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Knowledge and Inquiry · JC 1

Active learning ideas

Methodology in the Social Sciences

Logic is the 'grammar' of inquiry. This topic distinguishes between deductive reasoning (where the conclusion *must* follow from the premises) and inductive reasoning (where the conclusion is *likely* based on evidence). Students learn to evaluate arguments not just by whether they agree with them, but by their logical structure: validity, soundness, and strength.

MOE Syllabus OutcomesMOE H2 KI Syllabus LO 7.1MOE H2 KI Syllabus LO 7.2
20–50 minPairs → Whole Class3 activities

Activity 01

Stations Rotation50 min · Small Groups

Stations Rotation: The Fallacy Detective

Stations feature advertisements, political speeches, and social media posts. Students must identify the logical fallacies (e.g., Ad Hominem, Straw Man) and rewrite the argument to be logically sound.

How do social sciences differ from natural sciences in their methodology?
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Activity 02

Inquiry Circle40 min · Small Groups

Inquiry Circle: Building the Perfect Syllogism

Groups are given a 'conclusion' and must work backward to create a valid and sound deductive argument. They then present it, and other groups must try to 'break' it by finding a flaw in the premises.

What are the limitations of quantitative data in understanding human behavior?
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Activity 03

Think-Pair-Share20 min · Pairs

Think-Pair-Share: Deduction vs. Induction

Students are given five arguments and must categorize them as deductive or inductive. They share their reasoning with a partner, focusing on whether the conclusion is 'guaranteed' or just 'probable.'

How do researchers account for human agency?
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A few notes on teaching this unit


Watch Out for These Misconceptions

  • A 'valid' argument is the same as a 'true' argument.

    Validity only refers to the *structure* (if the premises were true, the conclusion would follow). An argument can be valid but have false premises. Using 'silly' valid arguments (e.g., 'All cats are aliens...') helps students see this distinction.

  • Inductive arguments are 'weak' because they aren't certain.

    Most of our knowledge (including science) is inductive. It's not 'weak'; it's 'probabilistic.' Peer-reviewing scientific claims helps students appreciate the strength of well-supported induction.


Methods used in this brief