The British Academy has long believed that the quantitative skills taught in the social sciences (other than economics and psychology) in the UK are far too basic.
To try and help put this right, it commissioned a team from the University of Edinburgh to look at what is happening at 16 leading international universities. The results have now been published as .
The central conclusions are stark.
âUndergraduate social science students in many universities in Europe, North America and Australasia reach much higher levels of achievement in quantitative skills than even their best UK counterparts,â argue the authors of the report.
This is most obviously because âtheir degree programmes devote a much larger share of curriculum time to the study of methodsâ, but a substantial contributory issue is the fact that âuniversity teaching staff [in other countries] are much more likely to have advanced quantitative skills than in the UKâ.
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The case studies corroborate this general picture.
Motivated by the fact that âthe universe of data, big and otherwise, is growing explosivelyâ, the University of Auckland, for example, offers âa non-mathematical, conceptual introduction to statistics, and particularly data analysisâ to about 4,500 students a year, reaching about two-thirds of the overall undergraduate intake.
First-year students of sociology and politics at the University of Mannheim âstudy a range of statistical methods, up to linear and logistic regression, in generic lecture classesâ, so that when they embark on more substantive courses they âwould be surprised to be asked to read material that did not rely to some extent on the application of advanced statistical methodsâ.
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At Yale University, students undertaking a BA in sociology are required to take two methods classes, including âan introductory overview of research design, including the ethical implications of doing social research, sampling and the measurement and interpretation of dataâ.
In Britain, by contrast, says Measuring Up, social science âstudents not only [generally] arrive at university with little exposure to statistics or quantitative methods, but typically are given little encouragement, opportunity or requirement to develop these skills in their undergraduate programmesâ.
Given that âthe range of high-quality quantitative [data] available to social scientists is increasing exponentiallyâ, there are âpractical economic reasonsâ why this is worrying. Yet since many students find quantitative skills modules difficult or âonly come to appreciate their value in the graduate labour market later onâ, there is also a danger that student satisfaction surveys and the teaching excellence framework may act as a disincentive to their development.
But although the authors believe that âUK universities set their expectations far too lowâ, the case histories provide crucial lessons about the need for âsuitably qualified staff, good teaching and adequate curriculum timeâ.
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In doing so, they could draw on a number of valuable assets and precedents, such as âthe world-class data infrastructure available in the UK through the UK Data Serviceâ; a âwealth of teaching support resourcesâ developed, for example, under the Economic and Social Research Councilâs Quantitative Methods Initiative; and the way that the country has âalready successfully tackle[d] the challenges of studentsâ math competence or anxiety around number work in the STEM subjectsâ.
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