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Soc 100S Social Issues
(4-0) 4
This introductory course
seeks to examine the extent to which the crisis of institutions
creates personal problems in our everyday lives. Conversely, it
will explore the degree to which our personal troubles foster institutional
contradictions. Topics for study may include the workplace, the
environment, inequality, sexism, racism, health care, criminal justice,
education, alienation, and social services. Fall and winter terms.
Soc 101 American Society
(1-0) 1
This course introduces
international students to contemporary American society through
a sociological analysis of the changing patterns of family, community,
work, gender, and education in the U.S. and Japan. This sociological
perspective on U.S. society will deepen students' understanding
of the society in which they will be living and attending college.
This course is taught in English. This course is repeatable for
up to 2 credits.
Prerequisite:
Consent of the instructor.
Soc 200 Social Change
And Human Services (4-0) 4
This course is designed
to facilitate critical understanding of, and commitment to, processes
of social change in modern society. Using historical and theoretical
analysis of social change efforts, students are encouraged to embrace
and develop models of change that take seriously the personal and
social dimensions of human struggle. The role and responsibility
of human service agencies in social change/community development
is also considered. Field work is required.
Soc 210W Social Inquiry
And Research Methods (4-0) 4
An introduction to quantitative
methods used in social science this course serves as one of the
Writing Courses for the Department of Sociology/Human Services.
The appropriateness and application of various methods will be emphasized.
Data collection, reduction, analysis and interpretation will be
covered. Emphasis will also focus on interviewing, participant observation,
and ethnographic approaches to data collection, and the development
of descriptions and interpretations of social settings.
Prerequisites:
Consent of instructor and concurrent registration in Soc 320 and
Soc 421.
Soc 250R Social Issues
In Contemporary Native Societies (4-0) 4
An examination of the
social, political, and economic circumstances of both urban and
rural native societies worldwide. Emphasis will be on the United
States. Topics may include indigenous peoples in cities, tribal
councils, environmental racism, criminal justice, social services,
youth, international indigenous issues and networks.
Soc 275S Families,
Marriages, And Other Sex-Role Systems (4-0) 4
Analysis of changing
patterns of family life and sex roles in contemporary society, of
the social sources of these changes, and of their societal and individual
consequences.
Soc 279R Ethnicity,
Gender, And Class In The Southwest (4-0) 4
A descriptive analytic
inquiry into the historical, social, and economic position of the
Hispanics, Native Americans, and women of the Southwest.
Soc 280S Popular Culture
And Mass Communication (4-0) 4
An inquiry into both
the production and the consumption of popular culture. Attention
will be paid to cultural power as a force for domination as well
as a condition for collective affirmation and struggle. Topics include
popular music, radio and television programs, news media, comic
strips, and pulp fiction.
Soc 300W Theories
Of Social And Personal Life (4-0) 4
This course will critically
examine the classical and contemporary theories of self and society.
The major paradigms of functionalism, Marxism, symbolic interactionism,
structuralism, ethnomethodology, and critical and feminist theory
will be evaluated. This course serves as the Writing Course for
Humanities majors seeking a primary concentration in Sociology/Human
Services.
Soc 301 Comparative
Societies (4-0) 4
A comparative study of
the social structures of selected countries and regions within the
first, second, and third worlds. Comparisons will be made of societies
within selected regions as well as their relationships to US. society.
Selected countries and regions will include: Cuba and the Caribbean,
the Andean countries, China, Japan, etc. Students may repeat the
course for credit provided the topic is different on each occasion.
Soc 310 Ecology And
Society (4-0) 4
This course will examine
environmental issues and the natural world from a cultural and socioeconomic
perspective. It will attempt to study the ideas, conceptions, practices,
and beliefs that relate people to the land and their collective
environment. Finally, it will look at environmental concerns from
the perspective of workers, minorities, and rural and urban communities
both in America and worldwide.
Soc 311 Ecology And
Society Field School 8
This course offers a
field experience in the relationship between people and the land.
Students will work on farms and in the U.S. National Forest. They
will meet with Anglos, Hispanics, and Native Americans in rural
communities. One week will be spent in the National Forest learning
to identify wildlife and its habitat.
Soc 320 Community
Service Practicum 4-8
This course provides
the student with experience in applied sociology. Students will
be involved in human services, applied social research or other
activities approved by the advisor and practicum coordinator. The
emphasis is upon gaining experiential knowledge through active participation
in sociological practice and sharing this in a classroom experience.
Practicum may be taken for 4 or 8 credits per term and for a maximum
of 16 credits. A maximum of 8 credits can be applied toward the
major in Sociology.
Prerequisites:
Consent of instructor.
Soc 330 Mind, Self,
And Society (4-0) 4
An examination into the
ways in which society influences the self and the individual produces
society. The relationship between consciousness and social structure
will be discussed. Theoretical focus may include symbolic interactionism,
ethnomethodology and/or a Marxist perspective.
Soc 340 Religion And
Social Life (4-0) 4
An examination of, principally,
contemporary religious phenomena from the viewpoint of social science.
The course will also examine the significance of religious studies
in the development of reasoning about society.
Soc 345 Art And Society
(4-0) 4
An inquiry into the relationship
between any historically specific art and the social setting in
which it was created. The idea that art is a way of seeing a world
view, or a theoretic, will be explored. The focus of the course
may be literature, the visual arts, music, theater, or film.
Soc 350 Search For
Intimacy (4-0) 4
This course will examine
the cultural and institutional obstacles to intimacy. Class, gender,
and race as historical categories will play their part in discussion
and analysis. The idea that intimacy is something that only applies
to romantic relations but not to larger social and community concerns
will be examined.
Soc 353 Medical Sociology
(4-0) 4
A study of the social
practices and beliefs which define and constitute the phenomena
of health and illness. The current health care delivery system,
including professional roles, patient participation, administration,
medical education and planning, will be critically reviewed, and
alternatives will be explored. This course is recommended for pre-health
majors as well as social science majors.
Soc 361 Deviance (4-0)
4
An examination of the
traditional versions of deviance followed by modern critiques which
emphasize "labeling" and the more phenomenological approaches to
understanding human conduct.
Soc 362 Criminology
And Criminal Justice (4-0) 4
An examination of the
major "positivist" theories of crime and criminality (individual,
familial, subcultural) followed by the modern critique of positivist
criminology emphasizing the part played by the administration of
criminal justice as an integral part of the characterizing and structuring
of crime.
Soc 363 Juvenile Delinquency
(4-0) 4
A review of contemporary
thinking about the development of juvenile delinquency and the linkages
between juvenile delinquency and the administration of juvenile
justice.
Soc 375 Sociology
Of Education (4-0) 4
Study of the organization
and practices of educational institutions and of the transformation
these institutions are now undergoing. Special attention to the
nature of these changes and their impact on the learning process
as well as their consequences for the larger society will be explored.
Soc 376 Language And
Social Behavior (4-0) 4
A concentrated look at
the social function of language use in society. The extent to which
languages create social reality will receive scrutiny. Particular
topics may include language and social class, language and sex,
linguistic politics, language and culture, or language cognition
and development.
Soc 380 Work And Authority
In Society (4-0) 4
This course will explore
the extent to which meaningful work is possible in any society.
It will seek to account for the forms of authority in work and describe
the impact that hierarchical structures have on the individual.
Soc 383 Women In Society
(4-0) 4
This course focuses on
where American women in various class and ethnic categories stand
in society now, compared not only to men but also to their mothers
and grandmothers. It takes into account economic status, educational
and job opportunities, family responsibilities, physical well-being
and reproductive rights. It includes a significant portion of feminist
theory, which serves as the vehicle for an ongoing analysis of the
ways in which political, economic, and other social structures,
as well as psychological factors such as gender attitudes, have
effected the status of women, historically.
Soc 421 Contemporary
Social Analysis In The Southwest (4-0) 4
A seminar in the application
of theories of social change, social knowledge, and research into
regional issues in the Southwest. Topics may vary but will critically
address issues of water, energy, agriculture, urbanization, inequality,
public morality, politics, education, and community.
Prerequisites:
Concurrent registration in Soc 210W and Soc 320 and consent of instructor.
Soc 496 Senior Seminar
(4-0) 4
Advanced study and research
in selected topics. The student will prepare and submit a senior
seminar research paper to qualify for graduation.
Soc 499 Independent
Study 1-6
Tutorial or individual
research conducted in consultation with a member of the Sociology/Human
Services faculty. Topic must be clearly defined in a written contract
between student and faculty member.
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