Increase the probability of success! Buy Political Science Research Methods, Sixth Edition and Working with Political Science Research Methods, Second Edition together and save. Specify ISBN 978-0-87289-772-4 when ordering. Dont let an introduction to research methods be your students least favorite (and most intimidating) political science course. Relevant, timely, insightful, comprehensive, and always mindful of their student audience, the authors have revamped their popular text so that the sixth edition is friendlier and more intuitive than ever-the perfect gateway to understanding not just the "how" but also the "why" behind research into politics. Covering the disciplines major methods, the authors lead students step-by-step through the logic of research design. "Building block" chapters on hypothesis formation and testing, variables, and measurement are right up front; the introduction to research design, sampling, and literature reviews now come with more explanation as to why a researcher would pursue different kinds of methods; the stats chapters begin with a common-sense primer that walks students through foundational ideas and practices.
Throughout the text, updated examples of contemporary research problems keep readers engaged. Each chapter has bolded key terms that are also listed in a glossary at the end of each chapter and the end of the text. "Helpful hints" feature boxes give students nuts-and-bolts reminders they can refer to when they conduct their own research or assess the work of others. NEW TO THIS EDITION New examples of political science research in Chapter 1, including a case on judicial decision making and current research into public opinion on the war in Iraq. Expanded discussion of theory in Chapter 2, showing how competing paradigms can be applied to the same topic of study. Substantially updated discussion of survey research including coverage of Internet polling and a fuller description of interviewing. Computational formulas and calculations are now featured in "How Its Done" boxes allowing students to separate lengthy calculations from substantive discussion of the meaning or interpretation of statistical results. Greater coverage of newer developments in applied statistics, including exploratory data analysis and descriptive and inferential statistics for counts and functions of counts.
In general, less emphasis on computation, and more on interpretation. Reorganized statistics chapters for better comprehension with regression analysis and logistic regression in their own chapters. A new overview of statistical analysis, including discussion of data preparation, description, modeling, inference, interpretation, and the communication of results.
                         
                        
                            Introduction Research on Winners and Losers in Politics Who Votes, Who Doesnt? Repression of Human Rights A Look into Judicial Decision Making and Its Effects  Influencing Bureaucracies Effects of Campaign Advertising on Voters Research on Public Support for U.S. Foreign Involvement Conclusion Terms Introduced Studying Politics Scientifically Characteristics of Scientific Knowledge    The Importance of Theory Acquiring Empirical Knowledge: The Scientific Method    Deduction and Induction    The Scientific Method at Work Is Political Science Really "Science"?    Practical Objections    Philosophical Objections A Brief History of Political Science as a Discipline    The Era of Traditional Political Science    The Empirical Revolution    Reaction to Empiricism    Political Science Today: Peaceful Coexistence? Conclusion Terms Introduced Suggested Readings The Building Blocks of Social Scientific Research: Hypotheses, Concepts, and Variables Specifying the Research Question Proposing Explanations Formulating Hypotheses    Characteristics of Good Hypotheses    Specifying Units of Analysis    Cross-level Analysis: Ecological Inference and Ecological Fallacy Defining Concepts Conclusion Terms Introduced Suggested Readings The Building Blocks of Social Scientific Research: Measurement Devising Measurement Strategies Examples of Political Measurements: Getting to Operationalization The Accuracy of Measurements    Reliability    Validity    Problems with Reliability and Validity in Political Science Measurement The Precision of Measurements    Levels of Measurement    Working with Precision: Too Little or Too Much Multi-item Measures    Indexes    Scales Conclusion Terms Introduced Suggested Readings Research Design Causal Inferences and Controlled Experiments    Causal versus Spurious Relationships    Randomized Controlled Experiments    Randomization and the Assignment of Subjects Interpreting and Generalizing the Results of an Experiment    Internal Validity    External Validity Other Versions of Experimental Designs    Simple Post-test Design    Repeated-Measurement Design    Multigroup Design    Field Experiments Nonexperimental Designs    Small-N Designs    Cross-Sectional Designs: Surveys and Aggregate Data Analysis    Large Longitudinal (Time Series) Designs    Panel Studies Alternative Research Strategies    Formal Modeling    Simulation Conclusion Terms Introduced Suggested Readings Conducting a Literature Review  Selecting a Research Topic Why Conduct a Literature Review? Collecting Sources for a Literature Review    Identifying the Relevant Scholarly Literature    Identifying Useful Popular Sources    Reading the Literature Writing a Literature Review Anatomy of a Literature Review Conclusion Terms Introduced Suggested Readings Sampling The Basics of Sampling    Population or Sample?    Fundamental Concepts Types of Samples    Simple Random Samples    Systematic Samples    Stratified Samples    Cluster Samples    Nonprobability Samples Samples and Statistical Inference: A Gentle Introduction    Expected Values    Measuring the Variability of the Estimates: Standard Errors    Sampling Distributions    How Large a Sample? Conclusion Terms Introduced Suggested Readings Making Empirical Observations: Direct and Indirect Observation Types of Data and Collection Techniques    Qualitative versus Quantitative Uses of Data    Choosing among Data Collection Methods Observation Direct Observation Indirect Observation    Physical Trace Measures    Validity Problems with Indirect Observation Ethical Issues in Observation Conclusion Terms Introduced Suggested Readings Document Analysis: Using the Written Record Types of Written Records    The Episodic Record    The Running Record    The Running Record and Episodic Record Compared    Presidential Job Approval Content Analysis    Content Analysis Procedures    News Coverage of Presidential Campaigns Advantages and Disadvantages of the Written Record Conclusion Terms Introduced Suggested Readings Survey Research and Interviewing Fundamentals: Ensuring Validity and Reliability Survey Research    Types of Surveys    Characteristics of Surveys    Response Quality    Survey Type and Response Quality    Question Wording    Question Type    Question Order    Questionnaire Design Using Archived Survey Data    Advantages of Using Archived Surveys    Publicly Available Archives Interviewing    The Ins and Outs of Interviewing Conclusion Terms Introduced Suggested Readings Statistics: First Steps The Data Matrix    Data Description and Exploration    Frequency Distributions, Proportions, and Percentages Descriptive Statistics    Measures of Central Tendency    Measures of Variability or Dispersion    Deviations from Central Tendency Graphs for Presentation and Exploration    Presentation Graphs: Bar Charts and Pie Diagrams    Exploratory Graphs Statistical Inference    Two Kinds of Inference    Hypothesis Testing    Significance Tests of a Mean Confidence Intervals and Confidence Levels: Reporting Estimates of Population Parameters Conclusion Terms Introduced Suggested Readings Investigating Relationships between Two Variables The Basics of Identifying and Measuring Relationships    Types of Relationships    The Strength of Relationships    Numerical Summaries: Measures of Association Cross-tabulations of Nominal and Ordinal Variables    A First Look at the Strength of a Relationship    The Direction of a Relationship    Coefficients for Ordinal Variables    A Coefficient for Nominal Data    Association in 2 x 2 Tables: The Odds Ratio    Testing a Cross-tabulation for Statistical Significance Analysis of Variance and the Difference of Means    Difference of Means or Effect Size    Difference of Proportions    Analysis of Variance Regression Analysis    Scatterplots    Matrix Plots    Modeling Linear Relationships    The Regression Model    Interpretation of Parameters    Measuring the Fit of a Regression Line    The Correlation Coefficient    Standardized Regression Coefficients    Inference for Regression Parameters    Regression Is Sensitive to Large Values Conclusion Terms Introduced Suggested Readings Multivariate Analysis Multivariate Analysis of Categorical Data Multiple Regression    Interpretation of Parameters    Dummy Variables    Estimation and Calculation of a Regression Equation    Standardized Regression Coefficients    Measuring the Goodness of Fit    Tests of Significance Logistic Regression    Estimating the Models Coefficients    Measures of Fit    Significance Tests    An Alternative Interpretation of Logistic Regression Coefficients    A Substantive Example Conclusion Terms Introduced Suggested Readings The Research Report: An Annotated Example Bias in Newspaper Photograph Selection    Relevant Literature    Political Atmosphere Theory    Why Newspapers    Research Design    Findings Conclusion Notes References Conclusion Appendixes Appendix A. Normal Curve Tail Probabilities Appendix B. Critical Values from t Distribution Appendix C. Chi-Squared Distribution Values for Various Right-tail Probabilities Appendix D. F Distribution