30528 - SOCIOLOGY
Department of Social and Political Sciences
ALEXANDER E. KENTIKELENIS
Suggested background knowledge
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
KEY CONCEPTS
- Power, Authority, Class and Socialization
- Kinship, Community, Groups and Networks
SOCIAL DYNAMICS AND INEQUALITY
- Social Stratification and Social Mobility
- Poverty & Inequality in High-Income Countries
- Global Stratification and Migration
- Public Health, Global Health & Epidemics
THE SOCIOLOGY OF ECONOMIC LIFE
- The Economy as an Instituted Process
- Labour Markets and Labour Movements
- The Global 1%
THE SOCIOLOGY OF POLITICAL LIFE
- The State and its Critics
- Welfare States in Comparative Perspective
THE SOCIOLOGY OF GLOBALIZATION
- Globalization and Challenges to the State
- The Future of States and Globalization
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Think sociologically about world phenomena.
- Differentiate sociological thinking from other disciplines.
- Use conceptual tools from sociology to explain social, political and economic dynamics.
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Apply sociological reasoning and sociological tools so that they can formulate broader or fuller explanations for social phenomena, compared to those offered by other social science disciplines.
- Interpret data in ways that problematize overly simple solutions and rely on strong explanatory frameworks.
Teaching methods
- Face-to-face lectures
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Individual assignments
DETAILS
Students may elect to write a short paper as an individual assignment (see Assessment Methods).
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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ATTENDING STUDENTS
Three take-home assignments (30% of grade each)
The three take-home essay-style assignments aim to assess students’ ability to apply the analytical tools presented during the course, to develop sociological explanations for different phenomena, and to interpret major social changes in a rigorous way. The questions will draw on the material/theories covered in classes and will invite students to develop arguments based on their own reading and any relevant empirical evidence (no independent data analysis is expected, but it can be employed). The emphasis should be on developing an argument that directly engages with the essay topic; further guidance and instructions to be offered during class 1 (see slides and syllabus).
The maximum word limit will be 1,200 words per question (no minimum). Academic-style referencing is expected, as appropriate. All assignment topics will be available via Blackboard (under “assessment”).
Final exam (10% of grade)
The short final exam will last one hour. On the final lecture of the course, we will provide a list of six key concepts introduced throughout the course, and the exam will present you with two of these: you will have to briefly define them and provide two short examples on how they can be used to explain social phenomena. Each answer should be no more than 200 words (one paragraph).
Optional: Short assignment (0-1 extra point)
Students may elect to write a short assignment on the topic of inequality to boost their grades. This will take the form of a hypothetical ‘explainer’ blog post for a policy think tank. Example topics include: ‘Changing inequality patterns in Italy — here is what you need to know,’ ‘The gender pay gap in Turkey — here is what you need to know,’ ‘The impact of the 2015 refugee inflows on wages in Germany — here is what you need to know’…
The precise topic should be tailored to your interests, as long as it relates to inequality in a meaningful way: you should review the evidence on your chosen topic and weave it together into a coherent narrative (while acknowledging any gaps in our knowledge). Further guidance will be provided in class 1.
Short assignments will be graded as follows: excellent (adds 1 point to your final mark), good (adds 0.5 point to your final mark), poor (does not alter your final mark). Length should be approximately 700 words.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Final written exam (100%)
The final exam includes two types of questions:
- 16 multiple choice questions.
- 2 essay-style questions (7 points each).
The questions cover all topics of the course. Please see mandatory readings and material covered in the lectures.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Students are provided with a selection of readings on the course Bboard site.
NICOLETTA BALBO
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
First part
- What is Sociology?
- Sociological perspectives.
- Asking and answering sociological questions.
- Research methods.
- Social norms.
- Socialization and social interactions.
- Crime and Deviance
- Gender and sexuality.
- Globalization.
- Environment.
- Cities and urban life.
Second part:
- Work and The Economy.
- The life course.
- Families.
- Health.
- Stratification and social class.
- Poverty.
- Global inequality.
- Race and ethnicity.
- Religion.
- Education.
- Digital revolution.
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Autonomously and critically search, and understand, sociological research on a wide range of topics, with diverse methodological approaches, linking this research to wider knowledge across the spectrum of social sciences.
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Cast sociological explanatory hypotheses on a wide range of social phenomena, in particular concerning policy-relevant issues, and to sketch research designs useful to test such hypotheses.
Teaching methods
- Face-to-face lectures
- Interactive class activities (role playing, business game, simulation, online forum, instant polls)
DETAILS
- Interactive class activities: in almost every lecture there are interactive class activties, such as role playing, puzzles to be solved in group, designing online surveys.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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x | x | |
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x | x |
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Students can choose between two options:
- A written exam or two partial exams (each with a 2/5 weight towards the overall grade), plus a short paper, written individually or together with another student (with a 1/5 weight towards the overall grade).
- A written exam, either taken through two partial exams (each with a 1/2 weight towards the overall grade) or one general exam (with a 100% weight towards the overall grade).
- Exams: written exams includes both short answers and essay-style questions. The questions cover theory, and interpretation of the results of applied research. The exam cover all topics of the course. Material covered in the lectures, in the text book and other set readings may be included in the exam.
- Project (optional): the project may be conducted by students working alone or in couple. It is worth 1/5 of your grade. Students working in couple receive the same grade. The grade you obtain in the project is valid for one-year cycle. The maximum length of the project is 1,500 words. You are required to design a sociological research project that can be carried out in two alternative ways:
- Applied project: by using secondary data (Europena Social Survey dataset), statistical analyses, interpreting the results and drawing independent conclusions based on sociological theory and hypotheses.
- Critical review project: by making a review of the literature on a specific topic; comparing results from two papers that adopt different theoretical approaches, and/or methods, and/or study different populations (e.g. countries); highlighting similarities and/or differences; drawing independent conclusions.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
- Book: A. GIDDENS, P.W. SUTTON, Sociology, Polity, 8th Edition.
- Readings: a set of readings and lecture slides are available on Bboard.