Duration
45h Th
Number of credits
Lecturer
Language(s) of instruction
French language
Organisation and examination
Teaching in the first semester, review in January
Schedule
Units courses prerequisite and corequisite
Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program
Learning unit contents
There are four parts to the course. 1. An introduction to the history of quantification and a presentation of the principles of historical criticism of quantitative data. 2. A presentation of the basic concepts of descriptive univariate statistics and of their usefulness for historical research: types of variables, central parameters, dispersion parameters, growth rates, index, graphic representation of data. 3. An introduction to bi(multi)variate statistics: temporal series (regression and linear correlation); distribution (contingency tables, interdependence); introduction to hypothesis testing; introduction to data analysis (factorial analysis). The presentation of each concept will be coupled with illustrations and concrete operations using simplified data (using Excel/Calc or Statistica). 4. Students will be allocated a collection of readings giving an insight into the use of quantitative methods to respond to questions posed by historians based on recent historical work; they will be asked to present them orally.
Learning outcomes of the learning unit
By the end of the course, students will be able to :
* Use desktop applications to process data (using Excel or Calc as a database (filters, cross-referenced tables); use of these same tools to process descriptive statistics) ;
* Using descriptive statistics to summarise data ;
* Understand the principles behind the most widely used historical statistical methods ;
* Identify the statistical methods enabling them to answer questions which historians may ask.
Prerequisite knowledge and skills
Planned learning activities and teaching methods
Mode of delivery (face-to-face ; distance-learning)
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Recommended or required readings
Students are asked to read: LEMERCIER, Claire and ZALC Claire, Méthodes quantitatives pour l'historien, Paris, La Découverte (coll. Repères), 2008, 120 pp.
Via MyULg, they will also receive each week copies of Powerpoint slides shown in class. These slides are animated to support the attention and are also, on the same time, very complete ; bibliographical orientations are proposed in food-notes. The slides shown in class are available on-line untill the end of the academic year.
Assessment methods and criteria
The exam is written ; it includes theory questions and two types of exercises (processing data ; choice of tools and approach to treating specific historical sources).
Work placement(s)
Organizational remarks
Computers (equipped with Excel and Statistica) are at the disposal of the students in one of the classrooms in the CIPL. The personal laptops are obviously welcome.
Contacts
Eric Geerkens, professor
Histoire économique et sociale
quai Roosevelt 1B (Bât. A4)
4000 Liège
Belgium
Tel. ULg : +32 4 3665359
Mail : e.geerkens@uliege.be
Items online
Online Notes
Notes are available on MyULg.