Political Science 51: Scientific Studies of
Politics Tuesday and Thursday 8:00-9:50 in Olson 6.
- Course Description: The course provides an
introduction to the theory and method of contemporary
political analysis. Emphasis on alternative analytical
frameworks, concepts, variables, measurement, and
quantitative analysis of political data. This course is
fundamentally about how to conduct research in political
science. This process includes: how to formulate research
questions and subsequent hypotheses, how to design a
research plan, determining what methodologies are
appropriate, and performing the specified analysis. This is
not a course that is restricted to purely quantitative or
qualitative approaches, rather the focus is on determining
appropriate methodologies given specific research areas of
interest.
- Course Requirements:
- Regular Attendance, Reading Prior to Class, Active
Class Participation.
Attendance is essential.
While this component is not graded, experience shows that
it is highly correlated with exam performance. Some
lecture topics will be in addition to material in the
texts, and some material in the texts will be omitted from
the course. All students are expected do the readings in
advance of the class, be prepared to discuss the material,
and participate in the classroom exercises. Questions that
one should think about while reading are: what are the
main points, how does this help me understand the research
process in political science, what could be explained
better, and how do the readings fit together.
Starting the second week of the semester we will
be reading primary source articles (see below). All of the
articles in the reading are available to you online (using
a UCD machine) at: http://www.jstor.org/
- Annotated Bibliography: 10%.
Due Thursday,
February 10 (week 6). This is a bibliographic listing of
(at least 20) books and articles in an area of interest to
you. The annotations should be about 3-4 sentences only,
briefly summarizing the main point in the work. You will
then use this to create the literature review (see below).
- Literature Review: 20%.
Due Tuesday, March 8
(week 10) . This is a literature of some political science
topic of your choosing. The literature review must be
concise, correct, and thorough. You need to include both
the seminal works in your area as well as recent
contributions of note. WARNING: this assignment requires
you to visit the library. Your review needs to be 10-15
pages, double-spaced, 1 inch margins, 12 point font. Here
is an example.
- Exam 1: 35%.
On Thursday, February 3 we will
have the first in-class exam concerning the readings up
until that point. The format will be short answer
questions.
- Exam 2: 35%.
On Thursday, March 10 we will
have the second (non-cumulative) in-class exam concerning
the readings up until that point. The format will be short
answer questions.
- General Policies:
- All exams must be taken and assignments turned in at
the date and time prescribed in the syllabus unless
authorized by the instructor in advance. The only
exceptions are personal or medical emergencies, in which
case the student must provide written documentation signed
by a doctor, parent, or university official. Absolutely
no exceptions, whatsoever. My experience is that a lot
of grandparents expire during weeks in which exams are
given or papers are due. In fact, most university faculty
have observed this unusual phenomenon, which apparently
has no basis in demographics (I've checked). Should this
actually be the case, I require ironclad proof with a copy
to Jeri Kemp.
- Academic dishonesty in any form will not be tolerated.
See the UC Davis Code of
Academic Conduct.
- We will start right on time. See file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/levente/Local%20Settings/Temporary%20Internet%20Files/Content.IE5/GBABUHSH/www.time.gov
for details.
- Accommodations for students with disabilities.
Students requesting classroom accommodation must first
register with the Dean of Students Office. The Dean of
Students Office will provide documentation to the student
who must then provide this documentation to the Instructor
when requesting accommodation.
- Ringing cell-phones count 10% against class
grade.
- Office Hours: Monday 8:00-11:00, and by
appointment.
- Teaching Assistant: TBA .
- Text:
- Title: Political Science Conduct of Inquiry, Fifth
Edition
Authors: Johnson and Reynolds
Publisher: CQ Press ISBN: 1568028741 Required.
- Course Content:
- WEEK 1 (January 6): Introduction, Vocabulary,
Basics. The Science of Political Science.
Background Reading: Johnson and
Reynolds: Chapters 1-2.
- WEEK 2 (January 11, 13): Causation and Causal
Inference.
Background Reading: Johnson and
Reynolds: Chapter 3. Article Reading: James
E. Campbell. "Candidates: A Causal Analysis."
American Journal of Political Science, Vol. 27, No. 2,
May 1983, p.284-293. Terence P. Thornberry, R. L.
Christenson. "Unemployment and Criminal Involvement:
An Investigation of Reciprocal Causal Structures."
American Sociological Review, Vol. 49, No. 3, June 1984,
p.398-411.
- WEEK 3 (January 18, 20): Describing Political
Phenomenon and Constructing a Literature Review.
Background Reading: Johnson and
Reynolds: Chapter 5. Article Reading: Kjell
Goldmann. "East-West Tension in Europe, 1946-1970: A
Conceptual Analysis and a Quantitative Description (in
Research Notes)." World Politics, Vol. 26, No. 1,
October 1973, p.106-125. Barbara J. Nelson.
"The Role of Sex and Gender in Comparative Political
Analysis: Individuals, Institutions, and Regimes (in
Book Review Essay)" American Political Science Review,
Vol. 86, No. 2, June 1992, p.491-495.
- WEEK 4 (January 25, 27): Research Design,
Conceptualization, Measurement.
Background Reading: Johnson and
Reynolds: Chapters 4, 6. Article Reading:
Richard G. Niemi, Stephen C. Craig, and Franco
Mattei. "Measuring Internal Political Efficacy in
the 1988 National Election Study." American Political
Science Review, December 1991,
p.1407-1413.
- WEEK 5 (February 1, 3): Comparative
Methodology.
Article Reading: Arend
Lijphart. "Comparative Politics and the Comparative
Method." American Political Science Review, September
1971, 682-693. Exam 1 on
Thursday.
- WEEK 6 (February 8, 10): Determining What
Phenomenon to Observe, Sampling, Selection.
Background Reading: Johnson and
Reynolds: Chapters 7, 9. Article Reading:
Richard Fenno. "U.S. House Members in Their
Constituencies: An Exploration." American Political
Science Review, September 1977, p.883-917. Political
Science, November 1982, p.834-855. Charles R.
Pruitt; James Q. Wilson. "A Longitudinal Study of
the Effect of Race on Sentencing." Law & Society
Review, Vol. 17, No. 4. (1983), pp. 613-636.
Annotated Bibliography Due Thursday.
- WEEK 7 (February 15, 17): Collecting and Organizing
Observations, Document and Archive Analysis.
Background Reading: Johnson and
Reynolds: Chapters 8. Article Reading: John
Seidler. "On Using Informants: A Technique for
Collecting Quantitative Data and Controlling Measurement
Error in Organization Analysis." American Sociological
Review, Vol. 39, No. 6, December 1974,
p.816-831. David M. Barrett "Doing "Tuesday
Lunch" at Lyndon Johnson's White House: New Archival
Evidence on Vietnam Decisionmaking." PS: Political
Science and Politics, Vol. 24, No. 4. 1991, p.676-679.
- WEEK 8 (February 22, 24): Hypothesis Testing.
Background Reading: Handout.
Article Reading: Gabriel A. Almond and
Stephen J. Genco. "Clouds, Clocksand and the Study
of Politics." World Politics, July 1977,
p.489-582. Hypothesis Testing Group Exercise
Thursday.
- WEEK 9 (March 1, 3): Survey Research
Principles.
Background Reading: Johnson and
Reynolds: Chapter 10. Article Reading:
Martin R. Frankel, Lester R. Frankel. "Fifty
Years of Survey Sampling in the United States." Public
Opinion Quarterly, Vol. 51, part 2: Supplement: 50th
Anniversary Issue. (1987), p.S127-S138. Jim
Hanson. "On How to Live with Survey Research (in
Counterpoint)" Contemporary Sociology, Vol. 8, No. 5,
September 1979, p.677-679.
- WEEK 10 (March 8, 10): Formal Models of
Politics
Article Reading: Morris Fiorina.
"Formal Models of Political Science." American
Journal of Political Science, February 1975,
p.133-159. John H. Aldrich. "Rational Choice
and Turnout." American Journal of Political Science,
Vol. 37, No. 1. (Feb., 1993), p. 246-278.
- WEEK 11 (March 15): Last Week of Classes
Exam 2 on Tuesday . Literature Review Due Tuesday (same
day). NO EXCEPTIONS.
|