Title: What is Sociology? Family Sociology
1What is Sociology?Family Sociology
- Montclair State University
2Sociological 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
3What 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?
4The 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
5Thinking Like a Sociologist
6The 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
7Thinking 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
8The 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.?
9The 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?
10The 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
11The 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
12The Sociological Approach
Macro Level
Micro Level
13The 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!
14The 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
15The 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
16The 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
17The 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
18The 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?
19Social 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
20Social 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
21Sociological 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
22Sociological 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
23Macrolevel 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
24Sociological 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
25Major 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
26Major 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?
27Major 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
-
28Major 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?
-
29Major 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.
30Major 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