Sociology Exam 3 1. Affirmative Action pos efforts to recruit minority grp mem/ women for jobs‚ promotions‚ edu opportunities; argued that discrimination will shift to Whites ex.: height/ residency requirements‚ testing differ w/ culture- sherpas: olf value independence‚ own homes/ good physical cond; fulani: old move to edge of homestead where ppl are buried‚ socially viewed as dead prejudice/ discrimination based on person’s age -endogamy: restrictions of mate selection to ppl in same
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Week 3 Movie Notes Rita (hairdresser) - if you want to change you have to do it from the inside out Professor kicks her out Rita barges into rooms‚ doesn’t sit down Frank’s wife left him for literature Gets upset at the fact she is still taking birth control and doesn’t want to have kids until she discovers herself Doesn’t have courage to go in and leaves the professor a note Wasn’t dressed up enough as everyone else and didn’t have expensive wine Wanted to talk serious with everyone
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Outline some of the functions that the education system may perform. (300 words/ 12 marks) There are a variety of many different sociological perspectives such as Marxist‚ Functionalists and the New Rights‚ which view the functions of the education system very differently. Functionalist view education as creating a consensus where as Marxists considers education as playing an ideological role. Functionalists believe that everything in society has a function in order for it to run smoothly
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Using material from Item 2B and elsewhere‚ assess the contribution of functionalist sociologists to our understanding of the family. (24 MARKS) Item 2B for functionalist sociologists‚ the family is an important institution in society. They see the family as having a number of roles essential to the smooth running of society. For example‚ the family is seen as key to socialising children into the norms and values of society. Other sociologists argue that the functionalist view is too uncritical
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Chapter One: Meaning‚ Nature‚ and Scope of Sociology 1.1 Definition Sociology is a new branch of social science‚ which primarily focused on society (social behavior). The term Sociology comes from the Latin “socius” meaning “companionship” and the Greek “logos”‚ meaning “science or study”. Literally‚ therefore‚ sociology means the study or the science of human society1. Sociology concerns on human behavior seeking to discover the causes and effects that arise in social relations among persons
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Chance H Smith Sociology 101 Sociology Chapter 1 Outline Understanding Social Context * Sociological Perspective; Understanding human behavior by placing it within its broader social context * “The sociological imagination enables us to grasp the connection between history and biography” -Wright Mills * Social Location; The group memberships that people have because their location in history and society Influences * External influences; are your experiences – becomes part of
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is sociology? Seeks to explain‚ describe‚ and predict human behavior Not concerned with individual human beings Concerned with human beings in reaction to other human beings Puts emphasis on group behavior (two or more people) (small group/large groups) Looks at group social interaction‚ social behavior an influence of social structures on people How old is sociology? 200 years Why did sociology (as social science develop)? Who was the founding father of sociology?
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The new medical sociology. Social forms of health and illness – Bryan Turner Introduction “Sociology is the scientific study of social institutions” (p. xiii)‚ and these social institutions are cluster of roles‚ norms‚ power‚ and knowledge which determine how we experience the social life‚ this means that social institutions mark how we have to behave and think. In this way‚ medicine is a social institution (p. xiii). Moreover‚ medicine is a social institution of normative coercion‚ and
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Helps us live in a diverse world. Applied Sociology • Applies theory to life The Importance of a Global Perspective • 1) Where we live makes a great deal of difference in shaping our lives. • 2) Societies throughout the world are increasingly interconnected. • 3) Many social problems that we face in the United States are far more serious elsewhere. • 4) Thinking globally is a good way to learn more about ourselves. SOCIAL CHANGE AND SOCIOLOGY 1) Industrial Technology 2) The Growth
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Chapter 1 Sociology -The Study of Human Behavior in Society The Classical Sociological Thinkers • Auguste Comte: Introduced the term “sociology” / Founder Catalyst for‚ “modernism”: the belief in evolutionary progress through the application of science • Alexis de Tocqueville: A French social theorist. Believed that democracy can either enhance or erode individual liberty. • Karl Marx: Believed that class was the organizing principle of social life; all other divisions would eventually
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