This self-paced social sciences course is about trying to understand ‘methods’ and the ways researchers go about trying to find things out about people, societies and cultures.
In this course, you will explore:
- The kinds of methods researchers tend to adopt
- The contexts in which certain research methods are used
- The benefits, drawbacks and ethical implications of research
This course isn’t a practical or technical guide to doing research. Rather, it offers a way for us to think deeply about what methods are, and what they allow us to achieve.
When you complete this course, we want you to be critical users of research – and that means having the ability to always question the application of methods, and to hold ourselves to account as researchers and scholars.
That not only makes our research better, it also foregrounds the things that are most exciting and interesting about methods.
We’ve designed this self-paced course to provide you with a unique opportunity to develop your understanding of methods. This course is linked to the Masters in Digital Education programme at the University of Edinburgh. You will study alongside students who are enrolled at the University and who are working towards a postgraduate qualification. By joining us you’ll get a sense of what it is like to study on our programme.
The Masters in Digital Education has built up a reputation over the years for critical engagement in our field, and it is this way of learning that we want to foreground in this course. Introduction to Social Research Methods will be about developing a rounded understanding of methods, and their underlying assumptions and values.