1 / 11

Sociology AS/A2 at High Storrs School

Sociology AS/A2 at High Storrs School. Sociology is the study of human social behaviour.

ashlyn
Download Presentation

Sociology AS/A2 at High Storrs School

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sociology AS/A2 at High Storrs School Sociology is the study of human social behaviour.

  2. The sociologist is interested in all social behaviour – work, leisure, education, family life, politics, religion, crime and deviance etcSociologists are interested in WHAT behaviour there is, and WHY it is happening.

  3. Example… Crime and deviance: • What types of crime are happening in the UK? • Are some crimes on the increase? • Do some crimes occur in certain cities, or parts of cities? • Who are the criminals? • Why are certain crimes rising or falling? • Why do people commit crime – is it linked to their age, culture, gender? • Is it because of a feeling of relative deprivation?

  4. Example 2 Why are there fewer women in prison? Is it because…. • Judges are too kind • Women commit less crime • Women are socialised with dolls and boys with guns • Women have too many responsibilities to risk getting caught

  5. Theories: • Smart (1977) • Pollack (1950) • Box (1981) • Concepts: • Chivalry Thesis • Gender Socialisation • Sentencing Policy Gender and Crime • Analyse: • Criticisms • Compare

  6. This information produced from research can be used to inform decision-making in central and local government. This may lead, for example, to new policies on how to deal with crime.

  7. Specification: AQA 1191 / 2191 • AS Module 1 (1 hour written exam)* Families & Households; • AS Module 2 (2 hour written exam) Education; Sociological Methods

  8. A2 • A2 Module 3 (1 hour 30 mins written exam) Beliefs in Society; • A2 Module 4 (2 hour written exam) Crime & Deviance; Theory & Methods

  9. How is it assessed? AS: Unit 1 – 1 hour exam (20% of A2) AS: Unit 2 – 2 hour exam (30% of A2) A2: Unit 3 – 1 hour 30 mins exam (20% of A2) A3: Unit 4 – 2 hour exam (30% of A2) No coursework!

  10. What careers can Sociology lead to? Journalism, politics, local and central government, management, law, social work, police, teaching and lecturing, social research, couselling and other professional occupations.

More Related