Glossary of Academic Skills for the Social and Psychological Sciences

Chapter 1: Literature

 

Literature review A detailed overview of the significant literature available about your chosen topic, providing a discussion and critical evaluation, and using clear argument to contextualise and justify your research. (p. 4)

Peer review The process of evaluating an article by experts to ensure the article meets quality criteria before being accepted for publication. (p. 9)

Textbooks Written specifically for audiences such as students or professionals. Material usually presented in an ordered and relatively accessible form. Often draw on a wide range of sources including peer-reviewed academic journal articles. Useful, particularly as an introductory source to get an overview of your research topic and find out who are the recognised experts. (p. 10)

Peer-reviewed academic journal articles Provide detailed reports of research. Articles written by experts in the field and evaluated by other academics (peer reviewers) to assess quality and suitability. Pay rigorous attention to detail and verification of information. Usually contains extensive list of references. Before publication, have usually been revise in response to comments. This is the most useful type for your literature review. Not all academic journal articles are peer-reviewed. (p. 10)

Non-refereed academic journal articles Articles may provide detailed reports of research. Articles selected by an editor or editorial board with subject knowledge. Relevance and usefulness varies considerably. Beware of possible bias. (p. 10)

Professional and trade journal articles Articles written for members of professional or trade organisations, so related to their needs. Consist of a mix of news items and more detailed accounts of a practical nature. Articles rarely based on research, although some provide summaries of research. Can provide useful insights into practice, although may be biased. Need to be used with considerable caution. (p. 10)

Newspaper articles Articles written for members of public, most newspapers addressing a particular market segment. News presented is filtered dependent on events, priority being given to headline-grabbing stories that are likely to appeal to the readers. Good source of topical events and developments. May contain bias in reporting and coverage. (p. 10)

Conference proceedings Articles consist of selected papers presented at a conference, often published as a book or special edition of a journal. Usually peer-reviewed. Increasingly available online. Sometimes difficult to find. Very useful if the theme of the conference matches your research. (p. 10)

Reports Reports on specific topics written by academics and various organisations, including market research organisations and government departments. Beware of possible bias. May not have gone through same review process as peer-reviewed academic journal articles, but those from established organisations are often of high quality. Often difficult to access or expensive to purchase. Can be a useful source of information when the topic matches your research. (p. 10)

Search term Refers to a word or phrase that describes your research topic, question(s) or objectives and can be used either on its own or in combination with other phrases in online databases. (p. 12)

Business Source Complete (EBSCO) Full text articles for over 2,900 English language journals published worldwide. Covera all areas of business and management. Most journals are included only from the 1990s onwards. Also includes Datamonitor industry profiles for various industries, and Economist Intelligence Unit country reports. (p. 13)

Emerald Full text articles for c.150 English language journals published in the UK by Emerald. Covers all areas of business and management. (p. 13)

JSTOR Full text articles for science, social science, arts and humanities journals. Coverage usually extends back to volume 1, issue 1 of journals and more of the current issues of journals are also becoming available. Often the best place to find old articles. (p. 13)

Blackwell Reference Online Latest edition of the 12-volume Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Management, 22 Blackwell Handbooks and Companions covering bussiness and management. (p. 13)

Wiley Online Coverage includes over 1,100 full text journals covering the sciences, business, law, humanities, psychology and social sciences. (p. 13)

Google Scholar Ranks scholarly literature consisting of articles, theses, books, abstracts or court opinions from many disciplines and sources. (p. 13)

Nexis Full text articles in UK national and regional newspapers as well as international news providers. (p. 13)

Abstract Summary of an article, book or report, providing an overview of what it contains and sufficient information for the original to be located. (p. 15)

Plagiarism Presenting the work and ideas of other people and passing it off as your own, without acknowledging and referencing the original source. (p. 20)

 

Chapter 2: Conceptual model

 

Concepts Are the building blocks of models and theories. Are the working definitions that are used in particular analyses for which they have been devised or chosen. Are chosen to be useful, not correct, and are more than just a dictionary definition. (p. 38)

Frameworks Are analytical schemes. Frameworks simplify reality to make it easier to dicsuss, anlyse, or research and they also simplify reality by selecting certain phenomena/variables and suggesting certain relationships between them. They are judged in terms or utility, not correctness. (p. 39)

Kolb’s theory of the learning cycle An example of a staged process type of conceptual framework. He identified four styles of learning: active experimentation, reflective observation, abstract conceptualisation and concrete experience. These four learning styles were linked in a cyclical proccess. Effective learning requires going through a complete cycle. (p. 40)

Maslow’s need hierarchy In many conceptual frameworks, concepts are related because they occupy higher or lower positions on a scale or in hierarchy. Maslow’s hierarchy is a good example. The sequence of human needs, going from the lowest to highest, was as follows: physiological needs, safety needs, belongingness needs, esteem needs and self-actualisation. (p. 41)

Boston Consulting Group Strategic Matrix (Stern & Stalk) This matrix is used to assess the levels of investment needed by different stategic business units. It uses two axes: rate of market growth and relative market share. Business units that have both high market share and a high growth rate are the stars and should be supported. Those with low growth rates but high market shares are cash cows and can be relied upon to generate income without much investment. If a business unit has a small share of slow-growing market, it is classified as a dog and it would be better if the company withdrew from this business. Business units that have a small share of a fast-growing market are question marks because they represent a gamble, and investmen in them may pay off but there is no guarantee. (p. 42)

McKinsey 7S Model Sometimes concepts are related because they are similar. A conceptual framework can consist of groups like themes that are clustered together. A famous exampleis the McKinsey 7S Model. This is a framework for evaluating the effectiveness of an organisation. The first three (strategy, structure, systems) are called the cold triangle and the last four (superordinate goals, staff, skills, style) are grouped as the warm square. (p. 44)

Theories Are, in general termes, ideas about how phenomena relate to each other. They are also, more specifically, ideas about how particular events or actions tend to lead to others or are brought about by them. Theories are generalisations and are the inductive heart of scientific study. (p. 47)

Official concepts Sanctioned or published by the top management of an organisation. McClean and Marshall termed this the ‘high profile culture’. (p. 53)

Unofficial concepts Values, beliefs and behaviours chosen by the staff. It is the same as McClean and Marshall’s concept of ‘low profile culture’. (p. 53)

Structure concepts The technologies, procedures, policies and charts that define the ‘architecture’ of an organisation. (p. 54)

Values concepts Beliefs about what is good and bad and what are proper and improper ways of doing things. (p. 54)

Sub-cultures concepts Organisations do not necessarily have a single, unified gains power to hegemony over other groups. (p. 54)

Cultural imperialism concepts When one sub-culture group in an organisation gains power or hegemony over other groups. (p. 54)

 

Chapter 3: Academic writing

 

Citation The use of the idea presented by an author and expressed in your own words to support a point in your own work. (p. 131)

Quotation The use of words drawn from the source you need. The words should remain faithful to the original. (p. 131)

Bibliography A listing at the end of your own work of all source materials that you have been consulted as preparation for your paper. You do not need to have referred to al these sources directly in your text. In stome styles the word ‘bibliography’ is used instead of the term ‘reference list’. (p. 131)

Reference list All the books, journals web and online materials you have referred to in your paper. This list is usually at the end of the work. (p. 131)

Ellipsis The three dots used to substitute for words that have been omitted from a quatation called ellipsis and are often used at the beginning of a quote, or where some information that is irrelevant to your point has been omitted for brevity. Obviously, you should not omit words that change the sens of the quotation. (p. 134)

Information-prominent method of citing Here the statement is regarded as being generally accepted within the field of study. For example: Children express an interest in books and pictures from an early age. (Murphy,1995) (p. 134)

Author-prominent method of citing Here the author and date of publication form part of the construction of the sentence. This formulation can be used with appropriate reporting words to reflect a viewpoint. For example: Murphy (1995) claimed that children as young as six months are able to follow a simple story sequence. (p. 134)

Copyright infringement Is regarded as equivalent to stealing, and legal rights are sometimes jealously guarded by companies with the resources to prosecute. (p. 149)

Topic introducer sentence Introduces the overall topic of the text, generally in the very first paragraph. (p. 168)

Topic sentence Introduces a paragraph by identifying the topic of that paragraph. (p. 168)

Developer sentence Expands the topic by giving additional information. (p. 168)

Modulator sentence Acts as linking sentence and is often introduced by a signpost word moving to another aspect of the topic within the same paragraph. (p. 168)

Terminator sentence This sentence concludes the discussion of a topic within a paragraph, but can also be used as a transistion sentence where it provides a link to the topic of the next paragraph. (p. 168)

Deductive model The writer moves from the key point and follows it with supporting information or evidence. (p. 168)

Inductive model The writer presents the supporting information and concludes with the key point. (p. 168)

Reviewing Appraising critically; examining a task or project to ensure that it meets the requirements and objectives of the task and that the overall sense is conveyed well. (p. 174)

Editing Revising and correcting later drafts of an essay, to arrive at a final version. Usually, this involves the smaller rather than the larger details. (p. 174)

Proof-reading Checking a printed copy for errors of any sort. (p. 174)

 

Chapter 4: Arguments

 

Spider diagrams Start with the question or topic you are going to explore. This goes at the centre of the web. From this point ideas thread outwards, creating a web or tree-like structure. Are excellent for the initial, creative stage of your argument. They ar not so good in helping you turn all those ideas into a coherent and plausible essay. (p. 185)

Flow diagrams This has four stages. First, you have to identify parts of your argument. Then arrange the parts in logical sequence, drawing an arrow between them. Unpack the contents of each parts and draw secondary arrows showing connections between the different parts of your argument. (p. 186)

Standpoints A statement that you wish to prove. May be based on a fact, an opinion or a value judgement. In principle, standpoints based on a fact are verifiable. Opinions cannot be proved and must therefore be made credible. (p. 198)

Arguments Statements that you use to support your standpoint. (p. 198)

Linking statements Standpoints and arguments are connected by linking statements, which often remains implicit. (p. 198)

Causal arguments A causal relationship exists when one phenomenon is the cause of another. If the causality in an argument is proven, it is a strong argument. (p. 198)

Examples An example can also be used as an argument to prove a rule. A general rule can then be deduced from that particular case and other examples. In addition, an example or illustration makes a presentation more lively. (p. 199)

Analogies and metaphors An analogy involves four terms: A is to B as C is to D. An analogy takes two random relationships and equates them to each other. A metaphor involves two terms: one term is compared to another. (p. 199)

Authority arguments Are based on an information source that is regarded as reputable. From the point of view of objectivity, such an argument is not very strong. Yet such arguments often work because they assume that the authority has formed a well-founded view based on knowledge and experience. (p. 199)

Motivational and ethical arguments Speakers who use motivational and ethical arguments are appealing to the subjective experiences and empathy of the audience. Motivational arguments are based on desires and motives that the audience is assume to have, such as economic motives. Ethical arguments are based on the audience presumed standards and values. (p. 199)

 

Chapter 5: Reflecting

 

Reflection Is about you understanding what happened or where you are now with an issue, being perceptive enough to see what happened and recognising how you felt. (p. 260)

Emotional intelligence We need to develop self-awareness and recognise what others are feeling, know how to handle our emotions and to have self-discipline. (p. 261)

Social intelligence About having empathic skills, motivating and inspiring others and generally knowing how to work most effectively with others. (p. 262)

Description Describe what happened. (p. 263)

Feelings Describe what you were thinking/feeling. (p. 263)

Evaluation Identify what was good/bas about the experience. (p. 263)

Analysis Identify a sense/meaning you can make out of this. (p. 263)

Conclusion Identify what you could have done differently. (p. 263)

Actions Describe what you would do differently next time. (p. 263)

 

Chapter 6: Team Work

 

Forming The team is faced with the need to become acquainted with its members, its purpose, and its boundaries. Relationships must be formed and trust established. Clarity of direction is needed from team leaders. (p. 294)

Norming The team is faced with creating cohesion and unity, differentiating roles, identifying expectations for members, and enhancing commitment. Providing supportive feedback and fostering commitment to a vision are needed from the team leaders. (p. 294)

Storming The team is faced with disagreements, counterdependence, and the need to manage conflict. Challenges include violations of team norms and expectations and overcoming groupthink. Focusing on process improvement, recognising team achievement, and fostering win/win relationships and fostering extraordinary performance are needed from the team leaders. (p. 294)

Performing The team is faced with the need for continuous improvement, innovation, speed, and capitalizing on core competencies. Sponsoring team members’ new ideas, orchestrating their implementation, and fostering extraordinary performances are needed from the team leaders. (p. 294)

SMART goals Specific (S): the goal is clear, and precise targets and standards are identified. Measurable (M): the goal can be assessed and quantified. The extent to which the goals has been achieved is obvious. Aligned (A): the goal is supportive of and consistent with the goals of the broader organisation. People are not pursuing their own objectives independent of their team. Realistic (R): while being difficult and causing performance to stretch, the goal is not foolhardy or a fantasy. Time-bound (T): an end point is identified or a completion date established so that goal achievement is not open-ended. (p. 306)

Everest goals An Everest goal goes beyond normal goal setting. It represents an ultimate achievement, an extraordinary accomplishment, or a beyond-the-norm outcome. Achieving it requires everyhing one can give. An Everest goal is clear and compelling: serves as a unifying focal point; builds team spirit; engages people; and creates positive energy and excitement. (p. 294)

Task-facilitating roles Those that help the team accomplish its objectives. (p. 309)

Relationship-building roles Those are the roles that emphasize the interpersonal aspects of the team. (p. 310)

Blocking roles Roles that inhibit the team or its members from achieving what they could have achieved, and they destroy morale and cohesion. (p. 311)

 

Chapter 7: Conversation

 

Dialogue specialized form of conversation that seeks to uncover and explore the underlying assumptions and beliefs that people bring to theur converstational decision making. (p. 329)

Discussions Participants often form opinions in advance, marshal evidence and facts to support their conclusions, and then converse with others with the underlying motive of persuading others to their point of view. (p. 331)

Patience Perhaps first among the skills necesarry to understand and practice dialogue is patience. One must be able to wait for the conversation to flower and bloom before plucking a decision from the group. (p. 336)

Team building Since dialogue seeks a consensual outcome, participants in it must have the skills to coordinate team members. Leaders of dialogue will invite participation from all members and do that in a way that is safe and encouraging. (p. 336)

Listening Dialoguers are good listeners. They genuinely care about what people are saying and where their words may be coming from. (p. 336)

Risk-taking Dialogue leaders are also willing to take some risks and reveal their own points of view and underlying thinking. Many so-called leaders are quick to relevant their conclusions but are rectulant, even afraid, to reveal their underlying thinking and basic assumptions, especially if it meant that these are to be open for conversation and examination. (p. 336)

Flexible In the same vein, when one is committed to the best possible solution and not convinced that their way is necessarily the best way, a person can become more open-minded and consequently, flexible. (p. 336)

Seeing assumptions A central, key skill in dialogue is the ability to recognize underlying assumptions. People with this skill are listening carefully to what others say and then inquiring personally or outright what the person must believe or assume in order to have made the statement. (p. 336)

Clear speech The insight into underlying assumptions, of course, is useless without an accompanying ability to articulate what one surmises and to present it to the speaker and/or group in a way that invites further exploration. (p. 337)

Communication process Before communication can take place, it needs a purpose, a message to be conveyed between a sender and a receiver. The sender encodes the message and passes it through a medium to the receiver, who decodes it. The result is transfer or meaning from one person to another. (p. 345)

Formal channels Are established by the organization and transmit messages related to the professional activities or members. They traditionally follow the authority chain within the organization. (p. 346)

Informal channels These are often spontaneous and emerge as a response to individual choices. (p. 346)

Filtering Refers to how a sender purposely manipulates information so the receiver will see it more favorably. A manager who tells his boss what he feels the boss wants to hear is filtering information. (p. 355)

Communication apprehension Experiencing undue tension and anxiety in oral communication, written communication, or both. They may find it extremely difficult to talk with others face to face or may become extremely anxious when they have to use the telephone, relying instead on memos or faxes when a phone call would be faster and more appropriate. (p. 357)

High-context cultures Such as China, Korea, Japan and Vietnam. People rely heavily on non-verbal and subtle situational cues in communicating with others, and a person’s official status, place in society, and reputation carry considerable weight. (p. 358)

Low-context cultures Such as people from Europe and North America. They rely essentialy on spoken and written words to convey meaning; body language and formal titles are secondary. (p. 358)

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Book summary of Critical Thinking - Moore & Parker - 12th edition

Book summary of Critical Thinking - Moore & Parker - 12th edition

What is critical thinking? - Chapter 1

[TOC]

What is the importance of critical thinking?

For us humans, there is an importance in critical thinking because it aids us in making good decisions. Often we do not realise how irrational our decisions can be, and this is where critical thinking comes in. Critical thinking basically means thinking about our thinking. We make use of logic and reason to determine whether or not a claim is true, if the reasoning behind it is sound and if we can draw a correlation or connection. It is not necessarily about coming up with claim as much as evaluating the correctness of claims that have been made and try to form a proper conclusion.

To achieve this, we evaluate our thinking on the basis of rationality. When we understand how critical thinking works, we can use this knowledge to be critical in multiple subjects and situations in our daily lives. It is, however, important to understand that criticising other people’s claims and ideas does not mean that we want to attack other people, only that we are trying to find the logic in them. Also, criticising other people in not always a case of critical thinking. People can criticise in the most illogical and unreasonable ways, without considering whether or not their claims are true or their reasoning sound.

When we come to a conclusion at the end of a reasoning, we call that a belief. Beliefs are prepositional and can be either true or false. Beliefs can be compared to a judgement or an opinion. When a belief is stated in a declarative way, that is when we start calling it a claim or statement. Claims are things that we can think critically about.

What are important elements of critical thinking?

Within critical thinking, there are three important parts: claims, issues and arguments. These parts can be analysed once they have been determined in conversation or writing.

Claims

Claims are things that we write or declare, to bring across information. With claims we often deal with statements, opinions or beliefs. Claims can be true or false and can be

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Glossary of Academic Skills for the Social and Psychological Sciences

Glossary of Academic Skills for the Social and Psychological Sciences

Chapter 1: Literature

 

Literature review A detailed overview of the significant literature available about your chosen topic, providing a discussion and critical evaluation, and using clear argument to contextualise and justify your research. (p. 4)

Peer review The process of evaluating an article by experts to ensure the article meets quality criteria before being accepted for publication. (p. 9)

Textbooks Written specifically for audiences such as students or professionals. Material usually presented in an ordered and relatively accessible form. Often draw on a wide range of sources including peer-reviewed academic journal articles. Useful, particularly as an introductory source to get an overview of your research topic and find out who are the recognised experts. (p. 10)

Peer-reviewed academic journal articles Provide detailed reports of research. Articles written by experts in the field and evaluated by other academics (peer reviewers) to assess quality and suitability. Pay rigorous attention to detail and verification of information. Usually contains extensive list of references. Before publication, have usually been revise in response to comments. This is the most useful type for your literature review. Not all academic journal articles are peer-reviewed. (p. 10)

Non-refereed academic journal articles Articles may provide detailed reports of research. Articles selected by an editor or editorial board with subject knowledge. Relevance and usefulness varies considerably. Beware of possible bias. (p. 10)

Professional and trade journal articles Articles written for members of professional or trade organisations, so related to their needs. Consist of a mix of news items and more detailed accounts of a practical nature. Articles rarely based on research, although some provide summaries of research. Can provide useful insights into practice, although may be biased. Need to be used with considerable caution. (p. 10)

Newspaper articles Articles written for members of public, most newspapers addressing a particular market segment. News presented is filtered dependent on events, priority being given to headline-grabbing stories that are likely to appeal to the readers. Good source of topical events and developments. May contain bias in reporting and coverage. (p. 10)

Conference proceedings Articles consist of selected papers presented at a conference, often published as a book or special edition of a journal. Usually peer-reviewed. Increasingly available online. Sometimes difficult to find. Very useful if the theme of the conference matches your research. (p. 10)

Reports Reports on specific topics written by academics and various organisations, including market research organisations and government departments. Beware of possible bias. May not have gone through same review process as peer-reviewed academic journal articles, but those from established organisations are often of high quality. Often difficult to access or expensive to purchase. Can be a useful source of information when

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How to Write an Academic Article - A Guide for Advanced Academics

How to Write an Academic Article - A Guide for Advanced Academics

Academic article

Do you need to write an academic paper? Do you have a lot to tell the world but are you not sure on how to go about doing so structured and well organized? This hero shows how you could structure your text. Enjoy!

40 paragraphs

The article will consist of roughly 40 paragraphs. Five of them will provide the introductory and concluding remarks. Five of them will establish a general, human background. Five of them will state the theory that informs the analysis. Five of them will state the method by which the data was gathered. The analysis (or 'results' section) will make roughly three overarching claims (that support the main thesis) in three five-paragraph sections. The implications of the research will be outlined in five paragraphs. These are ball-park figures, not hard and fast rules, but 'knowing' something for academic purposes means being able to articulate yourself in roughly these proportions.

  1. The First Three Paragraphs

It is difficult to overstate the importance of a good introduction. If your reader does not have a good sense of your argument by the end of the third paragraph (before reading the 600th word), there is something seriously wrong with your paper. Or, perhaps more tellingly, if you are unable to outline your argument straightforwardly and clearly in three paragraphs, you will be unable to write a good paper. When I talk about what a scholarly article is, I always use the opportunity to sketch 'the ideal introduction'. It consists of exactly three paragraphs and no more than six-hundred words.

The first paragraph tells us about the world we are living in. This should obviously be the world that your paper helps us to better understand. It's the world that needs to be understood in precisely the way you understand it. But in this paragraph we (your readers) don't want this understanding, we just want a recognizable description of the world we share with you. Talk to us like we only need to be reminded that this is where we live. It should be familiar to us and based on widely available sources. While you should avoid the letter of a statement like 'We live in a world of ...' or 'Ours is an age of ...', this is very much the spirit of the first paragraph. It's a time for commonplaces; it provides a shared place for you and your readers. In an important sense, you are here describing the practices that

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Stats for students: Simple steps for passing your statistics courses

Stats for students: Simple steps for passing your statistics courses

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How to triumph over the theory of statistics (without understanding everything)?

Stats of students

  • The first years that you follow statistics, it is often a case of taking knowledge for granted and simply trying to pass the courses. Don't worry if you don't understand everything right away: in later years it will fall into place, and you will see the importance of the theory you had to know before.
  • The book you need to study may be difficult to understand at first. Be patient: later in your studies, the effort you put in now will pay off.
  • Be a Gestalt Scientist! In other words, recognize that the whole of statistics is greater than the sum of its parts. It is very easy to get hung up on nit-picking details and fail to see the forest because of the trees
  • Tip: Precise use of language is important in research. Try to reproduce the theory verbatim (i.e. learn by heart) where possible. With that, you don't have to understand it yet, you show that you've been working on it, you can't go wrong by using the wrong word and you practice for later reporting of research.
  • Tip: Keep study material, handouts, sheets, and other publications from your teacher for future reference.

How to score points with formulas of statistics (without learning them all)?

  • The direct relationship between data and results consists of mathematical formulas. These follow their own logic, are written in their own language, and can therefore be complex to comprehend.
  • If you don't understand the math behind statistics, you don't understand statistics. This does not have to be a problem, because statistics is an applied science from which you can also get excellent results without understanding. None of your teachers will understand all the statistical formulas.
  • Please note: you will probably have to know and understand a number of formulas, so that you can demonstrate that you know the principle of how statistics work. Which formulas you need to know differs from subject to subject and lecturer to lecturer, but in general these are relatively simple formulas that occur frequently, and your lecturer will likely tell you (often several times) that you should know this formula.
  • Tip: if you want to recognize statistical symbols, you can use: Recognizing commonly used statistical symbols
  • Tip: have fun with LaTeX! LaTeX code gives us a simple way to write out mathematical formulas and make them look professional. Play with LaTeX. With that, you can include used formulas in your own papers and you learn to understand how a formula is built up – which greatly benefits your understanding and remembering that formula. See also (in Dutch): How to create formulas like a pro on JoHo WorldSupporter?
  • Tip: Are you interested in a career in sciences or programming? Then take your formulas seriously and go through them again after your course.

How to practice your statistics (with minimal effort)?

How to select your data?

  • Your teacher will regularly use a dataset for lessons during the first years of your studying. It is instructive (and can be a lot of fun) to set up your own research for once with real data that is also used by other researchers.
  • Tip: scientific articles often indicate which datasets have been used for the research. There is a good chance that those datasets are valid. Sometimes there are also studies that determine which datasets are more valid for the topic you want to study than others. Make use of datasets other researchers point out.
  • Tip: Do you want an interesting research result? You can use the same method and question, but use an alternative dataset, and/or alternative variables, and/or alternative location, and/or alternative time span. This allows you to validate or falsify the results of earlier research.
  • Tip: for datasets you can look at Discovering datasets for statistical research

How to operationalize clearly and smartly?

  • For the operationalization, it is usually sufficient to indicate the following three things:
    • What is the concept you want to study?
    • Which variable does that concept represent?
    • Which indicators do you select for those variables?
  • It is smart to argue that a variable is valid, or why you choose that indicator.
  • For example, if you want to know whether someone is currently a father or mother (concept), you can search the variables for how many children the respondent has (variable) and then select on the indicators greater than 0, or is not 0 (indicators). Where possible, use the terms 'concept', 'variable', 'indicator' and 'valid' in your communication. For example, as follows: “The variable [variable name] is a valid measure of the concept [concept name] (if applicable: source). The value [description of the value] is an indicator of [what you want to measure].” (ie.: The variable "Number of children" is a valid measure of the concept of parenthood. A value greater than 0 is an indicator of whether someone is currently a father or mother.)

How to run analyses and draw your conclusions?

  • The choice of your analyses depends, among other things, on what your research goal is, which methods are often used in the existing literature, and practical issues and limitations.
  • The more you learn, the more independently you can choose research methods that suit your research goal. In the beginning, follow the lecturer – at the end of your studies you will have a toolbox with which you can vary in your research yourself.
  • Try to link up as much as possible with research methods that are used in the existing literature, because otherwise you could be comparing apples with oranges. Deviating can sometimes lead to interesting results, but discuss this with your teacher first.
  • For as long as you need, keep a step-by-step plan at hand on how you can best run your analysis and achieve results. For every analysis you run, there is a step-by-step explanation of how to perform it; if you do not find it in your study literature, it can often be found quickly on the internet.
  • Tip: Practice a lot with statistics, so that you can show results quickly. You cannot learn statistics by just reading about it.
  • Tip: The measurement level of the variables you use (ratio, interval, ordinal, nominal) largely determines the research method you can use. Show your audience that you recognize this.
  • Tip: conclusions from statistical analyses will never be certain, but at the most likely. There is usually a standard formulation for each research method with which you can express the conclusions from that analysis and at the same time indicate that it is not certain. Use that standard wording when communicating about results from your analysis.
  • Tip: see explanation for various analyses: Introduction to statistics
Study Guide for summaries with Academic Writing Skills by Van der Molen a.o.
Summary of What is this thing called Science by Chalmers: 4th edition

Summary of What is this thing called Science by Chalmers: 4th edition

Does knowledge consist of facts that have come from experience? - Chapter 1

What is the common sense view of science?

In the first four chapters of this book, the statement "science is derived from facts" is critically analyzed. Throughout the book, this statement's meaning changes slightly. Facts are statements about the world that can be sensed. Facts are neither personal opinions nor speculative ideas. If the world is perceived accurately and without prejudice, the facts that are established are, therefore, a reliable and objective basis for science. Scientific knowledge is reliable and objective if the facts guide conclusive reasoning to laws and theories that make up the basis for scientific knowledge. Before the 17th century, science was primarily based on authorities such as the Bible and Aristotle. Due to people like Galileo, this idea changed in the 17th century. People started to see observation as the basis of science.

Empirists (such as Berkeley, Locke, and Hume) and positivists held the idea that we can see facts as indisputably correct through observation. It follows from this reasoning that knowledge derived from this is objective and reliable. However, it is doubtful that science is based on observable facts. The problem that arises following the statement that science can be deduced from the facts relates to:

  1. The nature of the 'facts' and the way in which scientists have access to those facts;
  2. The way in which laws and theories can be derived from the facts, once we know those facts.

Some believe that facts are at the basis of science because they have the following assumptions:

  • Facts are directly accessible through the senses to all unbiased observers;
  • Facts precede the theory and are independent of it;
  • Facts are a solid and reliable basis
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What general skills does a social worker need? - Chapter 6

What general skills does a social worker need? - Chapter 6

The listening skills can be divided into non-selective (actually impossible not to perform) and selective. The 'non'-selective skills include non-verbal behavior, careful following of the conversation and the use of moments of silence. Selective listening means asking questions, reproducing the information given in one's own words, stimulating precise answers and summarizing. Regulatory skills relate to opening of the conversation, formulation of goals, making agreements about goals, clarifying situation and concluding the conversation. These skills coincide with the phases of problem clarification, problem nuance and problem handling.

How does the social worker start?

First of all, the counselor must make clear what the usual course of events is, so that the client knows what to expect. The counselor must explain what his way of working is. The caregiver cannot do this if the client is completely confused. However, if the client is not particularly confused, the counselor can explain how he works and can make some suggestions. If the client agrees with these proposals, then both can start using them. If the client does not agree with the proposals, a different way of working must be implemented. Because of the structure that the counselor introduces in the beginning, the client will also get more clarity. Some practical issues will also have to be discussed in the beginning; such as the costs and duration of the calls. If both parties know what they can expect, an initial contract can be made.

Which 'non'-selective listening skills are important?

Being able to listen to someone properly is a profession in itself. One must show interest without interrupting too much. One has to listen carefully, but not lose sight of the role of caregiver. The caregiver must also keep his attention focused on his profession. In addition to listening, non-verbal behavior is another important aspect. This behavior has a lot of influence on communication between people. The facial expression is one of the most important forms of non-verbal behavior. For example, a smile can express interest and a sense of consent while a frown will express antipathy and disapproval. Different facial expressions have different meanings at different times. The rescuer can choose to manipulate his facial expression. He must be careful that he does not do this too much. As a result, he may lose his attention and the client may think that he is not being taken seriously. Eye contact also plays a very important role. Lack of eye contact by the health care professional could indicate that they are not involved. Excessive eye contact could lead to a feeling of discomfort. Finally, the body language plays a significant role. A relaxed body posture is the best posture. Gestures that encourage the client such as encouraging nods are also desirable.

A verbal way to pay attention is to follow what the client has to say. The counselor does not try to steer the client, but tries to stick to the client's storyline. In addition, the counselor tries to encourage the client, among other things by giving short verbal

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What is professional skills in pedagogics?

What is professional skills in pedagogics?

Professional skills in pedagogy encompass the knowledge, abilities, and attitudes that educators and educational professionals need to effectively work with children, young people, and adults. These skills are essential for guiding learning processes, creating safe and stimulating learning environments, and ensuring the optimal development of individuals.

What are the main features of professional skills in pedagogics?

  • Scientific Foundation: Skills are based on research in learning, development, and effective teaching practices.
  • Reflection and Critical Thinking: Educators can reflect on their practice, critically evaluate their work, and continuously develop their knowledge and skills.
  • Communication and Collaboration: Effective communication with students, parents, colleagues, and others is crucial. Collaboration is key to creating optimal learning environments.
  • Diversity Awareness: Recognizing and valuing differences, educators can work effectively with learners from diverse backgrounds, cultures, and needs.
  • Ethics and Professionalism: Educators act in accordance with ethical principles and professional codes of conduct.

What are the most important sub-areas of professional skills in pedagogics?

  • Instructional Science: Teaching skills, lesson planning, assessment methods, learning processes.
  • Developmental Psychology: Cognitive, social, emotional, and physical development of children and young people.
  • Educational Sciences: Educational styles, parental involvement, managing challenging behaviors.
  • Classroom Management: Creating safe and stimulating environments, classroom management techniques.
  • Special Education: Supporting learners with special educational needs.

What are the most important concepts of professional skills in pedagogics?

  • Learning: How people learn in different ways and how to optimize learning processes.
  • Development: The stages of physical, cognitive, social, and emotional development.
  • Education: The principles and practices of effective teaching.
  • Inclusion: Creating learning environments where all students feel welcome, valued, and challenged.

Who are the most influential figures of professional skills in pedagogics?

  • John Dewey: American philosopher and educator, advocated for experiential learning.
  • Jean Piaget: Swiss psychologist, known for his theory of cognitive development.
  • Lev Vygotsky: Russian psychologist, emphasized the role of social interaction in learning.
  • Paulo Freire: Brazilian educator, proponent of critical pedagogy.
  • Maria Montessori: Italian physician and educator, developer of the Montessori method.

Why is professional skills in pedagogics important?

Professional skills in pedagogy are crucial for:

  • Promoting the optimal development of children, young people, and adults.
  • Guiding effective learning processes.
  • Creating safe and stimulating learning environments.
  • Addressing diversity and inclusion.
  • Acting ethically and professionally.

What are applications of professional skills in pedagogics in practice?

Pedagogical professionals with strong skills work in diverse settings, including:

  • Schools: Teachers, lecturers, educational support staff.
  • Early Childhood Education: Educators, childcare providers.
  • Youth Work: Youth workers, youth coaches.
  • Special Education: Educational support staff, pedagogues.
  • Other Educational Settings: Trainers, instructional designers, curriculum developers.
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The Competencies Bundle: content and contributions about competence and skills improvement

Glossary of Academic Skills for the Social and Psychological Sciences

Glossary of Academic Skills for the Social and Psychological Sciences

Chapter 1: Literature

 

Literature review A detailed overview of the significant literature available about your chosen topic, providing a discussion and critical evaluation, and using clear argument to contextualise and justify your research. (p. 4)

Peer review The process of evaluating an article by experts to ensure the article meets quality criteria before being accepted for publication. (p. 9)

Textbooks Written specifically for audiences such as students or professionals. Material usually presented in an ordered and relatively accessible form. Often draw on a wide range of sources including peer-reviewed academic journal articles. Useful, particularly as an introductory source to get an overview of your research topic and find out who are the recognised experts. (p. 10)

Peer-reviewed academic journal articles Provide detailed reports of research. Articles written by experts in the field and evaluated by other academics (peer reviewers) to assess quality and suitability. Pay rigorous attention to detail and verification of information. Usually contains extensive list of references. Before publication, have usually been revise in response to comments. This is the most useful type for your literature review. Not all academic journal articles are peer-reviewed. (p. 10)

Non-refereed academic journal articles Articles may provide detailed reports of research. Articles selected by an editor or editorial board with subject knowledge. Relevance and usefulness varies considerably. Beware of possible bias. (p. 10)

Professional and trade journal articles Articles written for members of professional or trade organisations, so related to their needs. Consist of a mix of news items and more detailed accounts of a practical nature. Articles rarely based on research, although some provide summaries of research. Can provide useful insights into practice, although may be biased. Need to be used with considerable caution. (p. 10)

Newspaper articles Articles written for members of public, most newspapers addressing a particular market segment. News presented is filtered dependent on events, priority being given to headline-grabbing stories that are likely to appeal to the readers. Good source of topical events and developments. May contain bias in reporting and coverage. (p. 10)

Conference proceedings Articles consist of selected papers presented at a conference, often published as a book or special edition of a journal. Usually peer-reviewed. Increasingly available online. Sometimes difficult to find. Very useful if the theme of the conference matches your research. (p. 10)

Reports Reports on specific topics written by academics and various organisations, including market research organisations and government departments. Beware of possible bias. May not have gone through same review process as peer-reviewed academic journal articles, but those from established organisations are often of high quality. Often difficult to access or expensive to purchase. Can be a useful source of information when

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Leadership competencies for implementing planned organizational change - Battilana, Gilmartin, Sengul, Pache & Alexander - 2010 - Artikel

Leadership competencies for implementing planned organizational change - Battilana, Gilmartin, Sengul, Pache & Alexander - 2010 - Artikel

De meeste leiderschapsstudies houden zich niet bezig met de complexiteit van intra-organisatorische processen, waaronder veranderingsimplementatie processen, die verschillende activiteiten met zich mee brengen. In deze studie wordt er beweerd dat het waarschijnlijk is dat managers verschillende activiteiten benadrukken in de geplande organisatieverandering implementatie, afhankelijk van de mix van hun leiderschapscompetenties.

Effectief leiderschap en de bekrachtiging van geplande organisatieverandering

In deze studie wordt het taak-georiënteerde en persoons-georiënteerde model gebruikt. Taak-georiënteerde vaardigheden zijn gerelateerd aan organisatie structuur, ontwerp en controle en het vaststellen van routines om organisatiedoelen en doelstellingen te halen. Persoons-georiënteerde vaardigheden omvat gedrag dat collaboratieve interactie tussen organisatiewerknemers stimuleert, een ondersteunend sociaal klimaat vaststelt en managementpraktijken stimuleert die gelijke behandeling van werknemers verzekert.

Effectiviteit van de twee verschillende soorten vereist verschillende, maar gerelateerde groepen bekwaamheden. Effectiviteit van taak-georiënteerd gedrag staat of valt met het vermogen om taakeisen duidelijk te maken en taken te structureren rondom de missie en doelen van de organisatie. Effectiviteit van persoons-georiënteerd gedrag berust op het vermogen om rekening te houden met anderen als ook het rekening houden met je eigen emoties en die van anderen. Afhankelijk van de mix van deze leiderschapscompetenties wordt er een verschillende nadruk gelegd op de activiteiten die nodig zijn bij het implementeren van organisatieverandering.

Deze activiteiten bestaan uit communiceren, mobiliseren en evalueren. Communiceren: activiteiten die leiders uitvoeren om de noodzaak van verandering uit te leggen en hun visie te delen met de werknemers. Mobiliseren: acties die leiders uitvoeren om support van collega’s te krijgen en de inwerkingtreding van nieuwe werkroutines te aanvaarden. Evalueren: maatstaven die leiders gebruiken om de impact van de implementatie te volgen en vast te stellen en veranderingen te institutionaliseren.

Communiceren van de noodzaak van organisatieverandering

Leiders die veranderingen doorvoeren moeten de noodzaak van deze verandering communiceren met hun werknemers. De werknemers moeten begrijpen waarom gedrag en routines moeten worden veranderd.

Hypothese 1a: leiders die meer persoons-georiënteerd zijn, zijn beter in het communiceren van de noodzaak van verandering dan andere leiders.

Hypothese 1b: leiders die meer taak-georiënteerd zijn, zijn minder goed in het communiceren van de noodzaak van verandering dan andere leiders.

Mobiliseren van anderen om verandering te accepteren

Tijdens implementatie moeten leiders hun werknemers mobiliseren om de veranderingen te accepteren en toe te passen in hun dagelijkse routines. Mobiliseren is moeilijk doordat er verschillende persoonlijke en beroepsdoelen zijn, en dus verschillende opvattingen over de verandering. Mobiliseren brengt zowel taak als persoons-georiënteerde vaardigheden met zich mee.

Hypothese 2a: leiders die meer persoons-georiënteerd zijn, zijn beter in staat werknemers te mobiliseren dan andere leiders.

Hypothese 2b: leiders die meer taak-georiënteerd zijn, zijn beter in staat werknemers te mobiliseren dan andere leiders.

Evalueren van de implementatie van de verandering

Leiders moeten evalueren in hoeverre organisatieleden routines, werkwijzen en gedrag uitvoeren dat

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How do stress, coping, adaptation and health affect personality? - Chapter 18 - Exclusive

How do stress, coping, adaptation and health affect personality? - Chapter 18 - Exclusive

Health psychology focuses on the influence of psychological and behavioral factors on health, often in combination with the environment. Stress is central to this.

What models of personality are there?

What is the interactional model?

The interactional model suggests that personality factors determine the impact of events, because they determine how someone deals with the situation. Personality would thus influence coping. How someone deals with an event determines the degree of stress caused by that event. However, a limitation of this model is that stable coping strategies have never been found.

What is the transactional model?

The transactional model does things differently. According to this model, personality has three potential effects:

  1. Personality can influence coping.
  2. Personality can affect how the person interprets an event.
  3. Personality can influence the event itself.

It is not the event that causes stress here, but rather how it is dealt with. This model is called transactional because of the person's influence on the event and the person's appreciation. There is mutual influence.

What is the health and behavior model?

A third model is the health and behavior model. This assumes that personality does not directly influence the degree of stress or illness, but that it indirectly influences stress or illness through certain behaviors, such as unsafe sex or overeating. The less healthy someone is, the greater the chance of experiencing more stress.

What is the disease and behavior model?

Another model is the disease and behavior model. In this model, disease is explained as the presence of an objectively measurable abnormal physiological process, such as fever, high blood pressure, or a tumor. Abnormal or sick behavior is about the way people behave when they think they are sick. Personality determines the degree of sick behavior, whether or not in combination with a real illness.

According to the predispositional model, associations exist between personality and illness because of a third variable that affects both, namely predisposition. The predisposition can exist for stable individual personality differences and for specific illnesses.

What is stress?

Stress is a subjective feeling that is the result of uncontrollable and threatening events (stressors). These are often extreme situations with unpleasant consequences that cannot be influenced. Stress can be divided into low sources of stress in daily life (daily hassles) and important life events (major life events). Major life events are associated with intensity, conflict and uncontrollability. Positive things can also be very stressful, for example a marriage, a move or a promotion. People with a lot of stress in their lives have many psychological and physiological symptoms. Possible responses to stress may include palpitations, increased blood pressure, sweaty hands and feet, and

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