Title: HSB4U
1HSB4U
- Chapter 2
- Intro to Social Change
2First Homework
- Read pages 36-40.
- Take notes on Anthropological Questions about
Social Change - Pages 41-42.
3You and Cultural Change
- Interview the NEW person next to you. Name one or
two things they have experienced that came from
elsewhere. - Was it something they brought back with them that
contributed to cultural change? - Did it contribute to cultural change through
invention, discovery, and/or diffusion?
4Ask an older friend or relative
- What was the most important social change that
took place during their lifetime? - Connect the answers to Sources of Cultural Change
- Invention
- Discovery
- Diffusion
5Anthropological Questions About Social Change
- What are the major differences between developed
and developing countries?
6Invention, Discovery, Diffusion
- How did this aspect of culture come to us here in
Canada? - A Invention, B Discovery, C Diffusion
- System of writing
- Popularity of Thai or Vietnamese food
- Latest IPhone
7Four Parts of Culture
Physical environment How the physical place we live influences our culture e.g., winter clothes in Canada
Level of technology How much there is e.g, infrastructure may be less developed in a lower income country
Social organization Kinship, division of labour
System of symbols Peace sign Signs, shirts, jewelry, bumper stickers
8Homework
- Take notes on pages 43-45.
- Take notes on pages 45-47.
9Psychological Questions About Social Change
- In psychology, social change refers to the
transformation of a persons attitudes, beliefs,
and behaviours and the effect of these
transformations on the whole group or society (De
Coeur et al., 2012, p. 14). see note below
In APA format, an embedded citation such as the
author-date one above cannot stand alone. At the
end of the report or essay, there has to be a
Reference list in which the full citation of each
source is given in alphabetical order. See last
slide of this PPT.
10Marijuana Study
- http//www.cbc.ca/news/health/marijuana-use-by-tee
ns-linked-with-problems-in-young-adulthood-1.27610
59
11Psychological Questions About Social Change
Cognitive Dissonance
- Designated driver drinks only one drink.
- Procrastinators tell themselves theyll do it in
an hour or tomorrow. - Inactive people tell themselves theyre healthy
enough and can start working out tomorrow. - Skippers tell themselves that were not doing
anything in class. - Lazy students tell themselves theyll start
putting in the effort in grade 12.
12Festinger and Carlsmith (p.44)
- How does the conclusion of their experiment
relate to cognitive dissonance? - Make sure your answer includes these words
- Cognitive dissonance
- Attitude
- Behaviour
- Reward
- Incentive
- Note when attitude or behaviour changes this is
evidence of social change for psychologists
13Sociological Questions About Social Change
Direction of change __ A from exogenous or endogenous
Rate of change __ B how much regulation it will require to implement
Sources of change __ C positive or negative, for whom
Controllability of change __ D slow, fast, continuous
Four Aspects of Social Change
14Environmental Scenarios
- In order to cut down on traffic and pollution in
a city, the following solutions have been
developed. Imagine you are a sociologist hired by
the city government. Your job is to analyze the
likelihood of acceptance/success based on the
four aspects of social change.
15- The city government will significantly reduce the
property taxes for each household in which no
occupants own a car. - The city government will establish a tax for
driving in the city at certain times of day
(congestion charge). https//www.tfl.gov.uk/modes/
driving/congestion-charge - The city government will give access to the
carpool lane with only one driver for hybrid or
electric cars. http//www.go511.com/traffic/carpoo
l_lanes.aspx - The city government will provide low-cost
bicycles in areas throughout the city.
http//www.bikesharetoronto.com/ - The city government will designate days when
people can and cannot drive based on their
license plate number. http//www.ontheroadin.com/M
exico20Trip20Planning20and20Info202011/Mexico
20No20Drive20Restrictions.htm
16Homework
- Take notes on pages 50 and 52.
- Give an example of a longitudinal study from page
51.
17Anthropological Theories of Social Change
- Cultural interaction as a source of social change
- Interaction contact with other cultures
- Adaptation making changes according to the
environment - Unfortunately, contact between cultures is NOT
always positive. - Examples?
18San Case Study
Aspects of San culture before borders/fences Adaptation after borders/fences
Communal property H-G Traditional lifestyle language, religion, jobs, food, skills Already adapted by trading, working on cattle farms Moved to South Africa Worked in gold mines Property ownership Permanent settlement Living under apartheid laws
On YouTube, see The Journey of Man.
https//www.youtube.com/watch?vc246fZ-7z1wlistP
LAM1HrbaIGHXNTmjhJT41h3TxSGu4vyZ6
19San
- Is this case study an example of diffusion?
- Listen to the reading from The Wayfinders.
- What stance/viewpoint does an anthropologist take
when studying a different culture?
CBC Radio Ideas with Paul Kennedy. (2009, Nov.
2). 2009 CBC Massey lectures the wayfinders.
Why ancient wisdom matters in the modern world.
Retrieved Sept. 17, 2012 from
http//www.cbc.ca/ideas/episodes/massey-lectures/2
009/11/02/massey-lectures-2009-the- wayfinders-why
-ancient-wisdom-matters-in-the-modern-world/
20Adaptation Occurs Through
- Diffusion
- Acculturation
- Incorporation
- Directed change
- Cultural evolution
Meet the ancestors. DNA study pinpoints Namibia
as home to the worlds most ancient race.
(2009, May 1). Mail Online. Retrieved Sept. 17,
2012 from http//www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech
/article-1176140/Meet- ancestors-DNA-study-pinpoin
ts-Namibia-home-worlds-ancient- race.html
National Geographic San People
http//video.nationalgeographic.com/video/places/r
egions-places/africa-tc/southafrica_sanpeople/ 2.4
7
21Homework
- Take notes on pages 53-55.
- Read the article in the handout package entitled
Indian Residential Schools. Match the key
concepts at the bottom with the numbered passages.
22Psychological Theories of Social Change
Behaviour Modification
- Name common student misbehaviours in class
- Name teacher reactions to them
- Name common childhood misbehaviours at home
- Name parent reactions to them
23Skinners Operant Conditioning
- Learning can be programmed by whatever
consequence follows a behaviour - We repeat behaviours that are rewarded
- We avoid behaviours that are punished
- E.g., Skinner box how did it use operant
conditioning? - E.g., pigeon experiment on page 54 how does it
use operant conditioning?
Science Photo Library. (N.d.). Skinner box
research. Retrieved Sept. 17, 2012 from
http//www.sciencephoto.com/media/95709/enlarge
24Behaviour Modification Works on the Principles of
- Negative reinforcement if you do something
society disapproves of, society will punish you
or remove a privilege - Positive reinforcement rewards for good
behaviour - Seen as more effective than negative
25Residential Schools
- Claims against the government fall into three
categories - Sexual and physical abuse
- Loss of language and culture
- At the Shingwauk residential school in Sault St.
Marie in 1875, children were given a number of
buttons at the start of each week. Every time
they were caught using a native language, they
forfeited a button. At the end of the week, the
child with the most buttons received a prize a
bag of nuts. Many schools punished children for
speaking an aboriginal language. Punishments
included writing 500 lines, adhesive on the
mouth, withholding meals, needles through the
tongue, or a strap across the hand or backside. - Inter-generational family difficulties
- Parent visits were rare
- Siblings segregated by sex
- Letters home were in English unreadable by
parents
Indian Residential Schools Resolution Canada.
(N.d.). Retrieved Aug. 6, 2005 from
http//www.irsr-rqpi.gc.ca/english
26Residential Schools
- SOCIAL CHANGE THROUGH (identify the social
science discipline) - Diffusion
- Enculturation
- Directed change
- Acculturation
- Assimilation
- Behaviour modification / Operant conditioning
- Negative and positive reinforcement
Change in the 1) organization/structure of
society, and in the 2) beliefs and 3) practices
of the people in it.
27Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
McLeod, S. (2012). Maslows hierarchy of needs.
Simply Psychology. Retrieved Sept. 20, 2012 from
http//www.simplypsychology.org/maslow.html
28Behaviour Modification Articles Exercise (skip
Sept. 2014)
- In groups, read your article about a real-life
example of behaviour modification. In your
presentation - Summarize how the program uses BM
- Is BM BS?
- Is it a successful and effective real-life
strategy for changing behaviour?
29Homework
- Take notes on first half of sociological theories
(use the new handout uses pages 59-64). .
30Sociological Theories of Social Change
- Tension and Adaptation when so much change
occurs in society (tension, such as the Great
Depression) social institutions need to adapt by
doing new things - Before the 1930s when people were struggling
theyd either have to cope on their own or turn
to private charities or religious supports. - With so many people suffering in the Great
Depression, the government (an institution)
adapted by taking on the role of helping people - What happened after 911 that showed tension and
adaptation?
31Sociological Theories of Social Change
- Blue book case studies
- Page 22
- Page 101
- Can you make any connections between them and the
theories of change or key concepts from chapter 2?
32- Accumulation
- Our knowledge accumulates (grows) over time
- New generations thus develop new ways of doing
things - E.g., television was new in the 1950s for your
parents (or grandparents) - What would be an example of accumulation in our
day and age?
33- Diffusion of innovations
- New things are spread by people who adopt the
changes early on and speak out in favour of them - E.g., celebrity wears a new fashion trend
- What would be an example of a diffusion of
innovations other than the one above?
34- Cultural pluralism
- Pluralism when minorities are allowed to
maintain their traditions - Opposite of assimilation
- In a diverse society like Canada there are so
many groups, they need to discuss with each other
before making any decisions - Slows change
- What is the relationship between pluralism and
assimilation?
35- Technology
- Social network leading to lots of social
changes - Did you know that Facebook, now in its tenth
year, went from having 17 million users in 2007
to 500 million in 2011? - Did you know that the trigger event for the
eruption of the protests in Egypt in 2011 related
to Facebook? (next slide please)
36Wael Ghonim
- In June 2010, Khaled Said was beaten to death
after exposing police corruption in Egypt. Wael
Ghonim, an Egyptian Google marketing executive,
established a Facebook page in July called We
are Khaled Said. By January it had 350 000
members. The day of revolt in Egypt drew 15 000
protestors to Tahrir Square in Cairo while 20 000
people protested in Alexandria. Eventually
hundreds of thousands of protestors filled the
streets. Ghonim was arrested on January 27. The
government shut down the internet in Egypt. On
February 11, President Mubarak resigned. (See
blue textbook page 22)
37- Gender gaps
- Men and women are raised differently
- Women are socialized more in the private sphere
(in the home as opposed to outside the home) - McCormack studies voting
- Though men and women dont necessarily all vote
together, women are influenced by their private
sphere upbringing - Obama is much more popular with women
- Did you know that Barack Obama is much more
popular with women voters? There was an 18
gender gap in 2012 and a 12 gap in 2008.
38- Discourses
- Smith
- The way people talk about a subject discourses
- Celebrity discourse
- School discourse (words like rubric and victory
lap are specific to going to school in Ontario) - Social media discourse (Ms. G has no idea what
hashtag YM problems means) - All of these influence the way we think and act,
potentially leading to social change - As a class, write a sentence that shows
celebrity discourse and email it to Ms. G who
probably wont understand it (thats the point
we speak different discourses).
39Name the theory, key concept or theorist
associated with each of the following
- _______________ Skilled people with access to
development funds they have influence. - _______________ Require consensus on basic values
and beliefs in order to take action. (synonym for
multicultural) - _______________ Growth of knowledge from
generation to generation allows development of
new ways of doing things. - _______________ In this older theory, equilibrium
is the balancing-out factor when institutions
struggle with something new. - _______________ Ways of communicating that
influence the way we think and act. - _______________ Women are socialized in the
private sphere which influences their political
viewpoints. - _______________ Proximity to the core determines
wealth. - _______________ The core of it is at the centre
of profit made from international trade. - _______________ By adopting and speaking in
favour of something new, they cause the diffusion
of innovations. - _______________ Your generation has a very
different one, rooted in social networking, while
your parents may focus more on the world of
work. We have to take them into account for
social change to occur.
40References
- Bain, C. et al. (2002). Transitions in society
- the challenge of change. Toronto
- Oxford University Press.
- De Coeur, T. et al. (2012). Challenge and
- change patterns, trends, and shifts in
- society. Toronto McGraw-Hill Ryerson.