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Education and Modern Society

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Hunting and Gathering survival, minimal or little inequality ... appointment in sociology in France in 1887 at the University of Bordeaux ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Education and Modern Society


1
Education and Modern Society
  • Society a group of people who share a culture
    in a particular territory.
  • Societies have evolved with different levels of
    technology

2
Education and Modern Society
  • Hunting and Gathering survival, minimal or
    little inequality
  • Horticultural domestication of animals,
    inequalities increased e.g. slaves
  • 3. Agrarian large scale farming, use of plows
    etc., greater social inequality e.g. serfs and
    lords.

3
Societies have evolved with different levels of
technology
  • 4. Industrial societies factories, people moved
    from the farms to cities, inequality formed
    between capitalists and labourers.
  • 5. Post-industrial computers global society

4
Major Social Theorists
  • Auguste Comte (1798 -1857)
  • Karl Marx (1818 -1883)
  • Emile Durkheim (1858 -1917)
  • Max Weber (1864 -1920)
  • George Herbert Mead (1863- 1931)

5
Auguste Comte (1798-1857)
  • Positivism applying the scientific method to
    the social world
  • Experience of the French Revolution inspired his
    thinking on the twin problems of social order
    and social change

6
Auguste Comte (1798-1857)
  • What holds society together?
  • Why is there social order instead of anarchy or
    chaos?
  • Once society becomes set on a particular course,
    what causes it to change?

7
Auguste Comte (1798-1857)
  • Concluded that the answer was in applying the
    scientific method.
  • This would uncover the laws that underlie
    society.
  • It would not only discover social principles but
    it would also apply them to social reform.

8
Auguste Comte (1798-1857)
  • He called this new science
  • SOCIOLOGY
  • The study of society
  • Credited with being the founder of sociology

9
Karl Marx (1818-1883)
  • Influenced sociology but also left his mark on
    world history.
  • Ranked by the Wall Street Journal as one of the
    three greatest modern thinkers (along with Freud
    Einstein)

10
Karl Marx (1818-1883)
  • Believed people should take active steps to
    change society.
  • Exiled to England from Germany for proposing
    revolution
  • Believed that the engine of human history is
    class conflict.

11
Karl Marx (1818-1883)
  • Said that the bourgeoisie are locked in
    inevitable conflict with the proletariat.
  • Purported that this struggle can only be resolved
    by the members of working class uniting in
    revolution and breaking the chains of bondage
    from the Capitalist class.

12
Karl Marx and Early Conflict theory
  • Everything that happens in society is caused by
    economic relationships.
  • Modern industrial society is divided into
  • Those who own wealth capitalists or bourgeoisie
  • Those who produce wealth labourers or
    proletariat (2 classes)

13
Karl Marx and Early Conflict theory
  • The result of revolution would be a classless
    society
  • Free of exploitation
  • Where all individuals, will work according to
    their abilities and receive according to their
    needs.

14
Karl Marx and Early Conflict theory
  • Marx did not consider himself a sociologist.
  • However, his ideas have profoundly influenced the
    discipline particularly conflict theorists

15
Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)
  • Contributed many important concepts to sociology
  • First to study suicide
  • Concluded People are likely to commit suicide
    if their ties to others in their communities are
    weak.

16
Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)
  • Sought for the recognition of sociology as an
    academic discipline
  • Sociology was seen as an offshoot history and
    economics
  • Durkheim's received the first academic
    appointment in sociology in France in 1887 at the
    University of Bordeaux

17
Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)
  • Studied how individual behaviour is shaped by
    social forces.
  • Identified social integration the degree to
    which people are tied to their social group
  • Conclude that people with weaker social ties are
    more likely to commit suicide.

18
Early Functionalist theory Emile Durkheim
  • Social Fact something that is external to and
    constraining upon the individual
  • Mechanical Solidarity primitive societies get
    along because they are unspecialized and familiar
    with the same tasks. (religious and premodern)

19
Early Functionalist theory Emile Durkheim
  • Organic Solidarity division of labour and
    specialties produce different experiences and
    interests.
  • Anomie feeling rootless and normless, lacking a
    sense of belonging- the opposite to what
    sociologists mean by community.
  • Durkheim felt that modern society tended to
    produce feelings of isolation resulting from
    the division of labour.

20
Early Functionalist theory Emile Durkheim
  • Education
  • Schools are key institutions in providing moral
    unity through forging a sense of nationhood and a
    commitment to common values and beliefs.
  • Creating cohesion or social integration.
  • Reducing the sense of anomie

21
Durkheim and Moral Education
  • Education
  • Provides us with the DISCIPLINE to restrain our
    individual passions and drives. As we learn
    right and wrong we normally develop self
    discipline.
  • Provides us with a sense of AUTONOMY the social
    rules become our own rules.
  • Aims to develop our sense of appreciation FOR
    SOCIETY and to its common morality.

22
Max Weber (1864-1920)
  • (pronounced Veber)
  • A contemporary of Durkheim
  • Considered, along with Durkheim and Marx, one of
    the most influential sociologists

23
Max Weber (1864-1920)
  • Studied the rise of Capitalism
  • How did it come about?
  • Why did some countries adopt it enthusiastically
    while others lagged behind?
  • Suspected that religion might be the key.

24
Max Weber (1864-1920)
  • The typical approach to life, during this time of
    history, was not to strive to get ahead, but to
    work only enough to maintain ones usual way of
    life.
  • Weber Roman Catholic belief encourage this
    traditional way of life

25
Max Weber (1864-1920)
  • The Protestant belief system (especially
    Calvinism) encouraged people to embrace change.
  • Catholic belief accumulation of material
    objects was a sign of greed and discontent
  • Protestants denounced greed but encouraged hard
    work, saving money and investing money.

26
Max Weber (1864-1920)
  • Protestantism over took Catholicism after the
    Reformation of the 1500s
  • Led to the development of Capitalism.
  • Ideas and religion have created capitalism

27
Max Weber and Interpretive theory
  • The underlying foundation of modern society is
    rationalization and has created
  • bureaucracy large scale enterprises in the
    political, educational and economic realm
  • alienation dehumanizing us from each other.

28
George Herbert Mead (1863- 1931)
  • Mead stated that self-development and
    self-awareness require the capability to use
    language and interact symbolically
  • Symbolic interaction a perspective focusing on
    how the self and social relationships develop
    through social experience and communication

29
Symbolic Interaction - G.H. Mead
  • It involves individuals responding to objects,
    situations, and events according to the meanings
    that these have for them.
  • Argued that to interact with others the
    individual must take on the role of the other -
    to imagine how this other views him/her and to
    know what this other expects.
  • Individuals act and react to one another
    according to these mental interpretations

30
Symbolic Interaction - G.H. Mead
  • The concept of self includes the me
  • Self An individuals notion of who he or she is.
  • Me The part of the self which represents
    inte4rnalized social attitudes and expectations.
  • The self also includes the I.
  • I The individuals reaction to situations from
    his/ her standpoint - produces spontaneity
    individuality.

31
Symbolic Interaction - G.H. Mead
  • Mead suggested that these societal and individual
    aspects of the self collaborate to form an
    interactive quality he called interactionist.

32
Symbolic Interactionist Interpretive Theories
(Mead Cooley)
  • Symbolic-Interactionist Model
  • Introduced by the Chicago School of Sociology
  • Links social structural realities such as wealth,
    power, and status position with patterns of
    interaction
  • education is related to social inequality.

33
Symbolic Interactionist and Interpretive Theories
  • Attempt to understand how structural variables
    become incorporated into the individuals
    perceptions and interpretations and how the
    individual acts on the basis of these
    interpretations
  • Interpretive procedures Basic rules and
    procedures drawn upon by teachers when
    interacting with students and with each other in
    an educational setting.
  • Results in social differentiation in educational
    settings through teachers categorizing and
    classifying various student behaviours

34
Symbolic Interactionist and Interpretive Theories
  • Structures of dominance - the institutions and
    ideologies used by the dominant class to
    perpetuate and increase their advantaged position
  • The schooling process - achievement testing,
    ability grouping, and tracking - reflects the
    structural needs of society.

35
Symbolic Interactionist Theory- George Herbert
Mead and Charles Horton Cooley
  • Generalized other over time the combination of
    many significant others grows into a concept of
    the generalized other so children can imagine
    what other people or society expects of them.

36
Symbolic Interactionist Theory- George Herbert
Mead and Charles Horton Cooley
  • Looking-Glass Self
  • A childs self image or identity develops out of
    the interactions with parents, peers and
    teachers.
  • Eventually they come to see themselves as others
    see them.
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