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FAK3024 Introduction to Theory of Science and Research Methodology, for Graduate Students in Technology and Natural Sciences 4,5 hp

Course memo Spring 2023-60495

Version 1 – 03/14/2023, 3:00:15 PM

Course offering

Spring 2023-1 (Start date 20 Mar 2023, English)

Language Of Instruction

English

Offered By

ABE/Philosophy

Course memo Spring 2023

Course presentation

Headings denoted with an asterisk ( * ) is retrieved from the course syllabus version Autumn 2021

Content and learning outcomes

Course contents

The following is an incomplete list of topics covered in the course.

  • Scientific knowledge
  • Hypothesis testing
  • Observations and measurements
  • Experiments
  • Models
  • Statistical reasoning
  • Causes and explanations
  • Qualitative methods
  • Engineering design
  • Risk and risk assessment
  • Research ethics

Intended learning outcomes

After having completed the course, the student should, with regards to the theory and methodology of science, both orally as well as in writing, be able to:

  • Identify definitions and descriptions of concepts, theories and problem areas, as well as identify the correct application of these concepts and theories.
  • Account for concepts, theories and general problem areas, as well as apply concepts and theories to specific cases.
  • Critically discuss the definitions and applications of concepts and theories as they applies to specific cases of scientific research.

Learning activities

9 pre-recorded video lectures. For each lecture there is a non-mandatory quiz and a text transcription. The videos are included in the schedule but can be watched at another date or time.

Additionally, the course features on additional campus lecture and two flipped classroom sessions on campus.

4 seminars. Each seminar relates to a selection of lecture contents and course texts. Before each seminar there is a mandatory quiz to be completed. The seminar consists of instruction and group discussions. The seminars start course week 3, one seminar each week.

Detailed plan

This course includes the following online lectures. They are all available as videos on Canvas to watch whenever you want. Their place in the schedule is a suggestion of when you might view it.

  1. Scientific inferences (59 minutes)
  2. Observation and measurements (76 minutes)
  3. Experiments (49 minutes)
  4. Models (62 minutes)
  5. Statistics (62 minutes)
  6. Explanations and causes (81 minutes)
  7. Engineering design (76 minutes)
  8. Qualitative methods (93 minutes)
  9. Research ethics (103 minutes)
  10. Anticipating risk in science and engineering (85 minutes)

For each lecture, there is an associated quiz comprised of 15 questions. If you complete the quiz with at least 14 points, you will get 0,5 bonus points for the exam. You can attempt to complete the quiz as many times as you like until it closes. Each quiz closes at the end of the week where the lecture is scheduled (Sunday, 23:59, of each week). This is to incentivise studying throughout the course, rather than only at the end.

Participating and completing the tasks in the flipped classroom sessions gives you 0.5 bonus points per session.

Bonus points collected during one period are scaled and are valid for the exam and the re-exam for that period.

This course includes these four mandatory seminars.

  1. Definitions, operationalizations and hypotheses (course week 3)
  2. Designing a scientific study (course week 4)
  3. Interpretation, analysis, and evidence (course week 6)
  4. Risk and research ethics (course week 7)

For each seminar, there are texts to read and a quiz to complete before you take the seminar. You need 14 points on the quiz before attending. If you attend without having scored 14 points on the quiz, you are not sufficiently prepared and will not be marked as attending. You can take the quiz as many times as you want before your seminar.

You will take one seminar each seminar week. You join a seminar group on Canvas, under the heading “People”. If you cannot see the heading, make sure you have registered. You will then take the rest of the seminars with this group, the same day of the week and the same time of day each week.

There is more information about the seminars in the document “Seminar information”, accessible in the Canvas course room.

Preparations before course start

Literature

There are two main course texts:

  • Justified Method Chocie - methodology for scientists and engineergs by Till Grüne-Yanoff. Based on the video lectures. 

In addition, there are three supplemental texts:

  • Some Issues in the Philosophy of Technology, by Sven Ove Hansson.
  • On Being a Scientist: Responsible Conduct in Research, which is an excerpt from a text by the National Academy of Sciences.
  • Ethical Thinking by Jesper Ahlin.
  • The Art of Doing Science by Sven Ove Hansson.

All are available in the file format pdf from the Canvas pages. They cannot be bought as physical books, but you are welcome to print them. On the Canvas page “Reading instructions” you can see which sections to read for the lectures. There are also texts for the seminars, see the document “Seminar information” on Canvas.

Advice from previous students

In course evaluations for previous periods, students wanted to pass on the following advice.

  • This course is different from many other courses in an engineering degree, and often requires a slightly different approach.
  • It is a good idea to follow along with the course structure, such as watching lectures when they are scheduled and completing the quizzes.
  • It is useful to take careful notes during the lectures. However, this increases the viewing time of the videos, so you need to plan for that.
  • Taking time to prepare for the seminars and actively engaging in the seminars makes it much easier to understand the course concepts and pass the exam.

Examination and completion

Grading scale

P, F

Examination

  • SEM1 - Seminars, 1.5 credits, Grading scale: P, F
  • TEN1 - Exam, 3.0 credits, Grading scale: P, F

Based on recommendation from KTH’s coordinator for disabilities, the examiner will decide how to adapt an examination for students with documented disability.

The examiner may apply another examination format when re-examining individual students.

A student may request a home exam, with the maximum grade of E, if two requirements are fulfilled: (1) This is the last remaining exam left before graduation. (2) It is not possible for the student to attend the written exam because the student is, at the point of the request, residing outside of Sweden and will be residing outside of Sweden for at least twelve months following the request. The examiner approves or denies these requests.

The section below is not retrieved from the course syllabus:

Participation ( DEL1 ) (also known as the seminars)

There are four seminars, all mandatory. To pass a seminar you need to:

  • read the required material
  • watch the required videos
  • pass a seminar quiz
  • actively participate in the seminar

During a seminar you should be able to explain the course concepts for that seminar and use them correctly as well as discuss their definitions and uses with peers. The seminars are  learning activities and thus is is acceptable to, for example, have misunderstood a concept when preparing for the seminar. The teachers are there to help. However, it is not acceptable to attend the seminar without proper preparation or to remain quiet during the entire seminar.

Exam ( TEN1 )

The examination is a digital exam based on the 10 lectures and the 4 seminars, as well as the course literature. Some activities can award bonus points applicable to the exam. Bonus points are valid for the exam and re-exam belonging to the period and year when they were collected. One may collect points valid for another exam by re-registering for that period and re-taking the quizzes.

During the course there are 10 non-mandatory quizzes, one for each video lecture. These quizzes test the student's ability to identify the correct definition and application of the course concepts. Passing these quizzes awards bonus points: 0.5 points per lecture.

There are also two flipped classroom sessions where students can collect 0.5 bonus points per session. The bonus points from quizzes and flipped classrooms are then scaled to fit the exam format and added to the part 1 exam score, capped at the maximum for that part.

Alternatives to missed activities or tasks

If you are unable to attend one or more of the seminars, there are compensation seminars towards the end of the course. Alternatively you may re-register and attend the remaining seminars at a later date. Please inform the course administration when you have passed all seminars.

If you miss or fail the exam, you may take a re-exam.

Ethical approach

  • All members of a group are responsible for the group's work.
  • In any assessment, every student shall honestly disclose any help received and sources used.
  • In an oral assessment, every student shall be able to present and answer questions about the entire assignment and solution.

Further information

No information inserted

Round Facts

Start date

20 Mar 2023

Course offering

  • Spring 2023-60495

Language Of Instruction

English

Offered By

ABE/Philosophy

Contacts

Communication during course

Contact adress for all issues is the course coordinators e-mail: helena.bjornesjo@abe.kth.se

This includes administrative issues and course content-questions. You may communicate in either Swedish or English.

Do not use the messaging system in Canvas.

Please state your course code.

Course Coordinator

Teachers

Examiner