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SOCI40345: Research in Social Work

It is possible that changes to modules or programmes might need to be made during the academic year, in response to the impact of Covid-19 and/or any further changes in public health advice.

Type Tied
Level 4
Credits 45
Availability Available in 2024/2025
Module Cap
Location Durham
Department Sociology

Prerequisites

Corequisites

Excluded Combinations of Modules

  • None

Aims

  • to develop students' critical understanding of and skills in the main approaches and methods of social research, with particular reference to the use of research in social welfare practice settings within an ethical framework.

Content

  • the nature of practitioner research - complexities and challenges;
  • the uses of research in social welfare policy and practice;
  • approaches to social research - ontological and epistemological issues;
  • ethical issues in research;
  • developing research questions;
  • literature reviewing;
  • sampling;
  • methods of data collection;
  • methods of data analysis;
  • interpretation and validation;
  • writing up research.

Learning Outcomes

Subject-specific Knowledge:

  • a critical understanding of how research may be used to inform social welfare policy and practice;
  • a critical understanding of the key debates about the nature of 'practitioner research' and the complexities and challenges facing practitioners undertaking research;
  • an ability to identify an appropriate field of inquiry suitable for a small-scale research or evaluation project;
  • an ability to design an independent piece of research;
  • knowledge of a range of research methodologies and methods and an ability to review, evaluate and apply these appropriately and justify the choices made;
  • an appreciation of the ethical issues that may arise during the research process and the commitment and skills to apply appropriate principles of ethical conduct in practice including; the principles of information governance and awareness of the safe and effective use of health and social care information.

Subject-specific Skills:

  • an ability to relate research findings to policy and practice in a specialist field of study;
  • an ability to report findings effectively, draw conclusions based on research and locate these in the context of other research and literature;

Key Skills:

  • skills in collection, analysis and presentation of data;
  • an ability to work autonomously, taking a high level of responsibility for their work.

Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to the learning outcomes of the module

  • During periods of online teaching, for asynchronous lectures in particular, planned lecture hours may include activities that would normally have taken place within the lecture itself had it been taught face-to-face in a lecture room, and/or those necessary to adapt the teaching and learning materials effectively to online learning.
  • Teaching and learning in lectures and associated reading will utilise input from the tutor, student debate and discussion to contribute to all the learning outcomes, in particular, subject-specific knowledge.
  • Individual tutorials will focus attention on the individual student's project, to ensure learning outcomes related to subject-specific and key skills are met satisfactorily.
  • Knowledge, understanding and skills will be assessed through:
  • an outline research proposal (formative assessment) - feedback will be given by the dissertation tutor to enable students to make improvements.
  • a full research design - this tests out students' abilities to formulate questions and plan a piece of research, specifying methodology, methods, analysis, ethical issues.
  • a research project report - requires students to demonstrate all the learning outcomes at both a theoretical and practical level.
  • Students are offered individual written feedback on their formative and summative assignments and can seek additional one-to-one feedback in staff office hours if they require this.

Teaching Methods and Learning Hours

ActivityNumberFrequencyDurationTotalMonitored
Lectures10Weekly, term 12 hours20Yes
Tutorials41 x 2 months14Yes
Seminars 
PracticalsYes
FieldworkAs appropriate100Yes
Preparation & Reading326 
Total:450 

Summative Assessment

Component: AssessmentComponent Weighting: 100%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Research Proposal1,50020Yes
Research Report10,00080Yes

Formative Assessment

An outline research proposal.

More information

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