Schedule of Events
Sociological Research
Thursday, April 27, 2023
12:30 pm - 2:00 pm
Swenson Center – Outdoor Tent A
We invite you to join us and hear from several top student researchers at the Sociology Department’s Festival of Scholars panel. Sociologists seek to understand how individuals interact with and are shaped by institutions, organizations, and cultures by investigating underlying forces to reveal the ways in which many personal troubles are rooted in larger social problems. Students will present findings from original research studies that they conducted as part of our Quantitative Methods and Ethnographic Methods courses.
Student Abstracts
Magic or Tragic: Socio-emotional and Physiological Challenges of Receiving a Cochlear Implant.
Student(s):
Kawika Austin
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Adina Nack
Parents' Attitudes Towards Gun Control
Mass shootings have impacted our community affecting the lives of parents with children. We will use data that was collected to compare to the data that was collected in a recent survey. Mass shootings have called for new laws to counter the large number of deaths in the United States of America from mass shootings. This study sought to prove that people with children in grades K-12 would be in more favor of gun control than people who don’t have children. Data was collected from 196 respondents using a convenance survey with a snowball effect.
In 2022 there have been 620 mass shootings with 646 killed and 2,509 injured in the United States of America. (Gun Violence Archives 2022) The fear from this type of crime has become a topic of interest when children are at risk. (Verrecchia, Bush, and Hendrix 2021). In recent years, guns sales have been linked to the rise in firearm sales in America. (Iwama and Mcdevitt 2021). We will research gun control to find out how men and women differ in opinions on restricting guns to analyze how gender influences attitudes towards the matter. The rationale behind this research is to better understand this social problem and how certain gender norms and pressures can influence perspectives. We hypothesize that gender is related to attitudes towards gun control, with women being more supportive of guns than men. I hypothesis that parents with children in grades K-12 will be in more favor of gun control than parents without children.
Student(s):
Frank Conaway
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Cynthia Duarte
Hetereosexual Allies Negotiating Roles and Belonging in a Facebook Group for Transgender FolX
Student(s):
Jonathan Leon
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Adina Nack
Attitudes Toward Gun Control: How Personal Aspects Can Influence Our Perspectives on the Topic
This research group will research gun control to find out how men and women differ in opinions on restricting guns to analyze how gender influences attitudes towards the matter. The research sample consists of adults eighteen years and older. The rationale behind this research is to better understand this social problem and how certain gender norms and pressures can influence perspectives. As a collective, this research group hypothesizes that gender is related to attitudes towards gun control, with women being more supportive of restricting guns than men. Individually, I hypothesize that political affiliation is related to attitudes towards gun control, with liberal voters being more supportive than conservative voters. Other variables studied in this research are: socioeconomic status, religion, and parenting.
Student(s):
Gabriela Melchor, Ghausia Parveen, Jazmin Olvera-Rivera, and Frank Conaway
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Cynthia Duarte
Attitudes toward Gun Control: the Effect of Gender and Socioeconomic Status
Keywords: attitudes toward gun control, gender & gun control, socioeconomic status & gun control
Student(s):
Ghausia Parveen, Frank Conaway, Gabriela Melchor, Jazmin Rivera Olvera
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Cynthia Duarte
HAE and Her: Struggles with Hereditary Angioedema of Assigned Female at Birth Patients
Student(s):
Cheyenne Wierzbicki
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Adina Nack