Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students studying Belief Systems module.
Includes:
Marx and false class consciousness
Religion as a force of alienation
Religion as a conservative force
Evaluation points
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students studying Belief Systems module.
Includes:
Functions of religion
Durkheim, totemism and collective conscience
Criticisms of Durkheim
Malinowski, Parsons and Bellah (Neo-functionalism), with criticisms
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students studying Belief Systems module.
Includes:
substantive definition of religion, and criticisms
functional definition of religion, and criticisms
constructionist definition of religion, and criticisms
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15 LESSON BUNDLE of complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students. Includes key terms and studies, sociological perspectives, exam questions, and criticism and evaluation points.
(Module: Education)
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students
Includes:
Ball and Youdell (2007)
Political parties supporting privatisation
Ethnicity and educational policy
Mirza, Gillborn, Gove and New Right
Similarities and continuities between government policies since 1979
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students
Includes:
neoliberalism
globalisation
marketisation
left wing views of education
right wing views of education
evaluating the impact of educational policies
free schools
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students
Includes:
why do governments intervene in education?
aims of government intervention
1944 Education Act
11+ exams
comprehensive schools
school admissions and selection
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students.
Including:
the hidden curriculum
self-negating prophecy
Cicourel & Kitsuse: Ideal pupil
Official Curriculum
hidden curriculum
functionalist, marxist and feminist view of the hidden curriculum
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students.
Including:
labelling and teacher racism
pupils identities
pupil responses and subcultures
the ethnocentric curriculum
selection and segregation
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students.
Including:
gender and subject choice
gender role socialisation
gender domains
gendered subject images
single-sex schooling
gender identity and peer pressure
gendered career options
gender, vocational choice and class
pupils’ sexual and gender identities
the male gaze
male peer groups
female peer groups (policing identity)
teachers and discipline
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students.
Including:
external factors:
- boys and literacy (+evaluation)
- leisture time (+evaluation)
- decline in traditional male working class jobs (+evaluation)
internal factors:
- feminisation of education (Sewell) (Ringrose) (+evaluation)
- male role models (Francis) (Read) (+evaluation)
- masculinity and anti-school subcultures)
- attitudes to school work (+evaluation)
- teacher labelling (+evaulation)
- moral panic about boys (+evaluation)
- Social class evaluation points
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students.
Including:
Equal opportunities policies
Selection and league tables
Teacher labelling
Liberal Feminism
Radical feminism
Symbolic capital
Archer (2010)
Hyper-heterosexual feminine identities
Boyfriends
Being “loud”
Working class girls’ dilemma
Successful working class girls
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students.
Including:
The roles of Vocational Education argued by Functionalists, Marxists and the New Right
Criticisms of Vocational Education
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students.
Including:
Material deprivation
Cultural deprivation
Compensatory education
Operation Head Start
Bernstein (1972)
Sugarman (1970)
Douglas (1964)
Feinstein (2008)
Cultural capital
Material factors
Exam question model answers and complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students
Includes:
Strengths and criticisms of Functionalism, Marxism and the New Right
Model answers for:
- Define the Myth of Meritocracy (2 marks)
- Outline three ways in which the correspondence principle operates within school (6 marks)
- Outline and explain two roles that education fulfills according to functionalists. (10 marks)
Complete lesson notes aimed towards A-Level Sociology students
Includes:
Althusser (Education as an Ideological Status Apparatus)
Bowles and Gintis (The Myth of Meritocracy)
Bowles and Gintis (The Correspondence Principle)
Willis (Learning to Labour study)
Fordism and Post-Fordism
Criticisms of Marxist Arguments
Aimed towards A-Level Sociology students for support alongside classroom study.
Includes:
New Right views on society
Neoliberalism
Neoconservativism
1988 Education Reform Act
New Right Education Market
New Labour
Aimed towards A-Level Sociology Students for support alongside classroom study.
Includes:
Key Terms
Durkheim’s two functions of Education (Social Solidarity, Specialist Skills)
Parson’s function of Education (Focal Socialising Agency)
Davis and Moore’s function of Education (Role Allocation)
Criticisms of Functionalist Arguments
Aimed at GCSE and A Level Sociology students to support classroom study. (4 lesson bundle)
Introduction:
What is Sociology?
What are Social Factors?
Culture
Lesson 1:
Social Factors
- DRCAGES (Disability, Race, Class, Age, Gender, Ethnicity, Sexuality)
Sociological Theory
- Marxism, Functionalism, Feminism, Interactionism, New Right (political thinkers)
-Marxism
- Karl Marx and the Basis of Marxist Arguments
- Key Terms
- Criticisms of Marxism*
Lesson 2:
Feminism
- Basis of Feminist Arguments
- Key Terms
- Types of Feminism (Liberal, Radical, Difference/Postmodernist, Marxist, Dual Systems)
- Key Feminist Sociologists (Anne Oakley, Walby, Delphy and Leonard)*
Lesson 3:
The New Right
- Beliefs about society
- Liberal New Right
- Conservative New Right*