In this module student will pay particular attention to social stratification and the life course perspective of criminal offenders, victims, and society. Social stratification is the unequal distribution of scarce resources, and of the processes by which these resources are allocated to individuals, groups, and social positions. We will be asking how experiences in early life influence later events and choices for offenders, victims, and other parties, affect their access to education, work opportunities, and long-term health conditions.
Students in this module will be exposed to a selective introduction to the study of statistics in aspects of stratification, crime and victimization, and also on the national institutions that engage in crime and sociodemographic reporting such as police, courts, and prison data collection systems. We will pay particular attention to the problem-solving perspective of dealing with quantitative data; in other words, how researchers approach statistics examining the logics behind it with as little fear as possible.
The course will examine specific examples of quantitative research, covering the concepts, theories, facts, and methods of analysis used by social scientists to understand basic principles across statistical techniques. The examples are not meant to provide a comprehensive overview, but rather to illustrate prominent questions in the field and how researchers go about answering them.
In general, the module relies on a building-block approach, meaning that each teaching week helps to prepare the student for the sessions that follow. It also means that the level of sophistication of the course increases as the year progresses. In the teaching weeks that follow, students will examine three types of statistics used in criminological research: descriptive statistics, inferential or inductive statistics, and multivariate statistics.
After the introductory week, this course is divided into eight sections, each devoted to providing students with an accessible, yet sophisticated understanding of statistics that can be used to examine real-life social science problems with popular statistical software programs.
This module is part of the Q-Step pathway. Q-Step is an award which you can gain simply by enrolling on specific modules and will signal to employers your capability in quantitative research. Learn more about the Q-Step pathway and enhance your degree now.