- Oct 2022
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Local file Local file
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here are several ways I havefound useful to invite the sociological imagination:
C. Wright Mills delineates a rough definition of "sociological imagination" which could be thought of as a framework within tools for thought: 1. Combinatorial creativity<br /> 2. Diffuse thinking, flâneur<br /> 3. Changing perspective (how would x see this?) Writing dialogues is a useful method to accomplish this. (He doesn't state it, but acting as a devil's advocate is a useful technique here as well.)<br /> 4. Collecting and lay out all the multiple viewpoints and arguments on a topic. (This might presume the method of devil's advocate I mentioned above 😀)<br /> 5. Play and exploration with words and terms<br /> 6. Watching levels of generality and breaking things down into smaller constituent parts or building blocks. (This also might benefit of abstracting ideas from one space to another.)<br /> 7. Categorization or casting ideas into types 8. Cross-tabulating and creation of charts, tables, and diagrams or other visualizations 9. Comparative cases and examples - finding examples of an idea in other contexts and time settings for comparison and contrast 10. Extreme types and opposites (or polar types) - coming up with the most extreme examples of comparative cases or opposites of one's idea. (cross reference: Compass Points https://hypothes.is/a/Di4hzvftEeyY9EOsxaOg7w and thinking routines). This includes creating dimensions of study on an object - what axes define it? What indices can one find data or statistics on? 11. Create historical depth - examples may be limited in number, so what might exist in the historical record to provide depth.
Tags
- The Sociological Imagination
- categorization
- compass points
- building blocks
- definitions
- combinatorial creativity
- sociological imagination
- historical context
- abstraction
- flâneur
- diffuse thinking
- thinking routines
- devil's advocate
- dimensions
- terms
- opposites
- trend analysis
- dialogues
- generalization
- browsing
- information visualization
- historical perspective
- taxonomies
Annotators
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- Apr 2022
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www.ons.gov.uk www.ons.gov.uk
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Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey, UK: 29 October 2021, Office for National Statistics
Tags
- cases
- is:webpage
- graph
- lang:en
- COVID-19
- analysis
- Office for National Statistics
- percentage
- testing
- positive
- UK
- trend
- statistics
- report
- variant
- vaccine
Annotators
URL
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- Jul 2021
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twitter.com twitter.com
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Dvir Aran. (2021, July 27). You’ve probably seen reports from Israel on low vaccine effectiveness in this wave. Is it because of Delta? Waning immunity? We think the reason is mostly that we got the denominator wrong. Https://t.co/yloh5Vo9Xi [Tweet]. @dvir_a. https://twitter.com/dvir_a/status/1420059124700700677
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- May 2020
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wintoncentre.maths.cam.ac.uk wintoncentre.maths.cam.ac.uk
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Winton Centre for Risk and Evidence Communication
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Du, H., Yang, J., King, R. B., Yang, L., & Chi, P. (2020). COVID-19 Increases Online Emotional and Health-Related Searches [Preprint]. PsyArXiv. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/5gskw
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- Apr 2020
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Wang, T., Chen, X., Zhang, Q., & Jin, X. (2020, April 26). Use of Internet data to track Chinese behavior and interest in COVID-19. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/j6m8q
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