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What is Sociology? Family Sociology

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Montclair State University * Sociological & Policy Perspectives on Families * Introduction 1) The class name * * Sociologists focus on how society, culture, and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What is Sociology? Family Sociology


1
What is Sociology?Family Sociology
  • Montclair State University

2
Sociological Inquiry
  • Families do not exist or evolve in isolation
  • Rather, they react to and have an influence on
    the social world around them
  • The sociological perspective on families
    emphasizes the rules, roles, and relationships
    that are created an maintained by the larger
    society
  • How do sociologists examine family life?
  • Theoretical perspectives
  • Methods of social analysis

3
What is Sociology?
  • What pops into your mind when you think about
    Sociology?
  • What do sociologists study?
  • How is sociological thinking different from other
    social science disciplines?

4
The Sociological Approach
  • Sociology focuses on the family from the outside
    in rather than the inside out
  • Sociology looks behind the scenes to explain
    patterns of behavior
  • Sociology looks for general processes that
    produce an individual experience

5
Thinking Like a Sociologist
6
The Sociological Approach
  • Sociology focuses on how social forces influence
    individual behavior, actions, and feelings.
  • AND
  • Sociology examines how the interaction of
    individuals and small groups influence the
    economic or social change?
  • Humans viewed as both puppets and puppeteers

7
Thinking like a Sociologist
  • In this class, we will focus on how families are
    influenced by the larger social structure
  • Social structure is a stable framework of
    social relationships that guides our interaction
    with others

8
The Sociological Approach Levels of Analysis
  • The macro level comprises
  • Society a population of people that is
    organized in a cooperative manner to carry out
    the major functions of life
  • Culture All modes of thought, behavior, and
    production that are communicated to members of a
    society through all forms of communication 
  • How would you describe the culture of the U.S.?

9
The Sociological Approach Levels of Analysis
  • The macro level comprises
  • Analysis at the macro level focuses on
    large-scale
  • social institutions
  • social structures
  • comparisons between entire societies
  • How does one society differ from another?

10
The Sociological Approach The Macro Level
  • For example How are families different in Japan
    compared to the U.S. ??
  • The divorce rate in the U.S. is 50
  • The rate in Japan is 27

11
The Sociological Approach The Micro Level
  • The micro level includes interactions among
    individuals, small groups, and families
  • The micro level focuses on our individual
    actions, thoughts, and choices
  • Think of this as the smaller picture

12
The Sociological Approach
Macro Level
Micro Level
13

The Sociological Approach The Macro Level
  • Social institutions
  • A social institution is a major sphere of social
    life with rules and roles that define a social
    unit of importance to society
  • A social institution is a visible structure that
    people can recognize and understand
  • Families are a social institution
  • MAKE SURE YOU UNDERSTAND THIS CONCEPT OF SOCAIL
    INSTITUIONS!

14
The Sociological Approach The Macro Level
  • Family sociologists examine how these SOCIAL
    INSTITUTIONS interact and how they influence
    behaviors, attitudes, and opportunities in
    families

Economy
Government
Education
Families
Religion
Healthcare
15

The Sociological Approach The Macro Level
  • The macro level comprises
  • Social Status
  • Social statuses are
  • the social positions people occupy and
  • the privileges and constraints that are attached
    to these positions

16

The Sociological Approach The Macro Level
  • This hierarchical arrangement of people in terms
    of power, prestige, and resources is called
    social stratification
  • These hierarchies in the U.S. are often based on
    race/ethnicity, education, income, and gender
  • Think about how your race or gender or age has
    blocked your from an opportunity or given you an
    advantage

17
The Sociological Approach The Micro Level
  • Micro level deals with issues of social life at
    the level of individuals or small groups
  • At the micro level we focus on patterned
    behaviors of people that are due to the social
    conditions in which we find ourselves
  • We act differently in different settings and
    places
  • Micro level analysis focuses on personal choices

18
The Sociological Approach The Micro Level
  • Micro level deals with issues of social life at
    the level of individuals or small groups
  • Micro level analysis focuses on personal choices
  • Think of an example of a personal choice you made
    recently and how it was influenced by the larger
    society, your social status, the economy, the
    government, the culture of Montclair?

19
Social Science Research
  • How do we know what we know?
  • Most of us understand the world around us through
    our personal experience -- the people and
    situations we have been in or have seen
  • This personal experience leads to your
    conclusions about the world
  • While there is nothing wrong with these ways of
    knowing -- social scientists are skeptical about
    relying ONLY on these sources because
  • An individuals experience of those around them
    is not representative of the broader society

20
Social Science Research
  • How do we know what we know?
  • Social scientists use a systematic and more
    scientific mode of investigation
  • Social scientists rely on
  • Observations of the social world based on
    representative samples
  • Example If we wanted to study why people in the
    U.S. get married, we should not just survey
    college students
  • We avoid the error of overgeneralization i.e.
    using what we know about a small group of people
    to conclude something about all people

21
Sociological Theories
  • Social science theories explain or help us make
    sense of patterns in social life
  • Theories shape and direct research they point
    us in a direction
  • That direction influences what we look for, what
    we find, and how we explain it

22
Sociological Theories
  • Theories about families and relationships are
    made up a set of statements that explain why
    certain relationships occur
  • For example The age at first marriage has
    increased because more women are graduating from
    college and starting careers before marrying

23
Macrolevel theories
  • Macrolevel theories focus on
  • a whole society or a large part of it
  • the BIG PICTURE
  • Example
  • How has the decline in real male wages influenced
    husbands and wives involvement in the paid
    labor force
  • Research might examine cost of living and
    employment rates by gender and compare data from
    1960 to 2000

24
Sociological Theories
  • Theories used to explain relationships at a more
    personal level are micro level theories
  • Examples
  • A researcher wants to know how often husbands and
    wives argue on a weekly basis
  • They might observe a husbands and wife in their
    home or tape their conversations over the week

25
Major Sociological Theories
  • Structural Functionalism
  • Operates at the macro level
  • Structural functionalists view society as a
    social system with interacting parts
  • The functionalist perspective views society as a
    vast organism whose parts are interdependent or
    interrelated
  • Think about how social institutions interact
    families and the economic system

26
Major Sociological Theories
  • Structural Functionalism
  • Operates at the macro level
  • Structural-Functionalists focus on how social
    institutions like families meet the basic needs
    or functions of a society.
  • The family as a social institution is analyzed
    from two perspectives
  • 1)    How does the family contribute to the
    maintenance of the larger social system ?
  • 2)    And, in what ways does society and other
    social institutions (like education or economic
    system) affect families?

27
Major Sociological Theories
  • Exchange Theory
  • Operates at the micro level
  • Similar to economic theories that view humans as
    rational beings who make decisions about the
    exchange of goods and services
  • In doing so, they weigh the costs and benefits of
    exchanges
  • Emphasis is on efficiency
  •  

28
Major Sociological Theories
  • Exchange Theory
  • Operates at the micro level
  • In relationships, for example, people have some
    resource that is valued by the other person
  • This is when exchange can take place
  • In relationships -- what do women hold of value?
  • How about men?
  •  

29
Major Sociological Theories
  • Gender Theory
  • Operates at both macro and micro level
  • Central concept is genderthe social and cultural
    characteristics that distinguish women and men in
    society.

30
Major Sociological Theories
  • Gender Theory Feminist Theory)
  • Oriented toward power in relationships.
  • Feminist theory argues that differences between
    men and women are socially constructed to
    maintain power of men over women.
  • Emphasizes culture, rather than biology.
  • Read more for Assignment 3 in Chapter by Cherlin
    on Theories
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