Critical Annotations

User Generated

Nmvm456

Humanities

Description

Instructions:

First, create two columns. Then, as you read, write the author’s main ideas on the left and your reactions to those ideas on the right side of the page. Be prepared to explain the connection between your notes and the material you’ve read.

Please note the following with regard to the completion and submission of the critical annotation assignments:

1. Each week's annotations are to be submitted in ONE typed document with the chapters individually labeled and annotated and entries numbered. Please note, pictures of hand written annotations or screen shots are NOT acceptable.

2. Please review the example provided for the required format. No other format, unless specifically approved by me, will be accepted and will result in the loss of points.

3. While there is no minimum number of annotations required, your work should reflect the content of the chapter.

Example

Author’s Main Ideas A Student’s Reactions

White drove 200 miles to this bookstore. That’s a long way to drive to a bookstore.

The bookstore was in Micanopy. I found out Micanopy is in Florida.

The bookstore smelled like old books. That’s a distinctive smell that anyone can recognize.

Books were stacked everywhere. I can tell the character of the bookstore and the bookstore
owner from this detail.

A wisteria plant was crawling around the This living plant is a nice contrast to the nonliving books in bookstore. the bookstore.

Unformatted Attachment Preview

Author’s Ideas Student’s Response 1. What is considered deviant across society varies across societies? 1. Deviant isn’t always against the law. Different norms and defying them is different for certain people. 2. Cesare Lombroso- thought that deviants were, if effect, biological failures. 2. How could it be biological? Anyone can make a choice to be defiant. Sometimes not on purpose. 3. William Sheldon- Believe that a person’s body shapes played a role in criminality. 3. I believe that in the prison system there is every type of body shape for a criminal. How does body shape justify you as a criminal? 4. Emile Durkheim was one of the first researchers to look for the cause of deviance in terms of social rather than individual factors. 4. The people around us have a large impact on a person’s choice to commit suicide as most the time is usually something that happened in society. 5. Egoism occurs when people are not well integrated into society. 5. 6. Anomie is a situation in which people do not experience the constraint of social norms. 6. Being thrown into a place where you’re not familiar with the social norms. 7. Merton realized that anomie was not about to go away- anomie is built into the structure of modern society. 7. Every time we travel we are show the anomie in society. We have to adjust even if we don’t know the norms. 8. Adaptations of anomieConformity Innovation Ritualism Retreatism Rebellion 8. Which one you act when put in a new social structure. Forms of acceptance. 9. Sociologists have noticed the one generally learns to be deviant through a kind of socialization. 10. Learning to do it, learning to perceive it and learning to enjoy it. 10. Three separate social process. 11. Labeling theorist takes note of the fact that being judged and label deviant has significant consequences for people’s behavior. 9. An outcast? A person being secluded and not being apart or experiencing the social norms? Normally one wouldn’t do something unless they are exposed to it otherwise how would they know? 11. If you’re going to be called a certain title and that’s what people see in you then why not what they already assume of you do. Science and Fuzzy Objects Specialization in Sociology Sociological Eye The Science of Sociology “The sign of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposing views at the same time” F. Scott Fitzgerald Sociologists do not always have the exact answer Sometimes it is best to talk in probabilities – Why? (think about the sociological imagination) The world is constantly changing and these changes effect phenomena and events – Examples Dating Communication Daily organization Some Topics in Sociology Gangs Marriage Dating Domestic violence Deviance Crime Music Art Athletes Education Career choices Alcohol and Violence Unionizing/labor laws Inequality Clothing/fashion Entertainment Theoretical Perspectives (paradigms) Functionalism – 3 assumptions – General consensus of social norms and values – Society is a system of interrelated parts – Society seeks stability and balance – conflict is dysfunctional Conflict (in response to Functionalism) 3 assumptions – Differing groups/differing values and norms – Society is made-up of conflicting groups vying for power (competition) – Conflict is normal – society is never harmonious Theoretical Perspectives Symbolic Interactionism (social constructionists) – People act in accordance to their understanding of reality – People learn from others in what is “normal” and what is “right” (socialization) – People are constantly adjusting their behavior through watching others and reflecting upon themselves (looking glass) – When norms and values differ there will be conflict and misunderstandings Levels of Analysis Micro vs. Macro analysis – Micro looks at individual and small group interactions – and their influences on individuals and groups but also on larger structures/institutions – Macro – looks at larger structures and their influences on the larger social world but also on group behavior Quantitative vs. Qualitative Quantitative – numerical, statistical and specific Qualitative – personal and in-depth Who’s Afraid of Sociology? Chapter 4 What to study? Empirical – refers to things that can be observed through the use of one’s physical senses – sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell. Inconvenient facts – contradictions to your beliefs (folk knowledge) – Democrats wear suits – If you hold your face like that it will stay that way More Inconvenient Facts The majority of adults who sexually abuse children are heterosexual Whether students get into college has more to do with their parents’ socioeconomic standing than with their own intelligence or high school grades Friendships between people of different races are as stable as friendships between people of the same race The death penalty does not have an appreciable effect on a country’s murder rate – it cost more to put a person to death than to keep them in prison for life - Ethnocentrism The process of judging other peoples and their customs and norms as inferior to one’s own people, customs and norms. – Can cause prejudice, discrimination, genocide – Can create solidarity, unity Examples – some religions, Nazi Germany – In regard to research ethnocentrism prevents understanding a community, culture, event or way of knowing in the context of their society Culture shock – Bad/unfair data Any examples? – biker research (bar) – deaf community Cultural Relativism Is the belief that other people and their ways of doing things can be understood only in terms of the cultural context of those people Sociology is not about who and what is right or wrong – good or bad - it is about understanding what things are and why The Vocabulary of Science Chapter 5 The Vocabulary of Science Variables (concepts) – either influences or is influenced by another thing (variable). – – – – Gender influences occupation Religious affiliation influences political affiliation Income is influenced by race Independent variable (cause) influences dependent variable (effect) Hypotheses Hypotheses are not necessarily true or false they are used as a way to test an assumption – an expect relationship Go to page 61 and 62 and answer 5.2, and 5.3 Examples of independent and dependent variables Go to page 65 and answer 5.4 Directionality Positive and Negative Relationships Variables that vary in the same direction have positive relationships Variable that vary in opposite direction have negative relationships Operationalization Transforming the variables into things that can be observed and measured – Rule one: The list of attributes must be exhaustive – Rule two: The list of attributes must be mutually exclusive (can only fit into one category) Some problems with operational definitions – How do you operationalize love, happiness, etc Tables, Figures and Graphs Be skeptical – view the materials yourself and ask questions Read the table etc.. carefully – look for the variables and how they are represented Determine the source of the data Read and all accompanying notes and footnotes Look for trends Tables and Charts Review each chart/table and identify ALL of the variables under consideration. If possible, identify the independent and dependent variables. Write out the relationships (long hand hypotheses) as shown in the data presented. (see exercise 5.2 needed)
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