Welcome to Political Science Research Methods
Section 1.1: Welcome
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Political science welcomes all students into a diverse scholarly community that borrows from many disciplines to understand politics and solve public problems, and this open textbook empowers the next generation to shape the field through accessible research methods education.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What political science is: a scholarly community of students, teachers, researchers, and practitioners studying who gets what, when, where, how, and why—not just behaviors and institutions.
- Political science as a "borrowing" discipline: it uses knowledge from history, economics, psychology, sociology, statistics, anthropology, computer science, mathematics, cognitive science, and biology while maintaining its own core tenets.
- Why this textbook matters now: students face food/housing insecurity, inequality, right-wing populist movements, and Big Data disruption—research methods training empowers them to address these challenges.
- Common confusion: political science vs other fields—political science differentiated itself from history and economics in its early years but still borrows from them and other disciplines.
- Open invitation: this is an Open Education Resource (OER) with a Creative Commons CC-BY-NC license, so students and faculty can contribute improvements and adaptations.
🌍 The Political Science Community
🌍 Who belongs
Political science: the scientific study of who gets what, when, where, how, and why.
- It is more than the study of political behaviors, processes, and institutions.
- It is a scholarly community of students, teachers, researchers, and practitioners who care about generating, disseminating, and applying knowledge.
- The community is increasingly diverse and resides all over the planet.
- You are warmly welcomed to learn about and join this community.
📜 A relatively young discipline
- The American Political Science Association (APSA) was established in 1903 (turn of the last century).
- Over the last 116 years, the discipline has dramatically evolved.
- Early efforts focused on:
- Inspiring a democratically minded public
- Pioneering innovations in political institutions and processes
- In its formative years, political science sought to differentiate itself from history and economics.
🔄 Political Science as a "Borrowing" Discipline
🔄 What "borrowing" means
A "borrowing" discipline: one that has core tenets, theories, and ways of analyzing the political world, but also utilizes and leverages knowledge from a range of other fields.
- Political science borrows from:
- History, economics, psychology, sociology, statistics
- Anthropology, computer science, mathematics, cognitive science
- Even biology
- Borrowing is bidirectional: other fields can borrow from political science as well.
- Example: political economics compares market-based systems with government-run systems.
🎓 Why borrowing matters for students
- Students with diverse intellectual interests can explore them through the borrowing framework.
- Don't confuse: "borrowing" does not mean political science lacks its own identity—it has core tenets and theories, but enriches them with insights from other fields.
📖 About This Textbook
📖 Purpose and audience
This book, Introduction to Political Science Research Methods (IPSRM), is an Open Education Resource (OER) written by community college faculty and supported by the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges (ASCCC).
Three-fold purpose:
- Introduce college students to research methods of political science
- Provide a no-cost textbook for adoption by faculty and use by students
- Invite faculty and students to contribute to the improvement of the book
🌟 Why now
The textbook comes at an important time in the discipline's history:
- Advanced democracies are strained by right-wing populist movements promoting austerity
- A rise in inequality manifests in students struggling with food and housing insecurity
- A Big Data revolution is upending industries and displacing workers
Implication: There is a clear need for all political science students to have access to learning about research methods to creatively grapple with trends and challenges facing societies and governments.
🔓 Open and collaborative
- Licensed under Creative Commons with Attribution and Non-Commercial (CC-BY-NC)
- You can expand this textbook and make it your own
- Contributions welcomed for:
- Grammatical errors
- Clarifications needed in chapter sections
- Underrepresented communities or voices in examples
- Missing topics
🎯 The Dual Task of Faculty and the Future of Students
🎯 Faculty's dual task
Faculty (teachers and researchers) have two responsibilities:
- Welcoming students to the discipline
- Imparting knowledge of political behaviors, processes, and institutions to create a publicly spirited, scholarly minded, and civically engaged public
🔥 The spark
- Most students take only one course in political science (to fulfill a social science or national government requirement)
- A fraction will continue their study because something sparked their interest
- This spark, the authors hope, turns into a gleaming shine that motivates students to shape political institutions and processes at subnational, national, and global levels
🌱 Students as the future
- Students are the future of any academic discipline and scholarly community
- How students are educated now will shape the discipline for generations to come
- Empowering current students and future researchers with research methods tools helps them address societal challenges