Keith is right.  First year students are probably not going to do sophisticated 
research but they certainly can begin to learn research skills. ASA sponsored a 
project, "Integrating Data Analysis across the Curriculum", whose purpose was 
to introduce research skills “early and often.”  There is an ASA publication 
(Integrating Data Analysis, Susan M. Hilal and Merredith Redlin, (Eds).) with 
examples of research modules, some of which focus on first year courses.  
Teaching Sociology also has a special edition coming out soon that focuses on 
the same issues.  

The assessment results from the university level “Inquiry Guided Learning” 
program that I direct suggests that first year students are certainly capable 
of learning basic research skills.  We find that across the disciplines, first 
year students learn content through the process of inquiry much more 
effectively than through traditional pedagogies.

I have a paper under review that I could send you that discusses the inquiry 
guided approach from a multidisciplinary perspective. Please contact me 
privately if you think that would be helpful to you. 

Maxine



  

-----Original Message-----
From: "Roberts, Keith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Teach Soc Listserv \(E-mail\)" 
<[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 6 Jan 2006 10:56:40 -0500
Subject: TEACHSOC: RE: original inquiry in the first course

Greetings:
 
I'm eager to find out wht your views are on assigning *empirical*
research
projects to students in the Introductory Class. I know some who do. On
the
other hand, some contend that FIRST students need to gain at least a
cursory
knowledge of the basic concepts, theoretical perspectives and most
important
research methods BEFORE they conduct any empirical research. Once
students have
the Intro Course under their belt THEN they would be in a better
position to
engage in mini empirical research projects.
 
 
We now have some aspect of original inquiry right from the very first
course.  These are obviously not highly complex or deeply sophisticated
projects, but some form of original inquiry is required in all of our
Gen Ed courses on this campus.  The rationale is largely to set the
stage for a "culture of inquiry" as part of what the scholarly life is
all about, but more than that it is so students get some sense of what
is considered "evidence" in a social science as opposed to some other
discipline.  We had found that students often finish a first course and
still have highly a unsophisticated epistemology, yet developing a more
sophisticated epistemology is at the core of "deep learning."  Students
just do not have much sense of how we know something in sociology, and
the solution is not to bore them with more detailed reading on a wide
range of research methods.  Instead, we try to give them some sense of
one methodology in a first course and to get their feet wet using it at
a basic level.  Because it involves active learning and the creation of
knowledge, the students seem to really like it.  This requirement has
only been in place for two years, so we do not have a lot of hard data
on how it is working, but that is our approach.

Keith


Maxine P. Atkinson, Ph.D.
Director, N.C. State's First Year Inquiry Seminar Program
 Division of Undergraduate Academic Programs, and
Associate Professor of Sociology
North Carolina State University
email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
phone: 919 515 9001

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