In 2012, in a bid to improve the quantitative methods training of social science students in the UK, the £19.5 million Q-Step project was launched. This investment demonstrated a significant commitment to changing how we train social science students in quantitative research methods in the UK. The project has involved eighteen higher education institutions exploring and trialling potential ways of engaging social science students with quantitative approaches. This paper reflects on the activities of one Q-Step centre based in the School of Social Sciences at Cardiff University. As well as describing some of the pedagogic changes that have been implemented, the paper draws on data to begin to evaluate the success of new approaches. Specifica...
British sociology has been characterised as suffering from a ‘quantitative deficit’ originating from...
This paper considers the rationale for, design and outputs of a project, based at the University of ...
Social science students fear and dread statistics; they avoid it whenever possible. This finding sha...
In 2012, in a bid to improve the quantitative methods training of social science students in the UK,...
In 2012, in a bid to improve the quantitative methods training of social science students in the UK,...
In British social science degree programmes, methods courses have a bad press, and statistics course...
Various initiatives have been launched to encourage sociology students studying in the UK to engage ...
In a period of high profile national concern about the low level of quantitative skills in the UK so...
In the UK the 2010 Royal Statistical Society campaign - getstats - and the Economic and Social Resea...
Research methods teaching in the UK may have many small challenges, but the really big one is how ca...
This article provides an outline of the conception and implementation to date of Q-Step, a national ...
In 2013 at The Campaign for Social Science event in the UK, David Willetts, Minister for Higher Edu...
This paper reports on a quasi-experiment in which quantitative methods (QM) are embedded within a su...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>This project investigates how quantitative methods (...
This paper outlines recent developments in quantitative methods teaching in the UK and discusses how...
British sociology has been characterised as suffering from a ‘quantitative deficit’ originating from...
This paper considers the rationale for, design and outputs of a project, based at the University of ...
Social science students fear and dread statistics; they avoid it whenever possible. This finding sha...
In 2012, in a bid to improve the quantitative methods training of social science students in the UK,...
In 2012, in a bid to improve the quantitative methods training of social science students in the UK,...
In British social science degree programmes, methods courses have a bad press, and statistics course...
Various initiatives have been launched to encourage sociology students studying in the UK to engage ...
In a period of high profile national concern about the low level of quantitative skills in the UK so...
In the UK the 2010 Royal Statistical Society campaign - getstats - and the Economic and Social Resea...
Research methods teaching in the UK may have many small challenges, but the really big one is how ca...
This article provides an outline of the conception and implementation to date of Q-Step, a national ...
In 2013 at The Campaign for Social Science event in the UK, David Willetts, Minister for Higher Edu...
This paper reports on a quasi-experiment in which quantitative methods (QM) are embedded within a su...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>This project investigates how quantitative methods (...
This paper outlines recent developments in quantitative methods teaching in the UK and discusses how...
British sociology has been characterised as suffering from a ‘quantitative deficit’ originating from...
This paper considers the rationale for, design and outputs of a project, based at the University of ...
Social science students fear and dread statistics; they avoid it whenever possible. This finding sha...