Admission requirements
Required courses:
- Introduction to Statistics
Description
This course introduces students to the features of qualitative research methods prevalent in social sciences such as anthropology, human geography, gender studies, and sociology. Qualitative methods allow researchers to use a structured process that empirically addresses conceptual questions. Students in this course will understand how methods relate to social science inquiry, and are an essential component of research design.
The course is designed as a hands-on sequence of conceptual reflection and empirical experimentation built around each student’s individual project. Students will conceptualize a social science topic in The Hague. Over the course duration, they will try out different qualitative methods in the field, assess their practical and ethical dimensions, and conducting post-fieldwork data analysis.
Learning this process enables a comprehensive and empirically grounded understanding of the social world we study. In the social sciences, qualitative methods may include: participant-observation in a specific community or organization; life-history narratives over decades with informants; and the convening of a focus group of individuals with shared social markers.
Students in this course will learn how to actually do qualitative research, to reflect on interpretive and ethical choices, and to understand how fieldwork variables condition data analysis. Qualitative methods discussed will include interviewing, mapping, and participant observation. This course will thus cover epistemological aspects of qualitative research, as well as the practicalities of design and implementation.
Course Objectives
Skills
By the end of this course, the students will be able to:
Distinguish between qualitative and quantitative methods
Describe the ethical and epistemological dimensions of interpretive social science
Explain and assess various qualitative research methods
Operationalize research questions and determine if a qualitative approach is suitable for addressing particular topics
Reflect on the design and execution of a self-guided social science project.
Knowledge:
- Students will become acquainted with different methods of data collection, processing, and analysis within the interpretive social sciences. They will be able to make judgments regarding the reliability and pitfalls of various investigative approaches, and to assess the ethical and epistemological aspects of carrying out their own project.
Timetable
Timetables for courses offered at Leiden University College in 2020-2021 will be published on this page of the e-Prospectus.
Mode of instruction
This course will consist of two-hour interactive seminars, and draw on both lectures and practical exercises. Guided by the instructor, interactive, hands-on, and reflective activities will be implemented to highlight the course material. Practical exercises will touch on participant observation, interviewing, and mapping material culture. The seminars will help students to recognize and apply qualitative research methods.
Students will, in the spirit of a practical methods course, individually engage in a fieldwork project in The Hague that will be analysed for their final essay and distilled into a podcast. This will involve using qualitative methods that enable students to think as researchers.
Assessment Method
In- class participation (on-going from week 1 to 7) 15%
Five assignments during course; a) brainstorming exercise; b) mapping reflection; c) observation exercise; d) interview exercise; e) ethnographic reflection (from week 2 to week 7) 5 × 10% = 50%
Final assignment based on original research conducted by student (in week 8) 35 %
Reading list
The Brightspace site of the course will give course readings, updates, guidelines, and enable the submission of student assignments.
Registration
Courses offered at Leiden University College (LUC) are usually only open to LUC students and LUC exchange students. Leiden University students who participate in one of the university’s Honours tracks or programmes may register for one LUC course, if availability permits. Registration is coordinated by the Education Coordinator, course.administration@luc.leidenuniv.nl.
Contact
Dr. Elena Burgos Martinez, e.burgos.martinez@hum.leidenuniv.nl (Block 1, Block 4)
Bruno Braak MA, b.j.braak@law.leidenuniv.nl (Block 3)
Remarks
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