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Chapter Two: How Do Social Workers Know Things?

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Title: Chapter Two: How Do Social Workers Know Things?


1
Chapter Two How Do Social Workers Know Things?
2
Scientific Method
  • Scientific Method p. 12 - an approach to inquiry
    that attempts to safeguard against errors
    commonly made in casual human inquiry.
  • Features include
  • Viewing all knowledge as provisional and subject
    to refutation
  • Searching for evidence based on systemic and
    comprehensive observation
  • Pursuing objectivity in observation
  • Replication

3
Scientific Method
  • Emphasizes the pursuit of objectivity.
  • Everything is open to question.
  • The ideal of objectivity vs. the reality.
  • Empirical (RB, p. 19) empirical evidence is
    evidence based upon observation.
  • The act of observation affects the observed.
  • Important to acknowledge biases.
  • Back to the blind men and the elephant
  • Replication (RB, p. 20) Replication means
    duplicating a study to see if the same evidence
    and conclusions are supported.
  • Extension (replication over a different time
    period)
  • i.e. What did human needs mean 1800-1921, and
    what did is mean 1921-1969 to the National
    Conference on Social Welfare?

4
Ways of Knowing
  • Ann Hartmans Editorial In Social Work
  • Social workers as witnesses
  • Perhaps one might call social work witnessing.
    The idea being that one is in a privileged
    position to witness and help alleviate human
    suffering and harm and therefore has a
    responsibility to testify to society about its
    nature. The goal shouldn't be to withdraw from
    that role but to fully implement it, no? (Dover
    2005)
  • Practice Wisdom

5
Other Ways of Knowing
  • Charles Ragins Elements of Social Research
    (Handout)
  • Research as one way of constructing
    representations of social life
  • Others films, novels, diaries, process
    recordings of your practice and interactions

6
Other Ways of Knowing
  • Tradition (RB, p. 13)
  • Each generation does not have to relearn the
    lessons that created the present body of
    knowledge.
  • Knowledge is the cumulative, and an inherited
    body of information and understanding is the
    jumping-off point for the development of more
    knowledge.
  • In practice tradition may involve conforming to
    an agencys preferred way of doing things.
  • Example of substance abuse treatment.
  • Downside of tradition
  • Erroneous assumptions
  • Overconfidence in veracity of current knowledge
  • Sanction of controversial questions

7
Other Ways of Knowing Continued
  • Authority (RB, p. 13)
  • Considering the reputed expertise of the source
    of information in deciding whether to be guided
    by that information.
  • Knowledge is more likely to be accepted if it
    comes from an authority
  • e.g. scholarly sources such as journals, reliable
    sources, etc.
  • Can help and hinder human inquiry.
  • MD Resistance to Expert knowledge or the cult
    of the expert

8
Other Ways of Knowing Continued
  • Common Sense (RB, p. 14)
  • Pros Pragmatic and can generate scientific
    research questions
  • Cons Risky and insufficient
  • Why not research whether common sense makes
    sense?
  • Popular Media (RB, p. 14)
  • Pros Source of digested research results
  • Only as good as the journalist who did the
    abstracting of results
  • If an independent review of the cited sources
    shows a good source, can be helpful in informing
    practice and clients
  • Cons Source of new but unvalidated results and
    misinterpretation

9
Recognizing Flaws
  • Inaccurate Observation (RB, p. 15) All inquiry
    is based on observation.
  • Occurs when we are too causal in our
    observations, not making deliberate attempts to
    reduce errors.
  • Essential to know what is occurring before we can
    determine why it is occurring.
  • Human Observation vs. Scientific Observation
  • General human observation is unsystematic and
    haphazard
  • Scientific observation is conscious activity and
    thereby reduces error

10
Recognizing the Flaws Continued
  • Overgeneralization (RB, p. 15) the assumption
    that a few similar events are evidence of a
    general pattern
  • occurs when we generalize based on an
    insufficient number of observations
  • PB example of interviewing rioters
  • My research in Detroit in 1967 - If you dont
    overgeneralize, can be a source of valuable
    hypotheses for further research, such as role of
    exempt property in deterioration of cities.
  • Science guards against it with large samples and
    replication (hopefully independent)

11
Recognizing the Flaws Continued
  • Selective Observation (RB, p. 16) - We attend to
    events that correspond to our predictions and
    overlook contradictions.
  • The world is as we see it.
  • The review of peers assists scientist to control
    for this source of error
  • Value of using eco-systems approach to organize
    research findings in a way which guides practice,
    and avoids selective observation
  • Nobody Loves You When Youre Down and Out
    Knowledge of the Psychosocial Consequences of
    Unemployment, 1979 and 2004 (Dover 1979 and
    Dover in progress, see blackboard)

12
Recognizing the Flaws
  • Ex Post Facto Hypothesizing (RB, p. 16)
  • Making new hypothesizes based on one studies
    results
  • Happens when we think up reasons to explain away
    inconsistencies between what we believe and what
    we observe
  • Ok to do as long as we test the new hypothesis,
    otherwise it is just made-up information
  • EXAMPLE Battered womens outreach
  • EXAMPLE Abandonment of the seduction theory
    (Freud and Fliess)

13
Recognizing the Flaws
  • Ego Involvement in Understanding (RB, p. 17)
  • Can create error when we resist accepting
    observations that make us look less desirable
  • Always a danger
  • Partially controlled for in science by peer
    review.
  • Commonly seen in program evaluation research.

14
Recognizing the Flaws Continued
  • Premature Closure of Inquiry (RB, p. 18)
  • Occurs when we rule out certain lines of inquiry
    that might produce findings that we would find
    undesirable
  • Overgeneralization, selective observations,
    made-up information, and defensive uses of
    illogical reasoning.
  • A particular type of treatment that works with
    one client does not mean it will work with all
    clients

15
Illogical Reasoning
  • "the exception that proves the rule
  • "gambler's fallacy
  • a good turn of luck is just around the corner.
  • Related string of good or bad luck seen as a
    real trend
  • Saved by not wearing a seatbelt
  • Key Concept
  • anomalies

16
Illogical Reasoning Continued
  • Straw Person Argument (RB, p. 18)
  • When someone attacks a particular position by
    distorting it in a way that makes it easier to
    attack
  • Ad hominem attack (RB, p. 18)
  • Attack the messenger rather than the message
  • Bandwagon Appeal (RB, p. 18)
  • where a relatively new intervention is touted on
    the basis of its growing popularity

17
Illogical Reasoning Continued
  • Mystification - occurs when attribute things we
    do not understand to supernatural or mystical
    causes.
  • Assertion of the unknowable- A cherished belief
    about practice effectiveness must be true and is
    beyond the ability of researchers to test out.
  • An article of faith in science is that everything
    is potentially knowable

18
To Err is Human
  • Science differs from casual, day-to-day inquiry
    in two ways
  • Science inquiry is a conscious activity
  • we decide what, how, and for how long we will
    observe the object or phenomenon of interest.
  • Scientific inquiry is more careful than our
    causal efforts

19
Objectivity and Subjectivity in Scientific Inquiry
  • Paradigms (RB, p. 19)
  • fundamental model or scheme that organizes our
    view of something
  • Research Traditions (Laudan)

20
Objectivity Subjectivity
  • Acts a frame of reference that help shape our
    observations and understandings
  • Positivist paradigm emphasizes the pursuit of
    objectivity in our quest to observe and
    understand reality
  • Social constructivist emphasizes multiple
    subjective realities and the most impossibility
    of objectivity
  • Postmodernism (an extreme form of
    Constructivism) an objective reality does not
    even exist

21
Key Concepts By Page
  • Direct, personal inquiry 11
  • Scientific method 11
  • Direct experience and observation (how we know
    things, p. 11)
  • Everything is subject to refutation (tentative
    until proven) 12
  • Everything is open to question 12
  • Authority 12
  • Dogma 12
  • Empirical Support (G) 12
  • Tradition 13
  • Common Sense 14

22
Key Concepts By Page
  • Inaccurate observation 15
  • Overgeneralization 15
  • Replication of inquiry (G) 16
  • Selective observation 16
  • Ego involvement in understanding 17
  • Ex post facto hypothesizing 17
  • Ad Hominem Attack
  • Bandwagon effect or appeal 18
  • Straw person argument 18
  • Illogical reasoning 18
  • Premature closure of inquiry 18

23
Key Concepts By Page
  • Positivist paradigm (G) 19
  • Postmodernism (G) 19
  • Positivism (G) 19
  • Social constructivist paradigm (G) 19
  • Modernism 19
  • Frame of reference (paradigm) 19
  • All knowledge is provisional (tentative until
    proven beyond reasonable doubt)
  • Hypothesis (G) 323

24
Key Concepts ABC
  • Ad Hominem Attack
  • All knowledge is considered provisional
    (tentative until proven beyond reasonable doubt)
  • Authority 12
  • Bandwagon effect or appeal 18
  • Common sense 14
  • Direct experience and observation (how we know
    things, p. 11)
  • Direct, personal inquiry 11
  • Dogma 12
  • Ego involvement in understanding 17
  • Empirical Support (G) 12
  • Everything subject to refutation 12

25
Key Concepts ABC
  • Everything is open to question 12
  • Ex post facto hypothesizing 17
  • Frame of reference (paradigm) 19
  • Hypothesis (G)
  • Illogical reasoning 18
  • Inaccurate observation 15
  • Modernism 19
  • Overgeneralization 15
  • Positivism (G) 19
  • Positivist paradigm (G) 19

26
Key Concepts ABC
  • Postmodernism (G) 19
  • Premature closure of inquiry 18
  • Provisional knowledge
  • Replication of inquiry (G) 16
  • Scientific method 11
  • Selective observation 16
  • Social constructivist paradigm (G) 19
  • Straw person argument 18
  • Subject to refutation
  • Tradition 13

27
Key Points Ch. 2
  • 1. Remember what Ann Hartman said about many ways
    of knowing? And how Charles Ragin pointed out
    that researching social life is much like other
    forms of inquiry such as journalism? Our
    attempts to learn about the world we live in come
    from all sources, including direct experience,
    tradition, authority, and direct, personal
    inquiry. But research is a special form of
    learning about the world. This is not to say
    that science offers total protection against the
    errors that nonscientists commit in casual,
    day-to-day inquiry, it doesnt. But we try.

28
Key Points Ch. 2
  • 2. Often, social workers tend to view
    psychiatrists and pschologists or social workers
    who have doctorates as authorities, when for all
    you know that MSW with a clinical license and his
    doctorate did a dissertation on property tax
    valuations in Ohios urban areas, so he is no
    more an authority on clinical social work than
    any other MSW with 10 years of post-MSW
    experience working with individuals. Lets not
    set each other up as an authority just based upon
    degrees. When a social worker makes a practice
    decision based upon the advice of someone just
    because they have a doctorate or some other
    credential, they are basing that decision not on
    evidence but on authority.

29
Key Points Ch. 2
  • 3. But lets say that that person with a
    doctorate just authored a small study of a
    particular intervention and it wasnt based on a
    random sample in any case. Wouldnt there be a
    danger of overgeneralization? Yes. In that
    case, what would be one way to try to gather
    further data? Well, you wouldnt want to
    replicate the study, since it wasnt based on a
    random sample anyway, and perhaps there wasnt a
    control group that received a standard
    intervention to which it could be compared. But
    lets say it was a well-designed study, but the
    sample was small. One way to guard against
    overgeneralization would be to do a replication
    of this study with another random sample from the
    same or similar population.

30
Key Points Ch. 2
  • 4. It is important not to prematurely close
    inquiry, thinking you already know enough.
    Thats a good lesson for our research in this
    class on SWK 100 students and the time schedules
    of social work majors and intents. Replication
    of a study is often a good idea, and there is
    nothing wrong with not exactly duplicating the
    study, if flaws were found. Improve by all
    means, even if it means items arent identical
    from year to year. After all, the sample has
    changed as well, and changes in samples are
    likely to affect answers more than changes in
    questions! Dont assume an intervention is a
    success if there is a risk that there was a
    premature closure of inquiry. For instance, in
    last years SWK 100 study, the ones studied were
    the ones who showed up for class, but there were
    a lot of absences! Anyway we could solve that
    problem? A blackboard survey by any chance?

31
  • 5. One of the worst errors in is to ignore events
    that don't correspond with a previously observed
    pattern of events is. That is called selective
    observation. Its important not to try to thing
    that concepts in the text mean what they might
    mean in everyday usage. For instance, selective
    observation doesnt mean something like choosing
    the wrong sample or picking which items to pay
    attention to. Nor does it mean the same thing as
    selection bias, covered in chapter 16. It means
    what it says it means in chapter 2, it is a
    common, human thing to do. You are used to
    seeing a pattern of events. You see something
    new and different that might contradict what you
    thought, and you disregard it! That is what
    selective observation means in this context. And
    the best antidote to it is using a clear research
    design, consulting with colleagues about the
    previous patterns and the new observations
    (rather than ignoring them), and planning
    research which studies things over time and
    across a sufficient number of observations that
    you can ascertain whether a newly observed
    finding is truly an exception to the rule or
    evidence that your rule needs to be rethought!

32
  • 6. Another hard to understand word is ex post
    facto hypothesizing. Unless you studied a lot
    of Latin or had a Latin dictionary handy, you
    wouldnt know that ex post facto means after
    the fact. Ex post facto hypothesizing is fine
    if it means you did an inductive study, the kind
    where you start without any clear hypotheses and
    collect data and then afterwards try to theorize
    about what you saw. Thats especially ok if you
    plan to do more research later. It really is
    legitimate to engage in ex post facto
    hypothesizing if doing so requires additional
    research.

33
Key Points
  • 7. But if your ex post facto hypothesizing
    amounts to explaining away your inability to
    confirm your initial hypothesis, thats a source
    of common misinterpretation of findings. Yes
    its illogical, but there are lots of kinds of
    illogical reasoning, this after the fact
    hypothesizing, a specific kind of flaw in
    scientific reasoning.

34
Key Points
  • 8. Ok, weve talked about Latin, now what about
    your typical everyday language. For instance,
    common sense. Im sure you will realize that the
    scientific method doesnt tend to put much store
    in common sense. So even if you might think
    common sense is a good thing in general, on the
    average research test, common sense may not get
    you very far. Knowing Latin, maybe. Common
    sense, problem know. But what about knowing what
    words like straw person means? Priceless. Me,
    Im always clueless and have to look it up, even
    though Ive been the victim time and time again
    of straw person attacks. You say A, someone says
    you said B and since B makes no sense whatsoever,
    you make no sense whatsoever. So what a straw
    person argument does is distort the position of
    the person you are trying to attack.

35
Key Points
  • 9. Now lets move from Latin to Philosophy! It
    is the philosophy of science and social science
    which has developed these concepts such as
    paradigm. A paradigm is simply a frame of
    reference shared by a number of people within a
    field or subfield. Another way of thinking about
    a paradigm is that it is a fundamental model or
    scheme that organizes our view of something.

36
Key Points
  • 10. One paradigm is the positivist paradigm, and
    you will hear a lot about how this paradigm
    strongly emphasizes the pursuit of objectivity.
    You will hear that it believes in maximizing
    precision and objectivity in testing whether an
    intervention reduces an undesirable behavior.
    The positivist paradigm embraces rather than
    rejects the pursuit of objectivity in our quest
    to observe and understand reality.

37
Key Points
  • 11. Whereas you will hear that the social
    constructivist paradigm does, and for the
    purposes of this course and the quiz, that is
    true, because the social constructivist paradigm
    stresses that people have multiple subjective
    realities. But what if it is objectively true
    that people have such multiple senses of reality,
    cant we study those perceptions objectively?
    Philosophically, the issue is whether or not we
    as scientists believe that there is some
    objective reality. Postmodernism is a point of
    view which actually does believe that there are
    only multiple subjective realities, and questions
    the existence of an objective external reality.
    So it goes beyond mere social constructionism,
    which although it is referred to as a paradigm by
    the authors is really in my opinion a theoretical
    point of view held by people from any number of
    epistemological perspectives. Modernism and
    postmodernism are more than pardigms, they are
    philosophies of science about how we understand
    the world around us, they are epistemologies.

38
  • 12. In my paper, Teaching Yourself to Write A
    Thesis Several Easy Steps, which Ive posted on
    the website, I cite Michael Mann as saying that
    it matters little whether the sociologist
    advocates positivism, interpretivism or realism
    or some other epistemological point of view,
    since in reality the sociologist operates as if
    they could apprehend and describe reality through
    the process of operationalization, and as if they
    could rely on absolute standards of scientific
    proof for their results to be evaluated (Mann,
    1981 548, emphasis in the original). (Not on
    quiz)

39
Key Points
  • 13. A word on overgeneralization The bottom line
    is that it refers to drawing conclusions about an
    entire population from a sample of that
    population which wasnt representative. Or, it
    refers to drawing conclusions about population B,
    when the research was on population A. Thats not
    selective observation! Thats overgeneralization.
    Yes, the conclusions draw from
    overgeneralization may be inaccurate, but they
    are not inherently inaccurate. In fact, they may
    not be inaccurate at all! Population B may in
    fact be like Population A. But you dont know
    that because you overgeneralized based on the
    study available.

40
  • 14. You are sure to be asked about ego
    involvement. Basically thats a form of bias in
    which you lose your ability to evaluate whether
    research is effective because you have so much
    ego involvement in the results. I mean lets say
    lets say you and your colleagues use nothing but
    ACT for treating cancer, despite the fact that
    ECT is used in Canada and Europe because of the
    cardiotoxicity of the A drug and because since it
    took so long to get E approved in the USA it
    costs 22 times as much here in the states. You
    see a study from France, one from Italy, and one
    from the US (but with the US one done by a doctor
    with consultant ties to the drug coming making
    E.) You put down the studies about ECT because
    it is not on the list of the approved regimens at
    the top 20 research universities, as approved by
    the board on which you sit! You call ECT an
    unnecessary treatment no more effective or less
    toxic than ACT and you call yet another new
    cancer treatment used at a top medical school not
    in your consortium an outlaw treatment. Thats
    a great example of ego involvement in
    evaluating research studies. It goes on all the
    time, and is done even by leading clinicians.
    Ego involvement is when you are biased against
    something because it threatens your authority,
    the tradition in which you work, or threatens
    your own work.

41
Key Points
  • 15. Now that doesnt mean you should disregard
    agency traditions. The ethics say you should
    respect your colleagues findings, but that
    doesnt mean you should agree with them. It also
    doesnt mean you should disregard authority,
    since the ethics discuss the appropriate use of
    consultation and stress our accountability (but
    note they dont say as much about supervision as
    you might think!). Think critically, and realize
    that tradition and authority arent always what
    they are cut out to be, but you have an
    obligation to seek out alternative sources of
    knowledge or research findings that might
    challenge that authority or tradition.

42
Key Points
  • 16. After all, all existing knoweldge, even that
    based on authority or tradition should be
  • Provisional (tentative until proven true)
  • Ssubject to refutation
  • Supported by objective observations
  • Supported by systematic and comprehensive
    observations
  • Supported by a large and diverse sample of
    observations
  • Supported by observations gathered in ways that
    seek to reduce the influence of researcher biases
  • It is not enough that it is supported by the
    teaching of a few authoritative scientists.
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