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Sociology | Wiley | Intro to Sociology: Note Guide & Sources, D___ Name:right7239000Defining Sociology Study of human society (aggregate of people living together in a more or less ordered community) and social interaction How human behavior is shaped by group life and social institutions (religion, education, family, media, gender, social class, environment, etc.)Sociologists believe that the ________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________Purpose: Understand society and its effect on membersResolve _______________________________Empower the individual to understand themselves betterThe Power of SocietySociologists believe that the society in which we live is the _________________ driver of human behaviorMost behavior is learned and shaped by our society; only a handful of our behaviors are genetically determinedOnce behavior is learned, we only _____________________________ our society’s powerful impact on our thoughts/behaviorsOur society guides our understanding of reality49029091270000The “Sociological Imagination” (SI)Sociologists encourage us to use the SI (coined by C. Wright Mills in 1959), which emphasizes the relationship between individual experiences and the larger societyHow behavior, even that which we presume is __________________________________________________Enables us to distinguish between personal troubles and public issuesPersonal: must be solved by the individual Public: requires societal solutions Sociological imagination transforms personal problems into _______________________________________ Views _______________________________________________, as the cause of most social problems Why use the SI?Empowers us to become more active in shaping our lives and institutions/groups that needs restructuring Helps us to connect with others and be more compassionateHelps us achieve a more accurate understanding of the society we live inUsing the S.I.—Childbearing in Global PerspectiveMany think that childbearing, the decision to have children, is a highly personal choiceYet, there are clear societal trends around the world that indicate that the society one lives in plays a major role in determining how many children a woman will give birth toWomen in poor countries have more children than those in rich countries Why might ________________________ individuals in the U.S. have less children?Why might ________________________ individuals in the U.S. have more children?Easy access to contraceptives (not a financial burden)Conformity (less children is now the norm)Career comes first now for many women and menCost of college has risen tremendouslyLimited access to contraceptives (a financial burden)Conformity (more children is the norm)Little to no stigma exists for out-of-wedlock childrenCosts of college (etc.) not relevant“Source of redemption” (see article)Actively read “Sociology professor delves into why poor women find redemption in having a baby,” (see next page) discuss, and answer questions with pod.3783330410700Sociology professor delves into why poor women find redemption in having a baby, Columbia Daily Tribune, 2013When Maria Kefalas started visiting low-income neighborhoods in Philadelphia to interview the young, single and often welfare-dependent mothers who lived there, many of the grandmothers were her age. When one mother heard Kefalas, at 32, had just become pregnant with her first child, she said, “Isn’t it wonderful that the doctors were proved wrong and you were able to get pregnant?” The woman, who had her own first child in her teens, assumed Kefalas had been trying without success to have a baby since 19 or 20. This wasn’t true, of course. In her early 20s, Kefalas had college to think about. Summer vacations spent traveling. Her future career. But this was still an assumption she encountered in these neighborhoods while conducting research with another sociologist. One 14-year-old told her, “I’ve been trying to have a baby ever since I could.” As Kefalas puts it, childbirth has very little “competition” in these women’s lives. When Maria Kefalas started visiting low-income neighborhoods in Philadelphia to interview the young, single and often welfare-dependent mothers who lived there, many of the grandmothers were her age. When one mother heard Kefalas, at 32, had just become pregnant with her first child, she said, “Isn’t it wonderful that the doctors were proved wrong and you were able to get pregnant?”The woman, who had her own first child in her teens, assumed Kefalas had been trying without success to have a baby since 19 or 20. This wasn’t true, of course. In her early 20s, Kefalas had college to think about. Summer vacations spent traveling. Her future career. But this was still an assumption she encountered in these neighborhoods while conducting research with another sociologist. One 14-year-old told her, “I’ve been trying to have a baby ever since I could.”Bottom of FormNeed an account? Create one now. “The stylish careers, fulfilling relationships and exceptional educations that will occupy middle- and upper class women’s twenties and thirties are unattainable dreams to the women driving the non-marital childbearing trend,” she writes on her blog on the Huffington Post. She sees children out of wedlock not as a decline in family values in poverty-stricken areas but as yet another symptom of the growing divide between the haves and the have-nots in the United States.In a phone interview, Kefalas said she believes talking to these women allowed her to dig past survey and statistical data that provide information but few answers. When the question “Why do poor women have children outside of marriage?” comes up, society responds that individuals in low-income neighborhoods don’t believe in marriage.The Bush administration encouraged the Healthy Marriage Initiative to address this very issue. Statistically, children born into unstable home situations suffer, and often — although not always — a single-parent household equals a more stressful family life. The legislation allotted funds to individual states for conflict resolution and marriage skills programs, public advertising campaigns, mentoring programs and “divorce reduction programs that teach relationship skills.” The programs were then shopped around low-income neighborhoods, basically providing “couple counseling to the poor,” Kefalas said. The connection seems simple: if you promote healthy marriage, then the cycle of poverty and other social ills will be broken. One assumption goes, “we can reduce levels of poverty by changing poor people’s values,” Duane Rudy pointed out. Rudy is an associate professor in the University of Missouri Department of Human Development and Family Studies.Kefalas and Edin’s research doesn’t refute the notion that repairing family structures will help end welfare dependency by stabilizing homes. But it does challenge the assumption that the women living in Philadelphia’s worst neighborhoods didn’t care about marriage. In fact, the young women they met cared deeply about it. “Everyone’s notions of marriage have changed in society,” Kefalas said. The difference is, “upper-class young couples are able to achieve those raised” expectations, although “among low income couples you see the raised standards like everybody else, but actually more diminished opportunities to achieve those goals.”For example, if the dream for marriage is a stable, dependable husband, these women had little hope of finding him. Many don’t go to college and remain in the neighborhood where they grew up. The men around them are engaged in high-risk behavior and are often involved in the drug economy. Many spend some time in prison. Seen in this light, marriage is far from a stabilizer. The relationships are very “volatile,” and the divorce rate for these low-income couples is significantly higher than the national rate. Having a child, however, does seem to provide new sense of purpose for the women Kefalas interviewed. It can act as a stabilizer in a neighborhood, family or financial situation that is otherwise chaos.“Having a child offers a source of redemption,” Kefalas said. “You go from being this teenager who is wild and out of control to being this young woman with a baby, and if your baby’s clean, people stop you on the street and say, ‘You’re such a wonderful mother.’right571500“These young women say, ‘Having a baby saved my life.’ ” Two comments made at the end of article:Comment by “Reality Check”: If the haves have largely because they've lived responsibly (e.g., not had kids before they could support them, didn't drop out of high school, didn't get hooked on drugs), why should they be forced to support the have-nots and their offspring?Comment by “Liz” in response to “Reality Check”: "lived responsibly" ?? For you, RealityCheck, living responsibly means not having a child before you can pursue a $100,000 education, meet a spouse who received a similar education, pursue a stable, healthy relationship and enter a working world to which you and your spouse have the education and social capital to obtain fulfilling, challenging and meaningful careers. A "Responsible decision" is one that entails a cost-benefit analysis - when the cost of the things you are sacrificing is equal or less than the benefit. I would imagine that you are evaluating the decisions of the have-nots based on the sacrifices that you, as a have, would have to make. Perhaps if you took a moment to realize that not everyone has the same set of opportunities of you, you would be a little less quick to deem the have-nots as "irresponsible." This is a great article. Hopefully, some readers will be spurred on to learn more about the deeper sociological and systemic issues behind this trend, as opposed to writing off a large segment of our nation as irresponsible drop outs and drug addicts.Describe Sociologist Maria Kefalas’s findings: What is your reaction to the two comments on the article, included above? 29743401333500Using the S.I.—Suicide in the U.S._________________________________ are far more likely than females and blacks to take their own lives2x as likely as ___________________________ to commit suicideIf we use an individualistic model to explain such differences, we’ll tend to see them as nothing more than a sum of individual suicidesInstead, we must look at how belonging to a group/society effects patterns of suicideright1397000Using the S.I.—Unemployment If in a region of 100,000, only 20 adults are unemployed, it’s likely a _________________________ troubleFor relief, we properly look to the character of the individuals and their skills But in a nation of 50 million employees, 15 million men are unemployed, that is a _________________________Solution is not within the range of opportunities open to any one individual, as the very structure of opportunities has collapsedRequires us to consider economic/political institutions of society, not merely the personal situation and character of an individualThe U.S. government does much to ____________________________________________________ in America, reflecting the belief that unemployment is a public issueSubsidizing educationTax breaks to job creators Unemployment insuranceRead about how the social problem of unemployment has psychological effects on the individual in “Psychological Effects of Unemployment and Underemployment,” discuss, and answer questions with pod. From the American Psychological Association, “Psychological Effects of Unemployment and Underemployment,” by Dr. Kerry Bolger, 2013.The current state of the economy continues to be an enormous stressor for Americans, with 78 percent reporting money as a significant source of stress. Unemployed workers are twice as likely as their employed counterparts to experience psychological problems such as depression, anxiety, psychosomatic symptoms, low subjective well-being and poor self-esteem. Like unemployment, underemployment (e.g., people working part-time because they cannot find full-time employment) is unequally distributed across the U.S. population, with women, younger workers and African Americans reporting higher rates of involuntary part-time employment and low pay, as well as higher proportions of “discouraged” workers who have given up on searching for a job. Unemployment not only affects those who lose their jobs. Coworkers who are still employed may experience a heavier work load and suffer from anxiety that they too will soon be unemployed. Unemployment and underemployment also affect families and communities.Effect on Families—The stress of unemployment can lead to declines in individual and family well-being. The burden of unemployment can also affect outcomes for children. The stress and depressive symptoms associated with job loss can negatively affect parenting practices such as increasing punitive and arbitrary punishment. As a result, children report more distress and depressive symptoms. Depression in children and adolescents is linked to multiple negative outcomes, including academic problems, substance abuse, high-risk sexual behavior, physical health problems, impaired social relationships and increased risk of suicide. Additionally, the effect of chronic joblessness is generational: Children of the unemployed get less education and have more trouble finding jobs when they enter the workforce.Effect on Communities—Widespread unemployment in neighborhoods reduces resources, which may result in inadequate and low-quality housing, underfunded schools, restricted access to services and public transportation, and limited opportunities for employment, making it more difficult for people to return to work. Unemployed persons also report less neighborhood belonging than their employed counterparts, a finding with implications for neighborhood safety and community well-being.High unemployment and growing income inequalities are key factors in declining social climate. The United Nations claimed that growing social inequality fueled by extended, global unemployment will increase social unrest and tension and a growing sense of unfairness. Increasing inequality in advanced economies is fundamentally linked to growing rates of physical, emotional, social and political disorder.Unemployment and Stress in Different Populations—Unemployment does not affect all groups equally. Rates are higher among Latinos/as (13.1%) and African Americans (15.7%) than European Americans (9.5%). Immigrants and people with disabilities are also especially vulnerable to layoffs as are those without college degrees. Unemployed women report poorer mental health and lower life satisfaction than unemployed men. Women are more likely to report that they have consumed unhealthy foods, or skipped a meal as a result of stress. Women are also more likely to report physical symptoms of stress, including irritability, anger, fatigue and lack of interest or motivation and energy. In combination with other health disparities, the unequal impact of unemployment on some groups may have devastating effects on already vulnerable communities.What are some of the psychological impacts that go hand-in-hand with the social problem of unemployment?What do Sociologists Do?_________________________________ on topics such as:How institutions (education, religion, media) form, work, and socialize participantsGangs, immigrant life, ethnic subcultures, race, prisons, prejudice, gender, drug abuse, wealth inequalityIdentify forces that promote societal health and progress vs. social problems in a given society______________________________________ at home (U.S. and state legislatures) and abroad (international organizations)The Emergence of SociologyOrigins of sociological thinking can be traced to early human history; people have thought critically about their societies since ancient timesAcademic field of sociology did not become prominent until the age of ______________________________________________ in the Western world (19th-20th centuries)[Different] Focus of Sociology and Psychology—Columbine SociologyPsychology[Different] Focus of Sociology and Psychology—EducationSociologyPsychology ................
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