.6 | 15, 14, 6, 5, 16, 13, 18 |
Text readings | 30 | 1.2 | 15, 2, 3, 6, 5, 1, 9, 7, 10, 12, 11, 13 |
In order for students to learn and think about what it means to investigate in Sociology, the teaching methodology and the formative activities of the subject are located at the very center of the learning process, based on the combination of: (1) expositive sessions, (2) classroom and out-class practices that allow to apply the acquired concepts, (3) tutorial sessions of follow-up and autonomous work. Following are the different activities, with their specific weight within the distribution of the total time that the student has to dedicate to the subject.
Annotation: Within the schedule set by the centre or degree programme, 15 minutes of one class will be reserved for students to evaluate their lecturers and their courses or modules through questionnaires.
Title | Weighting | Hours | ECTS | Learning Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. Monitoring (Assistance and Participation in scheduled practice sessions at classroom) | 10% | 0 | 0 | 15, 3, 4, 5, 1, 9, 8, 10, 13, 18 |
2. Written tests that will evaluate the acquisition of concepts and basic instruments related to the applied aspect of analysing social reality | 12% + 12% + 12% | 2 | 0.08 | 2, 3, 5, 1, 9, 8, 7, 10, 12, 11 |
3. Research project (including 3, both group and individual deliveries) | (5% + 5%) + 10% + 34% | 2 | 0.08 | 17, 15, 14, 4, 6, 5, 1, 9, 8, 10, 16, 13, 18 |
Single assessment system is not provided for this subject.
Building the working groups:
Only working groups of 4 or 5 people will be accepted. Only working groups with people in the same "enrollment group" (matricula) are accepted.
A change of enrollment group can be made, if A) is requested during the first 2 weeks of the course to the Academic Management Service, B) it is approved by the Faculty, and C) it is comunicated by the student to the teaching responsable of the "new" enrollement group.
To pass the course (regular course passed in June, after 3 partial exams + 1 group assesment + participation):
In order to compute the weighted mean and pass the whole subject,
(A) you must obtain a minimum grade of 4 in each of the 7 assessable pieces of evidence (one individual assignment, three group assignments and three partial tests), and also
(B) participation -or documental justified absence- is also required for a minimum of 80% of the scheduled practical sessions.
To participate in the compensatory activities (regular course NOT passed in June):
Only the 3 individual written exams and the 3 group project assignments can be "compensated" in a a second-chance evaluation.
The participation in practices and attendance activities are not considered recoverable, by their very nature.
In any case, this second-chance will imply a maximum score of 8 in the final grade of the subject.
To appear as "no avaluable" in the official records:
Only those who have not provided sufficient evidence of assessment throughout the course will be graded as "not present": those people who have not attended 50% of all scheduled assessment activities.
Faculty agreements regarding the Policy about students with language difficulties:
The answers to the exams can be given in Catalan, Spanish or English (the Faculty's working languages), regardless of the language in which the exams are made.
The use of electronic devices is not allowed to take the exams, except in (1) justified ERASMUS cases previously agreed with the teaching staff, or (2) PIUNE adaptations.
About plagiarism in academic work or written tests:
We kindly remind you that, at the time of signing up your enrollment, you committed yourself inthe following sense: "I DECLARE that the Autonomous University of Barcelona has informed me that (...) Plagiarism is the act of publicizing, publishing or reproducing awork or part of it in the name of an author other than the authentic one, which implies an appropriation of the ideas created by another person without explicit recognition of their origin. This appropriation involves an injury to the intellectual property right of this person that I am not authorized to do in any case whatsoever the circumstance: exams, work, practices ... Therefore, I COMMITTEE to respect the provisions related to rights of intellectual property in relation to the teaching and / or research activity carried out by the UAB in the studies I am studying."
In the event that any kind of plagiarism will be detected, the evaluation of the test, exam, individual or group assignement will be "zero" or NOT PASS, for anyone involved in the incident(even the "source" of plagiarism).
A list of compulsory readings corresponding to theoretical contents, practical sessionsand group projecto will be published at Campus Virtual webspace.
Bàsica
Blanco, C. (2010). La vigilancia epistemológica en Ciencias Sociales: un compromiso ineludible. En Reflexiones desde la sociología del conocimiento de Pierre Bourdieu. Primer simposio internacional interdisciplinario Aduanas del Conocimiento. La traducción y la constitución de las disciplinas entre el Centenario y el Bicentenario. Córdoba, 8 al 12 de diciembre 2010.
Corbetta, P. (2010). Metodología y técnicas de investigación social. Madrid: McGraw Hill.
Quivy, R., & Campenhoudt, L. V. (2017). Manual de investigación en ciencias sociales. Ciudad de México: Limusa : Grupo Noriega Editores.
Sautu, R.; Boniolo, P.; Dalle, P. & Elbert, R. (2005). Recomendaciones para la redacción del marco teórico, los objetivos y la propuesta metodológica de proyectos de investigación en ciencias sociales. En Sautu et Al. (2005) Manual de metodología. Buenos Aires: CLACSO, Colección Campus Virtual. < http://bibliotecavirtual.clacso.org.ar/ar/libros/campus/metodo/metodo.html >
Complementària
Sautu, R. (2003) Todo es teoria: Objetivos y métodos de investigación. Buenos Aires: Ed. Lumiere. <https://www.trabajosocial.unlp.edu.ar/uploads/docs/todo_es_teoria__objetivos_y_metodos_en_investigacion__sautu_ruth.pdf>
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Name | Group | Language | Semester | Turn |
---|---|---|---|---|
(PAUL) Classroom practices | 1 | Catalan | second semester | morning-mixed |
(PAUL) Classroom practices | 2 | Catalan | second semester | morning-mixed |
(PAUL) Classroom practices | 51 | Catalan | second semester | afternoon |
(TE) Theory | 1 | Catalan | second semester | morning-mixed |
(TE) Theory | 2 | Catalan | second semester | morning-mixed |
(TE) Theory | 51 | Catalan | second semester | afternoon |