Identify one specific form of discrimination experienced by one of the social groups addressed in this week’s resources. What, in your opinion, could be done to help eliminate this form of discrimination?

Stratification and Social Inequality

This week’s learning resources address stratification and inequality in society (UMGC, n.d.). In your main post this week, please address the following, using this week’s learning resources:

Part 1. What is stratification and how might discrimination contribute to it? As part of your response, explain what the terms stratification and discrimination mean in your own words.

Part 2. Identify one specific form of discrimination experienced by one of the social groups addressed in this week’s resources. What, in your opinion, could be done to help eliminate this form of discrimination?

 

In terms of the presenting problem, which strengths and protective factors does the client possess that will help him/her/them progress? What risk factors and needs are present?

Roberts-Degennaro model case management

The second step in the Roberts-Degennaro model of case management is to assess your client’s strengths and needs based on the biopsychosocial assessment.

  • In terms of the presenting problem, which strengths and protective factors does the client possess that will help him/her/them progress?
  • What risk factors and needs are present?
  • How motivated does your client seem at this juncture?

The link below is a helpful quick reference from SAMHSA that outlines examples of risk and protective factors.

A thorough paragraph (7-10 sentences) is an appropriate response.

 

Which aspects of capitalism do you personally appreciate? Which do you find worrisome? What are some of the effects the United States economic system has on society as a whole? Explain.

Capitalism

Which aspects of capitalism do you personally appreciate? Which do you find worrisome? What are some of the effects the United States economic system has on society as a whole? Explain.

 

Watch the video and share your thoughts. After watching the video “Why gender-based marketing is bad for business | Gaby Barrios”, write your thoughts on the information presented.

Reflection Journal 2

Watch the video and share your thoughts. After watching the video “Why gender-based marketing is bad for business | Gaby Barrios”, write your thoughts on the information presented. Some questions to consider answering:

–What did you think of the ideas presented?
–Did any ideas not make sense to you?
–Does this relate to anything you have experienced?
–What are some other ways someone could look at this topic?

What could be the disadvantages advantages of phone or in-person interviews? Would a non-structured or structured interview be most favorable? Is this study viable?

Module 4 Option 1

Option #1: Qualitative Research
As a researcher, it’s in your interest to develop an in-depth perspective of the daily living of inmates in prisons. To execute this investigation, you need to conduct qualitative interviews of inmates.

What could be the disadvantages advantages of phone or in-person interviews?
Would a non-structured or structured interview be most favorable?
Is this study viable?
What would be the main limitations?
What are the ethical issues involved?
Would you be able to establish empathy with the inmates to reach quality data?
Write a paper, describing your plan for qualitative research, along with your responses to the above questions.

Your paper must be concise, well written, should be 2-3 pages in length (not counting cover and references) and conform to APA guidelines. To support your statements, cite a minimum of 2 scholarly journal sources that are not provided or linked in this course. The Central state library database is very useful to find this type of scholarly sources.

What did each experiment try to measure? Do you think that researchers would get the same results if they did these experiments today?

DISCUSSION ESSAY

Instructions: You should have at least two posts to receive 30 points for this discussion. One of the posts has to answer the question; the second should be a comment about one of the posts made by one of your classmates. Make sure that your second post is respectful and thoughtful. All posts have to be turned in on time to receive full credit.

Read Chapter 5.
Chapter 5 is about social groups and about how we behave in groups, given our statuses and the meanings we attach to things or events.

Answer the questions below:
1) Watch the video about the social construction of reality (see link below, you can research this topic too). Then, provide an example of a social construct and briefly explain what makes it so (a social construction, that is). If you are the first one to answer this question, you can use the examples mentioned in the video, but please don’t use the examples that other classmates have already used. There are enough examples for all of us.
Now, state the Thomas theorem (it’s in your book) and answer the following question: How does the Thomas theorem apply to a reality that is socially constructed? (Or what does the Thomas theorem say about a reality that is socially constructed? You can use your example to illustrate your point).

(Links to an external site.)

2) Chapter 5: Please watch the videos below and answer the following questions:

  • a) What did each experiment try to measure? (There is a right answer).
  • b) Do you think that researchers would get the same results if they did these experiments today?

The Asch Experiment

(Links to an external site.)

The Milgram Experiment

(Links to an external site.)
Links to an external site.

The Stanford Prison Experiment

Link (Links to an external site.)

Respond to the post below
2. The Thomas Theorem states that something is socially real if it has consequences, regardless of if it is physically real. Occupations exist only because they are agreed to exist. That holding the status of an occupation includes the required roles involved with that occupation is true only because the society that status exists in agrees these roles should be assigned to people holding these statuses. The compensation given to people who hold these statuses for performing these roles is also determined by the consensus of the society these roles are performed in; for example, programming was an underpaid career before the demand for software increased. The fact that occupations do not exist in any physical sense yet are still integral to the operations of society demonstrates the Thomas Theorem. Occupations do not exist physically and are not a natural law, yet their consequences are impactful enough for them to be classified as socially real.

3. The Asch experiment was designed to measure the subjects’ susceptibility to peer pressure. The experiment involved showing a test subject four lines, one separate from the other three, and asking the subject which line the separate line is the same length as. Unknown to the subject, their peers in the experiment were not test subjects but were instead other experimenters. The variable changed in the experiments were the responses of the experimenters who posed as subjects; at first, they gave the correct answer and later they intentionally gave the wrong answer. Only 25% of the subjects would consistently give the correct answer after the experimenters’ answer changed. Later attempts to perform the Asch experiment resulted in less subjects giving the wrong answer in compliance with the experimenters. This shows that the experiment’s outcomes may have been a product of the increased focus on conformity in the culture of the 1950s, rather than an innate human quality.

4. The Milgram experiment was designed to test the subject’s compliance with authority. An excuse commonly given by the defendants during the Nuremberg Trials was that they were only following the orders of their superiors. In response to the then recent trial of Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem, Stanly Milgram developed an experiment to test if the subjects would suspend their moral concerns at the request of an authority figure. For the experiment the subject would be charged with asking questions and, when the person they were asking questions to gave an incorrect answer, they were to give an electric shock. The intensity of this shock would increase for each wrong answer, eventually it would reach a lethal level. What the subject did not know is that the pleas of the person receiving the shock were pre-recorded, no pain nor physical injury was being inflicted as a result of their actions. The test subjects fully believed that they were administering potentially dangerous shocks to the responder. At around 135 volts most subjects would face the experimenter and ask to either check on the learner or to discontinue the experiment, after a succession of orders from the experimenter most continued. Only 35% of the subjects quit before reaching the maximum voltage allowed by the machine. The goal of this experiment was to test how effectively socialized the subjects had been to follow the orders of an authority, despite their best judgement. If performed today the experiment would likely see a smaller share of the subjects comply with the experimenter’s orders up to the maximum amount of volts. Compliance with authority is less stressed as a value in the modern era than it was in the 40s and 50s, the era when Milgram’s test subjects were raised.

5. Zimbardo’s Stanford Prison Experiment was designed to test the extent that the situation a person finds themselves in effects their actions as opposed to their individual characteristics. In this experiment 24 undergraduate students were assigned either the role of a prisoner or of a prison guard based on a coin toss. The prisoners were subject to mock arrests, trials, and imprisonment in a school basement remodeled to look like a jail. The prison guards were allowed to do as they pleased to the prisoners, short of causing them physical harm. The experiment was canceled after six days because of the guards increasingly aberrant behavior towards the prisoners. All of the test subjects were deemed healthy and stable psychologically. What the change in behavior of the guards’ shows is that the status a person is given often overrides their own personal outlooks in determining their actions. If this experiment was performed today, it would likely not have the same outcome. People in the modern world are less concerned with compliance to the roles ascribed to them based on their status; as such, the subjects assigned the role of guard would be less likely today to engage in the aberrant behavior as the subjects of the original 1971 study.

Design a life course transition marker or ritual for adulthood that would apply to all Americans. How is it marked? It could be marked with signs that are visible or invisible, present in media, law, or on the body.

DISCUSSION ESSAY

You are the “Sociologist-in-Chief” of the United States.

1. Design a life course transition marker or ritual for adulthood that would apply to all Americans.

2. How is it marked? It could be marked with signs that are visible or invisible, present in media, law, or on the body.

3. How is it learned or delivered? Designations of adulthood could be delivered by any or all the major agents of socialization: family, media, schools, or peers.

4. What are the lessons that they are supposed to learn from this ritual?

5. What happens if they do not complete the ritual? What are the consequences?

Basically, you are designing a tradition, ritual, or a marker of what it would mean to be an adult in the United States. Your response papers will be 2-3 pages long. You need to use Calibri 12pt font, double-spaced with 1-inch margins.

Choose an article and lay out its main argument. Include definitions of important terminology, explanations of relevant concepts and theories, examples to illustrate the argument, and any contextualization necessary to understand the argument.

Essays I The Apathy Syndrome: How We Are Trained Not to Care about Politics

Regardless of the article you choose, your essay should have a specific and clear line of argumentation. This means you should not only examine the what of an issue but also the how and why of the issue. In other words, do not just define an issue but also try to explain (some aspect of) it. Think, for example, in terms of causes, processes, mechanisms, and predictions.

a. For essay I: The goal is exposition. Choose an article and lay out its main argument. This should include definitions of important terminology, explanations of relevant concepts and theories, examples to illustrate the argument, and any contextualization necessary to understand the argument. You should not only show that you understand the article but also help a reader of any expertise level understand the article. ‘

Select between The Medical Model, The Psychoanalytic Model, The Social Stress Model, and The Antipsychiatric Model. Write a Toulmin argument to explain which one of the models you found to be the most convincing.

Reflection

This Reflection Paper is based on information covered in Chapter 4 of our reading for this week. Complete the assigned reading then answer the question below. Refer to the relevant section on the Course Syllabus for instructions regarding how to write this paper, including the necessary instructions such as page numbers etc. Your completed paper should be submitted on BLACKBOARD by ATTACHING it via the link created for this assignment when you click where it says “Reflection Paper 2” above. This paper is due by 11:59 p.m. on Wednesday, February 1.

Q. Select between The Medical Model, The Psychoanalytic Model, The Social Stress Model, and The Antipsychiatric Model. Write a Toulmin argument to explain which one of the models you found to be the most convincing. (For this to be a true Toulmin Argument, it must include all four steps of the Toulmin Model of Argumentation as explained on the last page of the syllabus, including (i) your claim (here is where you identify the model you consider to be the most convincing), (ii) your reasons (give at least three reasons to support your claim), (iii) your evidence (give three evidences total – one evidence to illustrate or support each reason), and (iv) your counterargument (here is where you will need to acknowledge that someone who disagrees with you may argue that one of the other models you didn’t pick is the most convincing. You should identify which model that is and give the reasons why your critic would make this claim and the evidence they would cite to support themselves. You should then rebut their argument – this is your counter-argument (see the explanation of the Toulmin Model of Argumentation as explained on page 8 of the syllabus). You should make sure to provide specific references to, and provide specific examples from, the reading to support your answers, including specific page references.

A Modification of the Toulmin Model of Argumentation

The Toulmin Model of Argumentation can be considered as a guide to critical thinking which incorporates ones claim, reasons, evidence, and counter arguments as demonstrated below:
Four Questions whose sequential answers make an argument:
1. So, what are you advocating? (claim)
2. Why do you believe that? (reasons)
3. Do you have anything to back that up? (evidence)
4. But what about? (counter-arguments)

Explain why you think it is necessary to have both macrosociology and microsociology. If you were a sociologist, which level of sociology do you believe you would find most intriguing? Explain why.

Discussion Forum: Macrosociology & Microsociology

Introduction

Sociologists are interesting in understanding two levels of social life: structure interaction and social structure. As such, they employ two levels of analysis that we refer to as microsociology (used to examine social interaction) and macrosociology (used to examine social structure). This Forum allow you to discuss usefulness of microsociology and macrosociology.

Initial Post Instructions

Explain why you think it is necessary to have both macrosociology and microsociology. If you were a sociologist, which level of sociology do you believe you would find most intriguing? Explain why.

Peer Replies

Respond to at least two of your class members’ initial responses. In the discussion feel free to expand the conversation. You may even provide personal examples, links to other articles or videos. In your replies to two peers, offer feedback, ask further questions, or provide a personal reflection or commentary on their post. When replying to your peers consider replying using one or more of the following roles:

  • Validating – Validate the contributions of your peers and explain why their contributions resonate
  • Resourceful – Share or create resources that contribute to the discussion
  • Inquiring – Offer feedback, ask questions, provide reflection or commentary
  • Community Expander – Lead the discussion to deeper discourse and branch into new, but related topics