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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to basic research methods used in social research. Conceptualization and operationalization of research problems. Examination of various research designs used to collect data. Introduction to sampling, instrumentation, data processing, data analysis, and report production. Prerequisite(s): 980:001. (Offered Fall and Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Focus on the social organization of health care and the social psychological aspects of health, illness, and dying. Analyses of the social construction and distribution of illness, the structure of care, and the experience of health, illness, and dying. Prerequisite(s): 980:001; junior standing. (Variable)
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3.00 Credits
Comparative multi-disciplinary perspective on international migration and immigrant settlement strategies, with a focus on Western Europe and the United States. Topics cover the main theoretical and contemporary debates within the field of international migration. Prerequisite(s): 980:001; junior standing. (Variable)
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3.00 Credits
Personal, interpersonal, and societal factors in the human aging process; emphasis on family, community, and governmental responsibility in defining and resolving problems of the aged in modern industrial society. Prerequisite(s): 980:001; junior standing. (Offered Fall)
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3.00 Credits
Examination of men's lives from boys to men in such roles as friends, lovers, co-workers, family members, students, athletes, consumers, and soldiers. Consideration of diversities of male experiences through such categories as race, ethnicity, religion, class, sexual orientation, age, physical ability, and appearance. Prerequisite(s): junior standing. (Variable)
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3.00 Credits
Origin, development, and characteristics of systems of social inequality and stratification. Examination of class and caste systems, interactions between varying classes and status groups, the effects of social mobility, and theories of inequality. Prerequisite(s): 980:001; junior standing. (Offered Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Culture permeates our lives, as a powerful and everyday force in society. Covers classical and contemporary theory, the high and popular culture debate, and the production and reception/consumption of culture. Prerequisite(s): 980:001 or 990:011; junior standing. (Offered Fall)
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Research participation and/or independent supervised research. May be repeated for maximum of 6 hours. Prerequisite(s): 15 hours in sociology including 980:080 and 980:108; junior standing; consent of instructor and department head. (Offered Spring, Fall, and Summer)
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3.00 Credits
Examination of issues of resource depletion and environmental degradation from socio-ecological perspective. Emphasis on interaction between these problems and patterns of social organization, and impacts of these problems on quality of life. Prerequisite(s): 980:001; junior standing. (Offered Fall)
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3.00 Credits
Sociological and sociopsychological conceptualizations of the genesis, dynamics, and demise of modern social movements. Emphasis on reformist, utopian, nativistic, and totalitarian organizations. Prerequisite(s): 980:001; junior standing. (Variable)
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