01659cam a2200241 4500001000500000005001700005008003900022010001700061020001500078020002300093082001500116100002500131245011300156260003900269300003400308504005100342505057400393520034200967650003401309650002801343700002401371700002201395746220181127183704.0030725s2004 caua b 001 0 eng a 2003016653 a0761926666 a0761926674 (paper)00a300/.12221 aShoemaker, Pamela J.10aHow to build social science theories /cPamela J. Shoemaker, James William Tankard, Jr., Dominic L. Lasorsa. aThousand Oaks, CA :bSage,cc2004. axvi, 222 p. :bill. ;c24 cm. aIncludes bibliographical references and index. aPrefaceForeword - Jerald Hage1. Introduction: The Nature of Science2. Theoretical Concepts: The Building Blocks of Theory3. Theoretical Statements Relating Two Variables4. Theoretical and Operational Linkages5. Theoretical Statements Relating Three Variables6. Theoretical Statements Relating Four or More Variables7. Theoretical Models8. Creativity and Theory Building9. Using and Evaluating TheoryAppendix A: Guidelines for Preparing Tables and FiguresAppendix B: Acceptable Levels of Measurement for Various StatisticsReferencesIndexAbout the Authorsgrt aThree specialists in social science methodology (Syracuse U. and U. of Texas-Austin) discuss how new theories originate and how they are elaborated, from their most basic conceptual building blocks through multivariable theoretical statements, models, the role of creativity in theory building, and how they are used and evaluated.  0aSocial sciencesxMethodology. 0aSociologyxMethodology.1 aLasorsa, Dominic L.1 aTankard, James W.