Post on 06-Feb-2016
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Chapter One
Sociology: Perspective, Theory, and Method
The Sociological Perspective
Sociology is the systematic study of
human society.
The Sociological Perspective
• The sociological perspective helps us to see general social patterns in the behavior of particular individuals.
• It encourages us to realize that society guides our thoughts and deeds — to see the strange in the familiar.
The Sociological Perspective
Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)
Social Forces are constantly at work, even in an intensely personal action such as suicide.
Social Integration is the key.
BenefitsBenefits of the Sociological Perspective:
The sociological perspective helps us critically assess and challenge “common sense” ideas
BenefitsBenefits of the Sociological Perspective:
The sociological perspective helps us assess both opportunities and constraints in our lives.
BenefitsBenefits of the Sociological Perspective:
The sociological perspective empowers us to be active participants in our society.
The sociological perspective helps us to live in a diverse world.
The Sociological Perspective
Global Perspective: the study of the larger world and our society’s place in it.High-income
countries(about 50 countries)
Middle-income countries
(about 80 countries)
Low-income countries(about 60 countries)
The Origins of Sociology
the rise of a factory-based industrial economythe emergence of great cities in
Europepolitical changes
The Origins of Sociology
August Comte (1798-1857)
Considered the Founder of Modern SociologyCoined the phrase: Sociology (1838)
Described Sociology as having three stages:
TheologicalMetaphysicalScientific
The Origins of Sociology
August Comte (1798-1857)
Favored positivism — a way of understanding based on science
Strongly influenced the academic discipline of Sociology in the United States
The Origins of Sociology
August Comte (1798-1857)
The term sociology comes from:Latin – socius (friend or associate)
Greek – logos (word)
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“words about human associations”
The Origins of Sociology
Karl Marx (1818-1883)
Saw striking inequalities in the new industrial society. Known for Marxist Sociology and the Social-Conflict Approach
The Origins of Sociology
GENDER & RACE: Marginal Voices
Harriet Martineau (1802-1876)
Jane Addams (1860-1935)
W.E.B. Du Bois (1868-1963)
Sociological Theory
A theory is a statement of how and why specific facts are related. The goal of sociological theory is to explain social behavior in the real world. Theories are based on theoretical paradigms, sets of assumptions that guide thinking and research.
The Structural–Functional Paradigm
The structural-functional paradigm sees society as a complex system whose parts work together.It asserts that our lives are guided by social structures.
Herbert Spencer Robert MertonEmile Durkheim
The Structural–Functional Paradigm
Each social structure has social functions.The influence of this paradigm has declined in recent decades.–It focuses on stability, thereby ignoring inequalities of social class, race, and gender.
Herbert Spencer Robert MertonEmile Durkheim
The Social–Conflict Paradigm
Karl Marx W.E.B. Du Bois
The social-conflict paradigm sees society as an arena of inequality that generates conflict and change.Critical evaluation: This paradigm has developed rapidly in recent years.
The Social–Conflict Paradigm
Karl Marx W.E.B. Du Bois
It has several weaknesses:–It ignores social unity.–Like the structural-functional paradigm, it envisions society in terms of broad abstractions. It is political.
The Symbolic–Interaction Paradigm
Max Weber George Herbert Mead
The symbolic-interaction paradigm sees society as the product of the everyday interactions of individuals.
The Symbolic–Interaction Paradigm
Max Weber George Herbert Mead
Symbolic-interactionism has a micro-level orientation.It focuses on patterns of social interaction in specific settings. Ignores class, gender, and race
The Basics of Sociological Investigation
Sociological investigation starts with two simple requirements:
(1) Use the sociological perspective.
(2) Be curious and ask questions.
Science – a logical system that bases knowledge on direct, systematic observation.
Scientific sociology – the study of society based on systematic observation of social behavior.
Scientific Sociology: Basic Elements and Limitations
A concept – a mental construct that represents some part of the world in a simplified form.
A variable – a concept whose value changes from case to case.
Measurement – a procedure for determining the value of a variable in a specific case.
Almost any variable can be measured in more than one way.
Useful Measurements
For a measurement to be useful, it must be reliable and valid.Reliability – consistency in measurement.The procedure must yield the same result if repeated.
Useful Measurements
Validity – precision in measuring exactly what one intends to measure.Valid measurement means hitting the bull’s-eye of the target.
Relationships Among Variables
The scientific ideal is cause and effect – change in one variable causes change in another.The variable that causes the change is the independent variable.The variable that changes is the dependent variable.
Relationships Among Variables
Correlation – a relationship by which two variables change together.A spurious correlation is a false relationship between two or more variable caused by another. (Ice cream sales and drowning accidents)
The Ideal of Objectivity
Science demands that researchers strive for objectivity – a state of personal neutrality in conducting research.Researchers carefully hold to scientific procedures while reining in their own attitudes and beliefs.It is an ideal rather than a reality.
Interpretive Sociology
The interpretive sociologist’s job is not just to observe what people do but to share in their world of meaning.
Max Weber, who pioneered this framework, argued that the focus of sociology is interpretation.
Critical Sociology
Karl Marx rejected the idea that society exists as a “natural” system with a fixed order
The study of society that focuses on the need for desirable social change.
Gender and Research
Androcentricity, approaching an issue from the male perspective
Overgeneralizing, using data drawn from studying only one sex
Gender and Research
Gender blindness, not considering the variable of gender at all (men living with wives, wives living alone) Double standards, not judging men and women differently (Man, head of the household.)
Interference, a subject reacts to the sex of the researcher (That is not a teacher, that is a woman.)
An experiment is a research method for investigating cause and effect under highly controlled conditions
Research Methods
A research method is a systematic plan for doing research
A survey is a research method in which subjects respond to a series of statements or questions in a questionnaire or an interview
Research Methods
Participant observation is a research method in which investigators systematically observe people while joining them in routine activities
Research Methods
Existing sources, is a research method in which available data is analyzed.
Research Methods
Ten steps in sociological
investigation 1)What is your topic?2)What have others already learned?
Ten steps in sociological
investigation 3)What, exactly, are your questions?
4)What will you need to carry out research
Ten steps in sociological
investigation 5)Are there ethical concerns?6)What method will you use?
Ten steps in sociological
investigation 7)How will you record the data?8)What do the data tell you?
Ten steps in sociological
investigation 9)What are your conclusions?10)How can you share what you've learned?