Essentials
of Research Methods: A guide to social science research.
(2005). Janet M. Ruane. Malden MA: Blackwell. 239 pp., Price $
29.95 (paperback). ISBN 0-6312-3049-1.
Review
by: Joyce B. Buck
Chair,
NACADA Research Committee
Chair,
Division of Undergraduate Studies Coordinators
Penn State University
Park
The most important word in the title
of Janet Ruane's Essentials of Research Methods: A guide to
social science research is methods. This book gives readers
unfamiliar with the methods of social science, especially those
used in sociology, an excellent introduction. Writing for undergraduate
social science majors, the author links student experiences with
the news and popular culture to the concepts she presents.
Ruane first explains the need for systematic
research that discovers both new knowledge and avoids faulty logic.
Using ways of knowing to organize this section, she ends with
statements that challenge readers to become "critical consumers
of information" (pp. 13-14). Her second chapter, "Ethics: It's
the Right Thing to Do," is critical to the education of any researcher.
Here Ruane explains the reasons that researchers working with
human participants must do no harm, must obtain informed consent
and must respect participants' privacy. Writing about ethics,
she emphasizes the importance of researchers' conduct.
The next five chapters take readers through
the topics of measurement and research design used by social scientists,
especially sociologists. The chapters on measurement cover concepts
of validity and reliability, and the chapters on design cover
causal analysis, research strategies and sampling. An important
caution for those of us in advising comes in her discussion of
the limits of experimental design: "In general, any variable that
refers to a trait or a property of a person is not one that is
amenable to experimental research," (p. 85).
Beginning with the chapter on sampling,
the book covers the techniques used to conduct research-and assessment.
NACADA members faced with issues in assessment will find useful
information about methods advisors often use: questionnaires,
surveys, interviews and focus groups. For instance, had I read
this book last fall, I would have marked the chapter on focus
groups and given it to my dean. The dean had no experience with
these techniques; this chapter would have provided her with a
solid introduction.
The book concludes with two chapters
on statistics. The section on descriptive statistics may be familiar
to advisors because the numbers involved are used in many settings.
The last chapter, Beyond Description:
Inferential Statistics, however, runs very quickly through
material that is at least a full semester course in many graduate
programs. As the title suggests, the book describes the essentials
of research methods.
The book provides many sociological examples
to illustrate Ruane's points even though the title suggests that
methods illustrated are from a broader perspective. Because this
textbook is for undergraduates, there are sections where I wanted
to see homework assignments. These sections need content that
better illustrates the concepts to those not enrolled in a research
course but instead are reading for understanding.
Nonetheless,
those seeking to become critical consumers of information about
advising will find this book helpful in understanding why and
how research is conducted. Colleagues from arts and humanities
disciplines will find it a useful reference for reading some of
the articles published in the NACADA Journal. And I will
be adding it to the list of references that the NACADA Research
Committee maintains. It is a good primer on research methods.