Social Science Research Essays and Term Papers
1,351 Essays on Social Science Research. Documents 526 - 550 (showing first 1,000 results)
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Experimental Research
There are several techniques used in Experimental Research and are broken down into several methods of research used in psychology. These research methods are Naturalistic Observation, Correlational Method, Experimental Method, Clinical Method and Survey Method. The Experimental Method is used to give the researcher more control over the experiment. This is the most scientific method of research because the researcher is able to deliberately manipulate the IV (independent variable) while controlling the CV (confounding
Rating:Essay Length: 405 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: January 13, 2010 -
Case Study Consumer Research Inc.
This case study included information on a sample of fifty credit card accounts. This information, table one, included household size, annual income, and the amount charged to the account. Scatter plots of the data were produced. Figure one shows household size vs. amount charged. This graph shows that the positive linear relationship of the data is somewhat strong. The r squared is 0.56, analyzing the graph there is a correlation of household size to amount
Rating:Essay Length: 1,025 Words / 5 PagesSubmitted: January 13, 2010 -
Stem Cell Research
A stem cell is a rudimentary type of cell that can be nurtured into various types of specialized cells ranging from the cardiac cell to the bone marrow. Despite all the optimism in this field of science there are a lot of moral and ethical questions that remain unanswered. Society has its own way of determining if a new technology or a new field of research will complete its way into the field of acceptance
Rating:Essay Length: 1,819 Words / 8 PagesSubmitted: January 13, 2010 -
Social Pressures in Indian Writing
Social pressures and constraints are present in every society in the world. It doesn’t matter where a person lives, as long as they interact with other people from their society, they will be subjected to pressure. Everyone cares what other people think or say about them, and this leads them to start behaving in certain ways. This topic is also a recurring theme in every novel we’ve read up to now. Whether it’s Adela Quested
Rating:Essay Length: 2,893 Words / 12 PagesSubmitted: January 13, 2010 -
Corporate Social Responsibilty
From a business perspective, working under government contracts can be a very lucrative proposition. In general, a stream of orders keep coming in, revenue increases and the company grows in the aggregate. The obvious downfalls to working in this manner is both higher quality expected as well as the extensive research and documentation required for government contracts. If a part fails to perform correctly it can cause minor glitches as well as problems that can
Rating:Essay Length: 2,033 Words / 9 PagesSubmitted: January 14, 2010 -
Physical Science Lab #5
Physical Science lab #5 Objective The goal of this experiment is to develop a theory, which allows us to understand the motion of a marble. Materials Wooden roller coaster, marble, ruler, timer, clamp, physics stand. Theory In this experiment, we are finding the Conservation of Energy. Energy is neither created nor destroyed. Energy is summed up into two different properties: Potential energy and Kinetic energy. The law of Energy states that: Total Energy = Potential
Rating:Essay Length: 902 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: January 14, 2010 -
Corporate Finance Research Papers
Name of the Researcher – Dr. Y. S. Vaishampayan Abstract: The Role of Subsidiary Companies from the Perspectives of Growth and Development THEME - Role of Competition, Flexibility and Trade in Economic Growth This Research Paper throws light on the efforts of Indian corporations in their objectives of maximization of shareholders wealth. To achieve this, they have taken the route of subsidiarization. This Paper only takes the results achieved by Indian business corporations in fulfilling
Rating:Essay Length: 1,340 Words / 6 PagesSubmitted: January 14, 2010 -
The Need for a Paradigm Shift in Operations Research
THE NEED FOR A PARADIGM SHIFT IN OPERATIONS RESEARCH Manish Agarwal ABSTRACT The current paradigm in the field of Production and Operations Management (POM) is of mathematical modeling, with competition from empirically based theories. Empirical studies have been the basis for theory generation in marketing and organizational behavior. However, POM remains relatively poor in theoretical developments, resulting in a trend of devaluation of the field. This paper will discuss how adapting the competing paradigm may
Rating:Essay Length: 1,453 Words / 6 PagesSubmitted: January 14, 2010 -
Social Isolation in the Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano
Olaudah Equiano in his Interesting Narrative is taken from his African home and thrown into a Western world completely foreign to him. Equiano is a slave for a total of ten years and endeavors to take on certain traits and customs of Western thinking. He takes great pains to improve himself, learn religion, and adopt Western mercantilism. However, Equiano holds on to a great deal of his African heritage. Throughout the narrative, the author keeps
Rating:Essay Length: 1,312 Words / 6 PagesSubmitted: January 15, 2010 -
The Science Project
Product Assortment The Science Project’s goal is to provide consumers with all the science related products they want. The goal is to not only provide consumers with what they know they want, but also with what they don’t realize they want. Based on this, our product assortment has to include items that will get consumers into the store and products that consumers will buy impulsively when they see them in the store. It is with
Rating:Essay Length: 1,883 Words / 8 PagesSubmitted: January 15, 2010 -
Research and Treatment of Juvenile Sexual offending from a Policy Point of View
Research and Treatment of Juvenile Sexual Offending From a Policy Point of View By Yvonne K. Ray A Paper Presented in Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements of HS8101 Social Change and Public Policy September 2005 191 Sidney Street Twin Falls, Idaho 83301 208-212-5657 peewee1977@hotmail.com Dr. Timothy Emerick Abstract This paper is a review of previous research conducted on juvenile sexual offending. This paper presents information concerning the research of juvenile sexual offending and the treatments
Rating:Essay Length: 4,714 Words / 19 PagesSubmitted: January 16, 2010 -
Drawing on Appropriate Theory & Examples (i.E. Published Research, Case Studies and Personal Examples) Discuss the Extent to Which Managers Can Influence the Culture of an Organisation?
Culture is a term that is used in workplaces discussions but it is taken for granted that we understand what it means. In their publication In Search of Excellence, Peters and Waterman (1982) drew a lot of attention to the importance of culture to achieve high levels of organisational effectiveness. They made use of over 100 years of theory and research in cultural anthropology and folklore studies to inspire and legitimise their efforts. This generated
Rating:Essay Length: 2,887 Words / 12 PagesSubmitted: January 16, 2010 -
Socially Responsible Supply Chains:
Introduction Corporate Social Responsibility at Marks and Spencer has traditionally been interpreted as the provision of quality and value for money for the customers and a paternalistic regime for the large labour force of shop assistants. As 90 per cent of these were women cared for by women supervisors, perhaps �maternalistic’ would be a better word. However, a more important and original dimension of chain stores’ strategy has been the paternalism exhibited in relations with
Rating:Essay Length: 1,381 Words / 6 PagesSubmitted: January 16, 2010 -
Social Learning Theory
Social learning theory In criminology, Ronald Akers and Robert Burgess (1966) developed Social Learning Theory to explain deviancy by combining variables which encouraged delinquency (e.g. the social pressure from delinquent peers) with variables that discouraged delinquency (e.g. the parental response to discovering delinquency in their children). [edit] Discussion Social Learning Theory was derived from the work of Gabriel Tarde (1912: 322) which proposed that social learning occurred through three stages of imitation: • close contact,
Rating:Essay Length: 735 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: January 16, 2010 -
Social Structure
Social Structure As it is said in the Dictionary of Social Sciences a social structure is the most basic, enduring, and determinative patterns in social life. A social structure refers to the fact of how individuals act one toward another according to their position in the interaction. These positions create what we know as a social structure. The three main causes of inequality from a status position in a society are: power, prestige and
Rating:Essay Length: 488 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: January 16, 2010 -
Science Project - Making a Paper Clip Float
Introduction The purpose of my science fair project this year is to make a paper clip float upwards in mid-air. It consists of gravity and magnetic fields. It is not as easy as it sounds, because some magnets may be to powerful or weak, and making the paper clip float upwards is difficult. Materials 1. String 2. Scotch tape 3. Table or chair (to hang paper clip) 4. Paper clip or similar object 5. Refrigerator
Rating:Essay Length: 327 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: January 17, 2010 -
Sociology Research Methods Essay Assignment
Sociology Research Methods Essay Assignment “Bringing Home the Bacon: Marital Allocation of Income-Earning Responsibility, Job Shifts and Men’s Wages” By: Gorman, Elizabeth H. 1999 Research Question The research question addressed in the article “Bringing Home the Bacon: Marital Allocation of Income-Earning Responsibility, Job Shifts and Men’s Wages” discusses the issue of marriage and how it impacts men’s job shift patterns and how job shifting also influences men’s wages. The research question was presented clearly and
Rating:Essay Length: 744 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: January 18, 2010 -
Is Sport an Area of Neighborhood Social Life Where Performance Counts and Race or Ethnicity Is Irrelevant?
Topic: Structured Inequality: Neighborhood Sport and Race/Ethnicity Research Question: Is sport an area of neighborhood social life where performance counts and race or ethnicity is irrelevant? Neighborhoods in the United States are often segregated by race and have racial tensions. However, sport provides some opportunity for integration. Based on my reading for this assignment here is what seemed to be important points. Home neighborhoods matter more than sport in some instances, regardless of talent.
Rating:Essay Length: 2,758 Words / 12 PagesSubmitted: January 18, 2010 -
The Contrasting Views of Milton Friedman and Ralph Nader on Corporate Social Responsibility
Corporation is a legal entity made of natural persons or other legal entities that holds legal identity within the society. Corporate social responsibility is the duty of a corporation to create wealth in ways that avoid harms to, protect, or enhance societal assets. The idea of Social Responsibility interrelates the obvious interrelationship between business corporations, government and American society, is based on the fundamental idea that the corporations have duties that go beyond carrying out
Rating:Essay Length: 573 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: January 18, 2010 -
School Social Workers
A School Social Worker plays a major role in developing a student as a complete person. “School Social Workers provide a vital link among the school, home and community” (www.sswaa.org/about/career, retrieved 10/17/05). Nationwide school districts are now beginning to realize that a social worker in the school will help bridge the gap between home and education for students. Social work in general is a job that requires one to help others. And in this case,
Rating:Essay Length: 1,033 Words / 5 PagesSubmitted: January 18, 2010 -
Science Vs. Religion
Research paper Final Draft Science vs. religion “The nucleus of the cell derives its name from the Latin nux, meaning nut. Like the stone in a cheery , it is found in the center of the cell, and like this stone, keeps its precious kernel in a shell. -Susan Griffin” , “Our Secret” Ever since the evolutionary existence of humans, man kind has created various meaning systems such as art, language, writing, science, and
Rating:Essay Length: 2,137 Words / 9 PagesSubmitted: January 18, 2010 -
Liberalism and Social Contract
Liberalism and Social Contract Charles Larmore speaks of moral complexity as it exists in a pluralistic sense. The idea of pluralism says that each and every person has their own separate conception of the good as it appears to them. It is I virtually impossible to have to separate entities come up with the same exact concept of the "Good Life" and what it holds for them. As there are these conflicts ideals that exist
Rating:Essay Length: 559 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: January 18, 2010 -
Parental Particpation for Social Justice in Education
Parental participation: for socially just schooling Socially just schooling aims to offer every student an education of equality regardless of factors such as ethnicity, gender or social class. Often however, achieving social justice in schools can be complex when considering what lies outside classroom-control: a student's home environment and the level of their parents' participation. The film Take the Lead illustrates through two characters how schooling can be experienced differently by those from differing backgrounds.
Rating:Essay Length: 331 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: January 19, 2010 -
Science & Technology
Between pages 45-52, Sagan states the characteristics of science. Enlist which is the main idea of each paragraph. After each idea, explain, in your own words, what that idea refers to. • Science isn’t completely right all the time. By this statement, Sagan tries to make us realize the fact that no science is always exact. There will always be a certain margin of error. • Every experiment comes from imagination but follows a certain
Rating:Essay Length: 452 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: January 19, 2010 -
Historical Development in Nursing Research and Utilization
Collaborative Practice Paper This paper will be addressing a clinical case study from the writer's current experience that illustrates collaborative nursing practice. According to Schueller and Kimbrell (2003, p. 2), "When one refers to collaborative practice within a hospital setting, they are referring to healthcare personnel working together to care for patients and families". Collaboration is defined as "working together, especially in a joint intellectual effort to achieve a desired outcome; to cooperate" (American Heritage
Rating:Essay Length: 1,571 Words / 7 PagesSubmitted: January 19, 2010