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Understanding Society (SOCI10001)
Undergraduate level 1Points: 12.5On Campus (Parkville)
Overview
Availability | Semester 1 |
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This subject introduces big ideas in sociology that help to explain the key changes and challenges facing contemporary societies. You will be encouraged to develop what C Wright-Mills describes as a 'sociological imagination'. This framework focuses on how our identities and life trajectories are shaped by social institutions and historical changes. Society in the 21st century is being reshaped by new movements of people, cultures and finance across the world and the rise of new technologies, new identity categories and new political struggles over issues like climate change. This context is redefining who we are, how we work, how we build intimate relationships, and how we live together. In this context categories such as gender, class and the family are becoming unstable, leading to new and difficult-to-chart experiences and new forms of inequality.
Through in-class discussions and collaboration with peers, you will critically examine these real-world issues using a number of key concepts including social change, power and conflict, inequality, identity, risk, individualisation, and networks.
Understanding Society is available as a Bachelor of Arts Discovery subject, supporting your introduction to university and fostering connections within your course. If you are taking this as your Discovery subject, you will need to concurrently complete the three compulsory Joining Melbourne modules.
Intended learning outcomes
On completion of this subject, students should be able to:
- Discuss the sociological nature of social relationships and institutions; patterns of social diversity and inequality; as well as processes that underpin social change and stability
- Identify the main approaches in classical and contemporary sociology and explain their development in particular social, historical and world contexts
- Develop sociological arguments by using evidence, evaluating competing explanations, and drawing conclusions
- Apply sociological theories, concepts and evidence to sociological questions within complex and changing social contexts
- Communicate sociological principles and knowledge effectively in written format
- Engage in critical debates about different sociological explanations of society.
Generic skills
On completion of this subject, students should be able to:
- Communicate effectively in written form
- Generate original ideas and solutions
- Enhance research skills through sourcing appropriate information using databases
- Exercise critical thinking and analysis in evaluating information
- Develop reasoned arguments
- Engage in rigorous and respectful debate.
Last updated: 11 December 2024