gather information and evidence using their senses, especially their eyes and ears. Because we all do that in order to experience the world, what makes sociology different? In addition to using their senses, sociologists adopt the scientific method, or a similarly systematic approach, in search of a thorough understanding of the social world. They have a variety of methods at their disposal in researching and analyzing society, but they also experience a few significant constraints on their ability to conduct such research.
The Scientific Method
The scientific method is a structured way of finding answers to questions about the world (Carey 2011). The scientific method employed by sociologists is much the same as that used in other sciences. Although in practice creative sociological research often does not slavishly adhere to the following steps, they constitute the basic scientific method:
1 A sociologist uncovers questions in need of answers. These questions can be inspired by key issues in the larger society, personal experiences, or topics of concern specifically in sociology. The best and most durable research and findings often stem from issues that the researcher connects with personally. Karl Marx, for example, detested the exploitation of workers that characterized capitalism; Max Weber feared the depersonalizing impact of bureaucracies.
2 Sociologists review the relevant literature on the questions of interest to them. This is because others have likely done similar or related research in the past. After more than a century of doing scientific research, sociologists have learned a great deal about many things. It would make no sense to start over from the beginning. For example, Ritzer’s (2019) work on McDonaldization is based on the study of the work on rationalization by Max Weber ([1921] 1968), his successors (such as Kalberg 1980), and more contemporary researchers. Other scholars have since reviewed his work and that of other scholars of McDonaldization (for a collection of this work, see Ritzer 2010c). They have amplified the concept and applied it to domains such as religion (Drane 2008), higher education (Hayes 2017; Hayes and Wynyard 2002), social work (Dustin 2007), psychotherapy (Goodman 2016), and Disney World (Bryman 2004; Huddleston, Garlen, and Sandlin 2016). The ideas associated with McDonaldization have also been used as a way of teaching Max Weber’s complex theories to undergraduates (Aldrich and Lippmann 2018).
3 Researchers often develop hypotheses, or educated guesses, about how social phenomena can be expected to relate to one another. Uri Ram (2007) hypothesized that Israeli society would grow increasingly McDonaldized, and he found evidence to support that idea. Marx hypothesized that the conflict between capitalists and workers would ultimately lead to the collapse of capitalism. However, capitalism has not collapsed, although it came close in 1929 at the beginning of the Great Depression and maybe in 2008 at the onset of the Great Recession. This makes it clear that hypotheses may not be confirmed by research or borne out by social developments, but such speculation is important to the scientific method.
4 Researchers must choose research methods that will help them answer their research questions. Sociology offers diverse methodological tools; some are better than others for answering certain kinds of questions. For example, some sociologists are interested in how a person’s social class shapes his or her opinions about social issues. Surveys and other quantitative tools may be best to evaluate the relationship between class and attitudes. Other sociologists want to know how people interpret and make sense of their social world, and how this meaning-making shapes social action. Qualitative methods, such as observations and interviews, may be helpful for studying these issues.
5 Researchers use their chosen methods to collect data that can confirm—or fail to confirm—their hypotheses. Most contemporary sociologists venture into the field to collect original data through observations, interviews, questionnaires, and other means.
6 Researchers analyze the data collected, assessing their meaning in light of the hypotheses that guided the research. For example, Émile Durkheim hypothesized that those who were involved with other people would be less likely to commit suicide than those who lived more isolated existences and were experiencing what he called anomie. Analyzing data from several nineteenth-century European countries, Durkheim ([1897] 1951) found that the suicide rates were, in fact, higher for widowed or divorced people than for those who were married and therefore presumably better integrated socially.
Sociological Research
Sociological knowledge is derived from research that may use a variety of different methods. Typically, the method chosen is and should be driven by the nature of the research question. Imagine that you are a sociologist interested in studying differences in the behavior of people who visit Las Vegas. You might start by observing, perhaps by watching people gamble. You might look for variations: Are men and women equally represented at the slot machines? Are they equally likely to play craps or blackjack? Are there age differences in who plays which games? You could do much the same thing in looking for differences among those who attend the shows and musical events at the casinos. Are there gender differences between the Las Vegas audiences of, say, Cirque du Soleil’s Mystère or Zumanity and the audiences of the music of Barry Manilow or a Penn & Teller magic show? Are there age differences between the audience members at a Carrot Top show and those at a Mariah Carey concert? To better understand such differences, you might be inspired to participate, to become a participant observer, gambling or being entertained alongside those you are studying.
You may realize that your specific research questions are better answered through use of the interview method. You might interview those who have come to Las Vegas to gamble, asking about their expectations for having fun or winning a lot of money. Or, you might administer an anonymous questionnaire or survey to find out how much money people who gamble have lost.
You could also create an experiment. Using a social science lab at your university, you could set up a Las Vegas–style poker table and recruit students as participants. You could tell them that the typical player loses 90 percent of the time and that previous research has shown that most players lose most of the time. You could then ask whether, in spite of that information, they still want to gamble at your poker table. Of greatest interest would be those who say yes. You could interview them before they start “gambling” at your table, observe them as they gamble, and interview them again after they finish gambling. Did they start out believing, despite all the evidence to the contrary, that they would win? How could they have retained such a belief in spite of all the counterevidence? What are their feelings after gambling at your table? Did those feelings seem to be related to whether they won or lost? How likely are they to gamble again? Are there important differences between women and men in terms of their answers to these questions?
Observation is a primary method in sociological research. Do you think people behave differently when they know they are being observed?
Stephen Alvarez/National Geographic Creative
Observation, interviews, surveys, experiments, and other research methods are all useful and important to sociologists. All have strengths but also limitations. Before we examine these methods in more detail, there is an important distinction between two basic types of research methods that should be clarified.
Qualitative and Quantitative Research
The wide variety of research methods available to sociologists can be classified as either qualitative or quantitative.
Qualitative research consists of studies done in natural settings that produce in-depth, descriptive information (e.g., in respondents’ own words) about the social world (Denzin 2018; Silverman 2016). Such research does not necessarily require statistical methods for collecting and reporting data (Marshall and Rossman 2010). Observation—watching, listening, and taking detailed notes—and open-ended interviews are just two of the qualitative methods used by sociologists. Because qualitative methods usually rely on small sample sizes, the findings cannot be generalized to the