
Some Food for Thought.....
"Society is an insane asylum ran by the inmates." Erving Goffman
Friday, February 25, 2011
Survivor!

Thursday, February 24, 2011
People Who Need People.....
according to Barbara Streisand, are the LUCKIEST people in the world! Or at least, that is how the song goes :) As we move onto our next unit in Sociology, groups, we'll be examining WHY people need to be around others in order to be functioning members of society. Remember when we talked about the concept of solitary confinement in prisons, learned about it when we went to jail and the sheriff talked about it, as well as saw what it did to Andy in the movie Shawshank Redemption? Solitary confinement really messes with a person's brain as we are inherently social creature who need some sort of human contact to be a "normal" functioning members of society. It's like the monkeys in Harlowe's experiment who preferred the fuzzy metal monkey rather than the food metal monkey...we just want to be around somebody/thing who interacts with us. We're going to be identifying many different kinds of groups in class today: primary, secondary, kinship, interest, just to name a few. I challenge you for your blog post that is due on FRIDAY to list all the different groups of people you belong to and explain the roles that they have played in socializing you to American society.
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
And the Results are.....
Well, we did our data collection, and the results came in to answer our question of whether the kindness of strangers would stop a theft. As expected, there was a lot of variations to our answers. For the most part, we found that humanity was good and would step in, but we still had our lingering doubts, especially those who set up sting operations and had their wallets/phones/calculators nabbed. I'm glad to see that there were so many different methods of research done in the class as we could see the up and downsides of all of them.
I had mentioned to you the story of an Indian grad student at the University of Chicago, Sudhir Venkatesh, who wanted to study the workings of a typical African American Chicago street gang in the early 90s. He entered the housing projects and began surveying gang members by asking them how it felt to be black and poor, with a spectrum of potential answers from very bad, somewhat bad, neither bad nor good, somewhat good, to very good. As you can imagine, he didn't get too many answers, and he was actually held hostage by the gang overnight because they didn't know what he was up to. The result of this hostage experience was that he was befriended by the leader of the street gang and given an up close and personal look at the gang, getting much more rich detail. If you'd like to read an excerpt from the resulting book, Gang Leader For a Day, click HERE. If you'd like to see the movie, wait until next year when it comes to a theater near you :) If you want hear from Venkatesh, see below. Compare his research methods to your own. Do you think you got the best results that you could have, or were there barriers in the way from getting the true answers? Humans aren't too easy to study, are they? :)
I had mentioned to you the story of an Indian grad student at the University of Chicago, Sudhir Venkatesh, who wanted to study the workings of a typical African American Chicago street gang in the early 90s. He entered the housing projects and began surveying gang members by asking them how it felt to be black and poor, with a spectrum of potential answers from very bad, somewhat bad, neither bad nor good, somewhat good, to very good. As you can imagine, he didn't get too many answers, and he was actually held hostage by the gang overnight because they didn't know what he was up to. The result of this hostage experience was that he was befriended by the leader of the street gang and given an up close and personal look at the gang, getting much more rich detail. If you'd like to read an excerpt from the resulting book, Gang Leader For a Day, click HERE. If you'd like to see the movie, wait until next year when it comes to a theater near you :) If you want hear from Venkatesh, see below. Compare his research methods to your own. Do you think you got the best results that you could have, or were there barriers in the way from getting the true answers? Humans aren't too easy to study, are they? :)
Friday, February 4, 2011
Putting It Into Perspective...

Freaks and Geeks
I loved this show when it was on TV. I didn't go to high school in the 1980s, but even today, there is a lot that is timeless when it comes to describing the high school experience. Today you watched the pilot episode for the series and did some application of our sociologists and perspectives to what you saw. Did Sam and and his guy posse have anything to do with Herbert Spencer's theory of Social Darwinism? How did Lindsay trying to fit in with the "burnouts" an example of conflict theory? How is the school dance connected to symbolic interactionism? Looking forward to the connections that you've made to prepare for next week's test!
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