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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course will teach students the important influences and consequences of American family life. We will consider issues such as sex and sexualities, marriage and cohabitation, divorce, family structure, same-sex marriage, domestic violence, and household labor. We will also examine the role of social institutions & social inequality in shaping family norms and constraints on family behaviors.
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3.00 Credits
This course will explore the relationship between social factors and health, illness, and mortality, with a heavy emphasis on experiences of illness, the doctor-patient relationship, and the socialization of medical students and new doctors. Social determinants of health, cultural determinants of health, and the ethics surrounding conception, birth, and death will also be discussed.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines the history of census taking and the content and form of the census from 1790 to the present. In addition, it examines how the content of the census has changed and how social, economic and other factors have influenced the content.
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3.00 Credits
This course explores the rise, reign, and fall of elite groups in human societies (the powerful, the influential, the celebrated, the stars) with emphasis on the contemporary United States. Particular themes to be addressed include power, wealth, fame, and status and the paths to achievement in different sectors of society.
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3.00 Credits
This course engages and analyzes the foundational texts of social theory from its classical roots to its contemporary branches. Students will explore theoretical approaches that inform current sociological research and during the course will examine social phenomena of particular interest to them from the perspective of two major theorists.
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3.00 Credits
Emphasizes the practical uses of statistics to answer the types of questions sociologists ask. We learn sample description, sampling and probability, sampling theory, and how to make inferences from samples to populations. We study and apply common univariate, bivariate, and multivariate statistics. Because most statistical analysis is done with the aid of computers, we also learn how to use a common statistical package.
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
Directed readings and essay writing on special subjects. Includes advanced study in subjects from other courses, if desired.
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3.00 Credits
How have shifts in ethnic and race diversity affected the way we answer the question, "who am I?" "Identities in a Diverse World" is a seminar dedicated to answering this core question by exploring the new frontiers of understanding race and ethnicity. Topics include: Racial Passing, Transracial adoption, Whiteness, and Immigration.
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3.00 Credits
Sociological research under faculty supervision. Includes first-semester review of relevant literature and the preparation of an outline for planned research, followed by second-semester research and the writing of an honors thesis. Open only to students in sociology honors program.
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3.00 Credits
Familiarizes students with the analytical tools necessary for evaluating and analyzing public policies.
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