Title: Unit 1: Sociological Perspectives
1Unit 1 Sociological Perspectives
- Ch 1 An Invitation to Sociology
- Ch 2 Sociologists Doing Research
2Ch 1 An Invitation to Sociology
- Sociology is the scientific study of _______
_______. Social structure is the patterned
interaction of people in _______________. - A perspective is a particular ___________. The
sociological perspective looks at the behavior of
groups NOT _____________. - So sociologists look at the _________ __________
shared by members of a group or society. - They attempt to explain events w/o relying on
personal factors they look for ______________. - They dont speak of an individual, but of
______.
3- Group behavior vs. individual behavior
- Sociologists assume that social relationships
arent determined by the particular
_________________________ involved. - The mixing of the individuals creates a new whole
w/ new _____________. - Peoples behavior w/in a group setting cant be
____________ from their personal characteristics. - Groups range in size from a family to an entire
society. No matter its size, all groups
encourage _____________. - It occurs partly b/c members are taught to ______
their groups ways. Members may truly value
their groups ways or just be giving in to
________ ____________.
4- The ability of individuals to see the
relationship b/w events in their ________ _____
the events of their ________. - It helps us to understand the effects of events,
such as ______________, on our daily lives
challenges conventional social wisdom (ideas that
people _____ are true). - This enables us to better make our _____________
rather than merely ________.
End Section 1
5- Sociologys origins in Europe
- Began during the ________________ in late 19th
century Europe. There was a great social
upheaval large s of people were moving from
_______ to _______. - Some intellectuals were concerned by the sudden
changes. They looked for ways to ____________.
These ideas led to the rise of sociology. - Auguste Comte (France)
- The __________ of Sociology.
- Explained his theories in Positive Philosophy.
- Concerned w/ the ___________________. Believed
that for society to advance, social behavior had
to be studied _________. He attempted to create
a science to do this which he called sociology. - Positivism is the belief that knowledge should be
derived from ____________ ____________. - He distinguished b/w social statics which is the
study of social ______ social dynamics which is
the study of social _________.
6- Harriet Martineau (England)
- Translated Comtes book into ________.
- Contributed to research methods ___________
theory. - Saw a link b/w ______ the oppression of women.
Believed that womens lack of economic power
helped keep them _____________________. - Herbert Spencer (England)
- Introduced the idea of Social Darwinism which
claims that in order for society to ______, the
strongest, most fit members of society should be
allowed to flourish the ______, least fit
should be allowed to die based on the ideas of
Charles Darwin. - So he opposed ________________.
- Viewed positively by _____________ b/c he
justified their exploitation of the poor.
7- Karl Marx (Germany)
- Believed that social scientists should try to
__________________, not just study it. - Stated that throughout history, societies have
always been divided into _________ _________ - __________ vs. __________
- (haves, middle-class) (have-nots, poor)
- The Bourgeoisie is the class that _____ the means
of production. An individual w/in that class is
a capitalist. The Proletariat was the
__________________. - The Industrial Revolution _____________ b/w the
classes. He believed the Proletariat would rise
up overthrow the Bourgeoisie work for
________________ for all. This would lead to the
gov.t dissolving a classless society -
_________. He thought it would take numerous
revolutions for this to happen.
8- Emile Durkheim (France)
- Claimed that society exists b/c of a broad
consensus (agreement). - Believed in _____________ times, societies were
based on mechanical solidarity (social dependency
based on widespread consensus of values
beliefs, _________________, dependence on
tradition family). - Believed ____________ societies are based on
organic solidarity (social interdependency based
on a high degree of ____________ in roles). - Max Weber (Germany)
- Claimed humans act based on their understanding
of a _________. He believed an understanding of
the _______________ of people in groups can be
best accomplished through the method of verstehen
(understanding social behavior of others by
putting yourself in the _____________________). - Thought the key influence in industrialization
was rationalization (the mind-set emphasizing
_______, reason ________) instead of tradition,
emotion, superstition prevalent in
preindustrialized societies.
9- Sociology develops in the US
- The greatest development of sociology has taken
place in the ____ most sociologists are from
the ______. - Jane Addams
- Focused on the problems caused by the
________________ among the social classes.
Co-founded the ____ _____ in Chicago, a place for
people (the ill, aged, poor, immigrants, etc) who
needed assistance. - Also active in ________________ peace
movements. - Won the _______________ (1931).
- W.E.B. DuBois
- Black educator ____________ for the rights of
blacks in America abroad. - Helped found the __________.
End Section 2
10- Your perspective is the way you _______ the
meaning of an image or event. Its influenced by
your ______________. It draws your attention to
some things ________ it to others. - A theoretical perspective is a set of assumptions
______________. It helps its supporters ________
their research. - ________ theoretical perspectives usually exist
at the same time. - Sociology has 3 major theoretical perspectives
- ____________
- ________________
- ____________________
11- An approach that emphasizes the __________ made
by each part of society. - Parts of society include ________, economy,
_________, etc - Functionalists see the parts of a society as an
______________ a change in one part leads to
changes in other parts. For example, a major
change in the economy leads to changes in the
________. - Assumes that societies tend to return to a state
of _______ after some upheaval has occurred. - Believes that there is a consensus on ____ (Ex.
Most Americans agree on the desirability of
democracy equal opportunity) which promotes a
high degree of _______________. - Believes that most aspects of a society exist to
promote a societys __________ ________ (Ex.
gov.ts, families, religions, etc).
12- A function is a ___________ made by some part of
a society. - Manifest functions are __________ _________
contributions of an aspect of society. - Ex. Schools educate students.
- Latent functions are ___________ _________
contributions of an aspect of society. - Ex. Schools help develop ____________.
- Not all elements of society make _________
contributions. Dysfunction refers to the
__________ consequences of an aspect of society. - Ex. Gov.ts can be very ___________.
13- An approach that emphasizes the role of _______,
competition, _______, constraint w/in a
society. - Basically the ______ beliefs of functionalism.
- Focuses on the ____________ among various groups
in a society or b/w societies. - Believe that groups societies compete in an
attempt to preserve promote their own special
________________. - Its all a contest w/ the main ? being, _____
______________? - Those w/ the most power (ability to
________________ of others) get the largest share
of whatever a society considers to be __________. - Believe that social change occurs as the
_______________ among conflicting groups shifts.
14- An approach that focuses on the __________ among
people based on mutually understood __________. - Believe that groups exist only b/c their members
_______ each others __________. - A symbol is something chosen to __________
something else. It can be an object, ______,
gesture, facial expression, sound, etc - Often it is something _________ used to represent
something that is ______ ____________. - Believe that we learn the meaning of a symbol
from the way we see others ________ to it that
once we learn the meanings of symbols, we base
our ______ (or interaction) on them. We then use
the meanings of symbols to imagine how others
will _________ to our behavior.
15End Section 3
16Ch 2 Sociologists Doing Research
- How do sociologists conduct research?
- Like other scientists, sociologists gain
knowledge by doing ____________. - Unlike most other scientists, sociologists are
very ________ in their ability to set up
___________________ to replicate real-life
conditions. - Sometimes its impossible to __________ the
necessary conditions sometimes even if they
could, there are __________ preventing them from
doing so. - There are 2 methods of research sociologists use
- ____________ data based on s. Makes up
about ______ of research published in major
sociological journals. - _________ data based on narratives
descriptions.
17- A survey is a research method in which
information is obtained by asking many
individuals a ___________ of ?s. - Most ____________ research method in sociology.
- Ideal for studying ________ s of people.
- B/c they cant study an entire population (a
group of people w/ certain ____________________),
they must select a sample (a relatively ________
out of the total population under study). - A sample must be representative of the
________________. A representative sample is one
that accurately reflects the ______________ of
the population as a whole. There are 2 ways to
ensure the sample is representative of the
population - 1. Take a purely __________________.
- 2. ______________ pick individuals who
represent all of the various
________
in the population being studied. - May be a questionnaire or an __________.
Closed-ended questions are those w/ a limited,
fixed set of ______ open-ended questions are
answered in the participants own words. See p.
40 for examples.
18Closed-ended Survey Research
Advantages Disadvantages
Closed-ended answers can be more precisely __________. Responses can be easily __________. Statistical techniques can be used to ______ _______ of the data. A ______ of responses can be collected. Surveys are ________ to produce distribute. Responses are ______ to preset answers. Many people dont respond to surveys, resulting in low cost _______________. The way a question is stated may _________ the answer given.
19- Secondary analysis is using ______________
_____________ for data collection research
purposes. - Types of precollected data include ______ ______
(ex. Census information), company records, voting
lists, other scientists research reports, etc. - _____________ rarely used in sociology.
20- Uses ________________________ data rather than
numerical data. - Most of these methods are types of field research
(research that takes place in a natural,
___________, setting). - Case studies are a research method that involves
an ____________ of a single group, incident, or
community. - B/c only a few people are studied, a single case
study doesnt ___________. However, they can
generate new hypotheses that researchers can
test. - Most ___________ used field research method.
- Naturalistic observation research method in
which the sociologist observes the subject in a
________________ w/o ____________. - Researcher must avoid disturbing the people under
study b/c they may change their ________ if they
are aware of the researcher. - In the participant observation research method, a
researcher becomes a __________________ being
studied. The group may or may not be _________
they are being studied. - Know the chart on p.45!
End Section 1
21- The belief that events occur in _________ ways
that 1 event leads to another. - Social scientists look for the factors that cause
social events to happen. - Social events are usually ______________ to be
explained by a single factor. Multiple causation
is the belief that an event occurs as a result of
several factors working in ______________. - Ex. What causes crime?
- _______________
- _______________
- _______________
- _______________
- _______________
- Etc
- Each factor involved in multiple causation is a
__________.
22- A characteristic that is __________________.
- Different types of variables
- A variable is either quantitative or qualitative.
- Quantitative variable a characteristic that can
be _____________________. - Qualitative variable a characteristic that is
defined by its ______________ _________________
(ex male/female, single/married/divorced/widowed,
etc) - A variable is also either independent, dependent,
or intervening. - Independent variables a characteristic that
______________ to occur. These are the variables
a researcher can change so they can observe its
______. - Dependent variables a characteristic that
_________________. These are variables that
change b/c of a change in the independent
variable. - Intervening variables a characteristic that
_____________________ b/w an independent
dependent variable.
23 Types of variables Ex You dont spend much
time studying get a bad grade on your sociology
quiz. But Ms. Griggs decides to curve the grades
(Dream on!). What are the following
variables 1. Independent variable 2. Is the
independent variable quantitative or
qualitative? 3. Dependent variable 4. Is
the dependent variable quantitative or
qualitative? 5. Intervening variable
24- Sometimes, instead of looking for cause effect,
researchers look for correlations (measures of a
____________ b/w 2 variables or sets of data).
___________ ______________________________. - A positive correlation would occur if both
variables or . - Ex Grades IQ
- A negative correlation would be if one variable
the other . - Ex Grades absences.
- Its easier to show a ___________ than a
____________.
25- Standards for showing causation
- Standard 1 2 variables must be ____________.
- Standard 2 All other _________ _______ must be
taken into account. - A spurious correlation is an apparent
relationship b/w 2 variables that is actually
caused by a __________ that affects both of the
other variables. - Standard 3 A change in the _____________
variable must occur before a change in the
_________ variable can occur. - Sometimes its difficult to determine which
occurs _____.
End Section 2
26- Sociologists use the scientific method which
involves the recognition formulation of a
problem, the collection of data through
observation experiment, the formulation
testing of hypotheses. - The steps are
- 1. __________ the problem.
- 2. __________ the literature.
- 3. __________ hypotheses.
- - A hypothesis is a testable statement of
relationships among variables. - 4. __________ a research design.
- 5. __________ data.
- - Most sociological data is collected by
asking people ?s, observing behavior,
analyzing _____________________. - 6. __________ data.
- - Sometimes it can be ____________ in
different ways. - 7. ________ findings conclusions.
27- Ethics in social research
- Although there are principles for conducting
research, scientists sometimes fail to live up to
these principles whether ________________ them
(Ex. Nazi doctors experiments on concentration
camp prisoners) or ___________ (Ex. The Stanford
Prison Experiment). - Usually, sociologists routinely protect the
rights of research subjects avoid ___________
or harming them. - Conducting ethical research means showing
_________ using superior research standards
reporting findings methods ___________
protecting the rights, privacy, integrity,
dignity, freedom of ____________________. - The ___________________________ has published
guidelines for conducting research (Its in the
appendix of your textbook). - The researcher must balance the interests of
those being _________ against the need for
accurate, timely ________.
End Section 3