systematicandscientificstudy of the social word around us
what are functionalist
how componentpartmakesupsociety to operate functionally to its members and maintenance of society as a whole
what is Interactionist
try to understand the meaningbehindindividualactions instead of society as a whole
what is the Feministtheory
looks at genderinequitiesinsociety and the way that gender structures the social world
(particularly women's social roles .how Women face DISCRIMINATION, OBJECTIFICATION, OPPRESSION, AND STEREOTYPING)
Liberal Feminism
views gender inequality as stemming from the ignorance of men that derives from the strength of socialisation and 'sex role conditioning'
Marxist Feminism
economic dependence women have on men has been created by capitalism
This serves 2 function:
Provide cheapfemale workers who can be exploited even more than men
Ensure household chores are done cheaply
When women enter workforce they traditionally work in low paid, low status, mainly part time jobs (can now be viewed as simplistic and changing)
They argue the solution to women oppression is the abolition of capitalism. Eradicate double oppression of patriarchy in home and economic exploitation in the workplace
Radical Feminist
' sexual politics' -power relations between men and women - women are opressed by men within a home and need to break this imbalance power by challenging and eradicating the prevailing system of patriarchy/'sisterhood'
They see gender as a shared class identity . Argues women share the same sec class position because they are controlled and sometimes abused by the violence of men
Black Feminism
whitefeminist fail to recognise some women were pressed not only by patriarchy but racism
postmodernist feminists
shift towards an increasing gender equality, society made feminism no longer relevant
New Right Theory
believes that only the traditional two-parent family (nuclear family) structure can raise well-adjusted children, and the reduction of this may lead to problems in society like crimeandpoverty.
Postmodernists
today society is different to the industrial revolution
what needs to be in a 'sociological research'
representative- group of people being studied need to share characteristic of the larger or target population
generalisable-the infomation collected about smaller groups can be applied to larger groups
based on evedince
be verifiable (can it be tested )
be able to cross-referenced (checked against other findings)
qualitative research
sample small number of people taking derailed account of their emotions and behaviour
Quantitative research
research that collects and reports data primarily in numerical form
what are positivism theory
wants to replicate methods of natural sciences , likes quantitative data.
age, ethnicity etc does not affect behaviour
knowlege is gained through traditionalscientific methods and observations
behaviour is result of social forces which is observed and measured
what are Interpretivist theory
-world and reality is a socialconstruct(in our head)
-shift in meaning can influence a personbehaviour
-observations, unstructured interviews, documents
-wants to gain empathy and know their feelings
-behaviour is a result of decisions that peoplemake
-people attract meaning to their behavioy
what is realism
combination of Interperativist and positivist (triangulation) to check both reliability and validity
what are questionnaires
set of questions in a writtenformat. self-administered
what are interviews
a researcher directly asking questions to one or more interviewees
what is participant observation (overt)
the observer acts as a member of the group
e.g. pretending to be a student to study how the actual students behave
what is non-participant observation (covert)
the observer is an outsider of the group looking in
e.g. observing a class room of kids to see how they behave
what are experiments?
scientific method, seeking to establish a cause-effect relationship in between 2 variables by testing a hypothesis
e.g. the sociologist might expose the experimental group of students to tutoring while the control group does not receive tutoring
documents
secondary qualitative data
e.g. diaries, painting, public records etc
what is official statistic?
secondary data collected by the government or other official body
what is a pilot study
a trial run of a research method, usually with a very small sample, in order to ensure that the method will work as intended.
what are samples?
smaller group of people who will be studied, taken from a broader targetpopulation
functionalist perspective
Charles darwin- Society is made up of social institutions (family, education, work) that are interrelated and interdependent.
Durkheim- Collective conscience describes moral values that were core to any society
Talcott parson- socialization is a consensus value, commitment to common mortality (core values) ensures social order
Parsons- argued 4 sub-system: economic, political, kindship and culture. This is so society can be healthy and survive. 4 problems: adaption, goal attainment, integration and latency
Marxism
Like functionalism, Response to modernism, observed new industrial society of capitalism
Structure that makes up society , operation of society as a system. Preoccupied with the economic system of capitalism
Marxist perspective
conflict analysis of society. Centerd around class conflict
Capitalism as merely a stage or ‘epoch’ in the history of human development
End of history will be truly equal communist society
Marx argued – class conflict, all societies are class societies with dominant and subordinate class. They can never coincide. The subordinate class will seize power and overthrow.
Dominant class is bourgeoisie
Ideologies can preventing workers see their true class position – media, religion, education and family – divert people attentions away from revolutionary thoughts
marxist critics
Critics argue people make their own history and the assumed future of communism cant be predicted
Functionalist argue they place too much emphasis on conflict at the expense of recognising the fair amount of consenus in society
Feminist argues ,focusing solely on class ignores gender relations
What are Interactionist 3 key characters
Focuses on interaction between individuals (called actors) and the world (the ‘stage’ where actors perform variety of roles)
Actions of individuals (why people choose to behave ,’voluntaristic’ behaviour) rather than the structure in which they operate (family obligations, compulsory education, speed cameras etc)
Stresses the importance of an actor’s ability to interpret the social world, arguing there is no objecting reality; world is real inside the head of each individual
Interactionist perspective
Erving Goffman – idea of the self. Regognised the discrepancy between our ‘all too human selves and our socialised selves’.tension between what people expect us to do and what we spontaneously want to do
Howard Becker- Concept of power relation and labelling theory- powerful groups can impose labels on the less powerful – labels can become self-fulfilling
There is no such thing as objective reality, reality is what is inside people heads-individual interpretations of the world.
^idea adopted subsequently by postmodernists
interactionist critics - (functionalists and marxists )
they neglecting social structures Focuses on interaction between individuals (called actors) and the world (the ‘stage’ where actors perform variety of roles)
Actions of individuals (why people choose to behave ,’voluntaristic’ behaviour) rather than the structure in which they operate (family obligations, compulsory education, speed cameras etc)
Stresses the importance of an actor’s ability to interpret the social world, arguing there is no objecting reality; world is real inside the head of each individual
postmodernist pespective
Marxist argues society is fundamentally the same capitalists system with same economic relations of class exploitation
now characterised by its preoccupation with consumerism, shopping and style
Old society centred more on production and work
Society has become considerably fragmented and individualistic – so much diversity
This allows people to make personal choices in almost every field of life
Like interactionism, postmodernism doesnt recognise objective reality (whats inside people heads)
Postmodernism rejects grand theories
what makes a good research
valid and reliable
what does Valid mean
accurately record or measure what you originally wanted to explore
what does reliable mean
applicable to a different example of the same situation and give the similar results
what makes a good sociological research design
common sense versus sociological research (needs to avoids the characteristics of common sense - must be Rigorus and based on empirical evidence)
representation (sample shares characteristic of a larger group)
generalisability (information collected on the sample can be applied to larger groups)