| Social Science Requirements
Every student must successfully complete 6 credits in a single
department: African-American and African Studies, Anthropology,
Criminal Justice, Economics, Political Science, Psychology, Social
Work, or Sociology. The following courses fulfill the social
sciences requirement:
21&62:920:201. INTRODUCTION TO
SOCIOLOGY, I (3)
Study of society: social structure, culture, and social interaction;
the nature and historical developments of modern forms of social
organization and social relationships.
and one of the following:
21&62:920:316. RACE AND ETHNICITY IN MULTICULTURAL SOCIETIES
(3)
Comparative view of ethnic relations; origins in migration and
mixture of populations; social-psychological consequences of stratification
along racial and ethnic lines; prejudice; special emphasis on black
Americans.
21&62:920:321. SUBURBS, CITIES, AND INNER CITIES (3)
The city as a mosaic of communities; persistence and change in
the structure of urban neighborhoods; city life and the urban personality;
the sociology of community planning; the future of neighborhood,
suburb, and city.
21&62:920:326. AMERICAN SOCIETY/AMERICAN COMMUNITIES -
STRUCTURES and CHANGE.
Sociology Major Requirements
The requirements for the major include:
1. 38 credits in Sociology (920). Courses in Anthropology can also be applied as electives toward the sociology major. Courses in other social science departments may apply as electives at the discretion of the Sociology department. Students must consult with an advisor when declaring the Sociology major.
2. All majors are required to successfully pass (with a grade of “C” or better) Sociology core courses:
21&62:920:201 Introduction to Sociology (3)
21&62:920:301-302 Social Research I, II (4, 4)
21&62:920:409 Classical Sociological Theory (3)
21&62:920:415 Contemporary Sociological Theory (3)
3. Students who wish to major in Sociology must take a research methodology sequence. This requirement can be met through Social Research Methods in Sociology (Soc 301 & 302), or Research Methods in Criminal Justice (CJ 301 & 302), or Statistical Methods in Psychology (Psych 301 & 302).
4. Sociology majors are also required to successfully pass at least 5 additional courses (15 credits) in Sociology or Anthropology for their elective credits. Elective credits may also be earned in Criminal Justice, Economics, Political Science, Psychology, and Social Work courses with the explicit approval of the Sociology department.
5. Students who double-major in Sociology and another discipline must successfully pass the required courses for the major and are required to get approval from a Sociology advisor before applying courses from the other major toward the Sociology major. Students who specifically double-major in Sociology and Criminal Justice, Political Science, Psychology, or Social Work must successfully pass at least 4 Sociology elective courses in addition to the required courses in order to received credit towards the sociology major. Note: Where it is required, double-majors are only required to take the research methodology sequence (301-302) once to satisfy the requirements of both majors.
Candidates for graduate school are advised to take a foreign language and/or advance courses in mathematics/statistics.
All Sociology Courses:
21&62:920:201. INTRODUCTION TO
SOCIOLOGY, I (3)
Study of society: social structure, culture, and social interaction;
the nature and historical developments of modern forms of social
organization and social relationships.
21&62:920:202. INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY, II (3)
Critical themes in modern sociology. Emphasis on communities, minorities,
education, religion, leisure, the family, and the economy.
21&62:920:209. CRIME AND JUSTICE IN AMERICAN SOCIETY (3)
Analysis of major criminal justice institutions in American society;
the function of courts, police, and judicial systems in helping
or impairing the fair administration of criminal law.
21&62:920:301-302. SOCIAL RESEARCH I, II (4,4)
Lec. 3 hrs., lab. 3 hrs. Prerequisites: 21&62:920:201, 202,
or equivalent. The art and the science of doing research; how to
develop a researchable question (hypothesis construction and causal
modeling); how to collect (observation, surveys, experiments, and
secondary analysis) and analyze data (statistics); and how to write
a scientific report. Independent research project required.
21&62:920:303. SOCIAL CHANGE AND GLOBALIZATION (3)
Causes and consequences of change, as it touches individuals, small
groups, communities, organizations, and societies; analyzes intended
and unforeseen changes in both current social relations and the
history of social structures.
21&62:920:304. SOCIAL PROBLEMS (3)
Social problems facing Americans today; causes and processes underlying
these problems; evaluation of proposed solutions.
21&62:920:306. MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY (3)
The institution of the family; emphasis on the modern American
family and the current search for alternatives to the traditional
monogamous family.
21&62:920:307. SOCIAL PROTEST AND REVOLUTION (3)
Problem of order in social groups and entire societies; the production
and enforcement of norms; the role of authority in social life;
institutional integration and disintegration; oppression, revolution,
and normative reconstruction.
21&62:920:308. SOCIAL PROTEST AND REVOLUTION (SOCIAL MOVEMENTS)
(3)
The manifestations of social change as they appear in diffuse collective
behavior and subsequent reintegrative social movements.
21&62:920:310. OCCUPATIONS AND PROFESSIONS (3)
Variations in cultural definitions of work, attitudes toward careers,
and the social environment of work; the development of professions;
occupational and professional recruitment.
21&62:920:311. SOCIOLOGY OF THE ECONOMY AND INDUSTRY (3)
Development and significance of modern industry and bureaucracy;
division of labor; growth of corporations; interplay of formal and
informal organization; sources of labor supply; the role of labor
unions in industrial conflict; economic classes and status positions
in large-scale organizations.
21&62:920:313. CRIMINOLOGY (3)
Crime and criminals in modern society, including causes of crime;
machinery of justice; penal and correctional institutions; probation
and parole; theories of crime and punishment.
21&62:920:314. BUREAUCRACY AND SOCIETY (3)
Causes and consequences of organizations; internal arrangements;
effects of environment; organizational performances and effects
on people.
21&62:920:315. THE PERSON IN SOCIETY (3)
The interaction between the development of the self and the social
environment in which it occurs.
21&62:920:316. RACE AND ETHNICITY IN MULTICULTURAL SOCIETIES
(3)
Comparative view of ethnic relations; origins in migration and
mixture of populations; social-psychological consequences of stratification
along racial and ethnic lines; prejudice; special emphasis on black
Americans.
21&62:920:318. SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH CARE (3)
The health care system in the U.S.; social behavior of patients
and providers within the system; the role of the patient in the
delivery of health care; the health professions; health service
organizations.
21&62:920:327. PUBLIC OPINION AND COMMUNICATION (3)
Content and transmission of popular culture from a sociological
perspective; evaluation of selected forms of popular art and their
place in American culture; theories on the social evolution of popular
forms from folk and elite cultures; methods employed in analysis
of mass culture.
21&62:920:332. CLASS, STATUS, AND POWER (3)
Theories of inequality, social ranking, and the distribution of
resources and opportunity as they affect individuals and groups
in terms of crime, health, family life, and value systems.
21&62:920:333. JUNIOR READINGS IN SOCIOLOGY (3)
Prerequisites: Junior or senior standing, and permission of instructor.
Critical readings and discussions of a group of classic works in
the field of sociology and social research.
21&62:920:336. PUNISHMENT AND PRISONS (3)
Examines and analyzes major types of custodial and community-based
criminal corrections in contemporary America. Discusses purposes
of corrections, correctional organization, impact of corrections,
and contemporary issues facing the field.
21&62:920:337. SOCIOLOGY OF SEX AND GENDER (3)
Relative statuses and roles of men and women in American society,
including socialization; historical overview of sex statuses; differentials
between males and females in educational and occupational sectors;
personal relationships; sexuality.
21&62:920:338. SOCIOLOGY OF DEATH AND DYING (3)
Social factors that influence death and dying in the U.S.; characteristics
of patients, professional staff, and institutions as these relate
to the dying process and the definition of death; the routinization
of death; the impact of technology on dying; current issues in the
field.
21&62:920:340. SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION (3)
Social influences on religious organizations and religious beliefs;
aims and methods in the study of churches, sects, cults, and civil
religions.
21&62:920:344. SOCIOLOGY OF DEVIANCE (3)
Forms of social deviance; theories of deviant behavior; the amount
and distribution of deviance in society; societal reaction to deviants
and deviant behavior.
21&62:920:345. SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION (3)
The interaction between schools and society; basic social concepts
such as stratification, social role, and bureaucratic organization
as they relate to the educational system; the system in relation
to the larger institutions in the society, with emphasis on both
stated objectives and actual social functions.
21&62:920:346. POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY (3)
Perspectives on the nature, organization, and historical development
of power in society; social dimensions of the state, democratic
politics, and political change; consequences of the social organization
of power for other elements of society.
21&62:920:349. LAW AND SOCIETY (3)
Law as a social institution; social processes in the creation and
enforcement of law; the professions of law; law as product and producer
of social change; ancient and modern legal institutions; modern
societies and their legal systems.
21&62:920:354. APPLYING SOCIOLOGY (3)
Sociological practicum; the sociological meaning of the practical
experiences in work, internships, volunteer programs, and other
"real world" organizational settings.
21&62:920:375. POVERTY AND GROWTH IN AFRICA, ASIA, & LATIN
AMERICA (3)
Comparative study of the developed and the less-developed nations,
and of what separates the two; the growth of nationalism; the emergence
of new elites; the roles of higher education and the military in
development; the sociological determinants of economic growth; modernity
as an individual and societal characteristic.
21&62:920:380. CIVIL CONFLICT AND VIOLENCE (3)
Analyzes conflict as a normal process in social life; the emergence
and dynamics of conflict; the effects of conflict on individual
values and social structures; the processes of conflict resolution;
individual, group, and inter-social conflicts.
21&62:920:386. SOCIOLOGY OF SCIENCE (3)
Social organization of scientific knowledge; organization of scientific
communities; inequalities among scientists; effects of scientific
knowledge on modern ways of life.
62:920:393,394. TOPICAL ISSUES IN SOCIOLOGY (3,3)
Topics vary each term. Consult department for current information.
21&62:920:395. FIELD RESEARCH METHODS (3)
Non-quantitative observational and participant-observational research
techniques.
21&62:920:408. SENIOR READING IN SOCIOLOGY (3)
Prerequisites: Senior standing and permission of instructor. Critical
reading and discussion of monographs and journal literature dealing
with selected issues in the field of sociology.
21&62:920:409. CLASSICAL SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY (3)
Foundations of social theory; Comte, Durkheim, Marx, Weber, and
other contributors to major orientations in the nature and historical
development of modern society in the Western world.
21&62:920:415. CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY (3)
Prerequisite: 21&62:920:409 or permission of instructor. Current
modes of theoretical analysis, and contemporary perspectives on
the nature and historical development of modern forms of social
organization and social relationships.
21&62:920:454. TOPICS IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE (3)
In-depth exploration of selected issues in criminal justice of
general relevance and specific interest to course participants.
21&62:920:491,492. RESEARCH IN SOCIOLOGY (3,3)
Prerequisites: Junior or senior standing, and permission of instructor.
21&62:920:493. SEMINAR IN SOCIOLOGY (3)
Prerequisites: Junior or senior standing, and permission of instructor.
Individualized study of a sociological topic.
21&62:920:494. CONFERENCE IN SOCIOLOGY (3)
Prerequisites: Junior or senior standing, and permission of instructor.
Intensive study of one topic of sociology.
21&62:920:495,496. HONORS SEMINAR IN SOCIOLOGY (3,3)
Prerequisites: Completion of 24 credits in sociology and selection
by the department as an outstanding student. For seniors who intend
to pursue graduate training in sociology. Intensive review of general
sociology and a practicum in conceptualizing and teaching it.
21&62:920:499. INDEPENDENT STUDY IN SOCIOLOGY (BA)
Prerequisites: Permission of instructor and department chairperson
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