PRINCIPLES OF SOCIOLOGY Spring 2013 Course: SOCY 1150; Section 34008 Office Hours: Meeting Time: T/R 8:00-9:15 a.m.T-142 11:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. Tue & Thu Instructor: Michelle A. Smith‚ Ph.D. 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. Wed Office: B-2044 e-mail: msmith@lakelandcc.edu or by appointment!! Phone: (440) 525-7159 COURSE DESCRIPTION. During the next 15 weeks we will be exploring the social world as understood and explained by sociologists. The sociological investigation of society provides perspectives
Premium Sociology
GERMOV-PAGES/FINAL 1/12/08 3:06 PM Page 314 CHAPTER 16 N u rsing and Sociology An Uneasy Relationship Deidre Wick s Overview ■ ■ ■ Why is nursing often depicted in a negative light? What is the ‘New Nursing’? What are some of the new developments in nursing in Australia and overseas? This chapter examines some of the more recent sociological writings on nursing and discusses them in relation to the practical insights they have to offer for nursing. Recent nursing reforms
Premium Sociology
SOCIOLOGY ANALYSIS OF HEALTH WITH REGARDS TO GENDER IN MODERN SOCIETY. The social institution I have chosen for this CIA is health. Health is defined as ‘a state of complete physical‚ mental‚ and social well-being’. Though it is mainly a biological issue‚ it is just as much a social issue in many aspects. Sociologists study health to understand how society works (as according to sociologists‚ health and illness is a result of the organisation of society) and how social forces have a chief impact
Premium Health Medicine Sociology
Christine Winter‚ Professor of Sociology awinter@swccd.edu Office Hours: I will be available to meet with students before class‚ after class or by appointment. Please try to let me know in advance if you would like to meet with me so that I can schedule accordingly In this course‚ we will look at human behavior through the lens of sociology. Humans are social animals and are profoundly influenced by the social groups to which they belong. These groups include the family one is born into‚ one’s gender
Free Sociology Human Academic dishonesty
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 5. Sociological Theory 1. The Structural-Functional Paradigm 2. The Social-Conflict Paradigm 3
Free Sociology
1.0 Sociology Theory Sociological perspective provide us with a unique view point on a certain social issues however the needs to have sociology theory is to have a proper explanations or linkage as to the observation made. There are three most used theory used by sociologist and researchers today in studying the pattern that exist in society and to explain how society influences people and vice versa. Structural functional approach or also known as functionalism‚ observe society in a much bigger
Premium Sociology
culture of that period. -The work of such classical sociological theorists as Auguste Comte‚ Karl Marx‚ Herbert Spencer‚ Emile Durkheim‚ Max Weber‚ Georg Simmel was important in its time and played a central role in the subsequent development of sociology. They have become classics because they have a wide range of application and deal with centrally important social issues. Theory Theory is an explanation or model which is based on observation‚ experimentation‚ and reasoning‚ especially one that
Free Sociology
Sydney S. Writing Assignment #1 Soc 420 Sociology is concerned with human interaction. With that being said‚ the sociology of religion is also concerned with human interaction. In studying religion from a sociological perspective‚ one is looking at religion as a social institution and looking to answer questions such as: What effect does this particular institution have on the lives of its followers‚ how does this influence the upbringing of its followers‚ how does this religion affect
Free Sociology Religion
Sociology of the Classroom Sociology‚ as defined by Thompson (1994)‚ is one division in the family of social sciences that seeks to explain patterns of human behavior. The social environment is not only happen in our daily lives but also in our education especially in the classroom. As Boli (2002) writes‚ “Education has become a global social process that both reflects and helps create the global society that is under formation.” This assumes that education is a combination of social acts and it
Free Education Teacher
Midterm- Sociology 109 Clinton Benard III 1. Sociology is study of human groups and social behavior .The primary study of sociology concerns the influence of social attitudes‚ behavior and how those focal points have built societies and changed them for better or worse. Sociologist use creative thinking better known as sociological imagination to gain a different view‚ a view from abroad. The basic idea of sociological imagination is the ability to look at one’s culture from a different point
Premium Sociology C. Wright Mills Psychology