6/03/13 Thinking 1. What is a thought? An idea or opinion produced by thinking or occurring suddenly in the mind: "Mrs Oliver’s first thought was to get help”. Thought generally refers to any mental or intellectual activity involving an individual’s subjective consciousness. It can refer either to the act of thinking or the resulting ideas or arrangements of ideas. Similar concepts include cognition‚ sentience‚ consciousness‚ and imagination. 2. What do scientists say? As scientists
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Name Chapter 8--Stratification: United States and Global Perspectives Description Instructions Modify Add Question Here Question 1 Multiple Choice Question 0 points Modify Remove Which of the following is NOT one of the three lessons about social stratification that is illustrated in Brym and Lie’s discussion of the 1975 Italian movie‚ Swept Away. Answer It is possible to be rich without working hard because one can inherit wealth. One can work hard without becoming rich
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The United States is known for its cultural diversity. This is because of the United States open door police (Phillips‚ The Challenge of Cultural Diversity). The police produced growth (Phillips‚ The Challenge of Cultural Diversity). Growth melted many different cultures with different beliefs and backgrounds. The growth made cultural diversity (Phillips‚ The Challenge of Cultural Diversity). Cultural diversity causes challenges for workers and individuals in the health care field (Phillips‚ The
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Rural sociology studies the village and urban sociology deals with the city. The city life depends on the village and what it produces. Similarly‚ the village is very much influenced by the city. Due to the pressures from within and attractions from outside people are flocking towards the cities from the villages. The economic necessity and social deficiency are ‘pushing’ the people out of the village‚ while the attractions of the city are ‘pulling’ them towards their centres. This has resulted
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References: Henslin‚ James‚ M. (2012). Sociology A down-to-earth approach. Eleventh ed. Boston‚ MA: Nesbitt graphics Publishers.
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REFERENSES Haralambos‚ M(2000)The Sociological Perispective;Rondom House.New York. Schaefer‚R‚T and Lamm R (1992)Sociology;McGraw Hill.New York Thomas J.Sullivan.Sociology Linda L. Lindsey.Sociology According to Thomas J. Sullivan‚ the family is the eldest and most fundamental of all social institutions. In fact the family was at one time the center of the political economic educational and religious activities. Every society has
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We go to school to learn and study. What’s strange is why we still have to study things that can’t be applied to our everyday lives. Like in math‚ why do we have to study X and Y when it wouldn’t be applied in real life. It’s not like we’re going to buy in the department store and the cashier would say this cabbage price is x5 – y9. That would be ridiculous. We can’t apply that to our daily lives. So why do we have to study such things. When guys flirt with a million of girls some would say
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What Fires Motivation? Babies are born with an inherent drive to learn. Your challenge as the parent of a child with learning or attention problems is to help him build what Drs. Robert Brooks and Sam Goldstein (Raising Resilient Children: Fostering Strength‚ Hope‚ and Optimism in Your Child) call "islands of competence‚" to offset the frustrations and low self-esteem that can result from his learning struggles. The goal is to find subjects or activities where he is self-motivated to learn‚ enjoys
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General Education Program at EKU‚ students will be able to: Communicate effectively by applying skills in reading‚ writing‚ speaking‚ and listening and through appropriate use of information technology. (GE Goal 1) Use appropriate methods of critical thinking and quantitative reasoning to examine issues and to identify solutions. (GE Goal 2) Distinguish the methods that underlie the search for knowledge in the arts‚ humanities‚ natural sciences‚ history‚ and social and behavioral sciences. (GE Goal 7)
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Sociological Perspective 1. Seeing the General in the Particular 2. Seeing the Strange in the Familiar 3. Individuality in Social Context 2. The Importance of Global Perspective 3. Applying the Sociological Perspective 1. Sociology and Social Marginality 2. Sociology and Social Crisis 3. Benefits of the Sociological Perspective 4. Applied Sociology 4. The Origins of Sociology 1. Science and Sociology 2. Social Change and Sociology 3. Marginal Voices 4. Canadian Sociology: Distinctive Touches
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