BUY THE IGCSE PAPER 1 BUNDLE HERE: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/cie-sociology-notes-igcse-paper-1-13002933
This comprehensive revision guide covers all of the specification points, with key terms, case study examples and evaluative arguments.
Examples are shown clearly through Past Paper answer keys.
Although directed for the CIE syllabus, this is applicable to the AQA, OCR and WJEC specifications.
Relevant for IGCSE, GCSE, AS and A2.
Content included:
Culture, norms, values, roles, status and beliefs as social constructions; relativity
Conformity and non-conformity; the agencies and processes of social control
The formation and existences of sub-cultures
Diversity and cultural variation in human behaviour and issues related to multiculturalism
Age as an example of social construction
Processes through which children learn social expectations
Main agencies of socialisation and their impact on the individual, including the consequences of inadequate socialisation (feral children)
The nature/nurture debate
Role, age, gender, ethnic group and class as influences on social identity
BUY THE IGCSE PAPER 1 BUNDLE HERE: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/cie-sociology-notes-igcse-paper-1-13002933
This comprehensive revision guide covers all of the specification points, with key terms, case study examples and evaluative arguments.
Examples are shown clearly through Past Paper answer keys.
Although directed for the CIE syllabus, this is applicable to the AQA, OCR and WJEC specifications.
Relevant for IGCSE, GCSE, AS and A2.
Content included:
Structuralist, Interpretivist, Functionalist, Marxist, and Feminist views on society.
Distinction between Positivist and Interpretivist approaches to research
Main steps and challenges in devising and implementing a research strategy, such as sampling
Ethical issues affecting the choice and implementation of a strategy
The main methods used in sociological investigations; as well as their strengths and limitations
Differences between primary and secondary sources; their strengths and limitations
Differences between qualitative and quantitative sources; their strengths and limitations
This comprehensive revision guide covers all of the specification points, with key terms, case study examples and evaluative arguments.
Examples are shown clearly through Past Paper answer keys.
Although directed for the CIE syllabus, this is applicable to the AQA, OCR and WJEC specifications.
Relevant for IGCSE, GCSE, AS and A2.
Content included:
The various forms of media
Role of advertising
Ownership and control of the media
Freedom and censorship in the media
Pluralist, Marxist and postmodernist perspectives on the nature and role of the media
Patterns of media use by gender, age, social class and ethnicity
Media representation of ethnicity, gender, age, class and disability
The role of the traditional/new media in shaping values, attitudes and behaviour with specific reference to television and violence, political beliefs and voting, patterns of consumption, gender stereotyping, traditional stereotyping, the influence of the Internet in areas such as social networking
Agenda setting, gate-keeping and stereotyping through the selection and presentation of the news
Explanations of the influence of the media: hypodermic syringe, audience selection, cultural effects and uses and gratifications models
Bias and distortion in the media, including propaganda and moral panics
Developments in the media including changes in ownership, globalisation, interactivity, the digital divide, diversification and convergence
Influence of media representations on the audience
This comprehensive revision guide covers all of the specification points, with key terms, case study examples and evaluative arguments.
Examples are shown clearly through Past Paper answer keys.
Although directed for the CIE syllabus, this is applicable to the AQA, OCR and WJEC specifications.
Relevant for IGCSE, GCSE, AS and A2.
Content included:
The difference between ‘crime’ and ‘deviance’; relativity
Formal and informal social control
Measurements of crime and their strengths and limitations
Patterns and explanations of crime by age, class gender and ethnicity
Victims of crime
Policing and law enforcement, including targeting, surveillance and crime prevention
Crime related to new technology
Dealing with crime: community sentencing, punishment, prison, rehabilitation
Sociological explanations of deviant and criminal behaviour: Labelling theory, Marxist theory, Functionalist theory, socialisation (e.g. family and peer groups), lack of opportunity, relative deprivation, masculinity, status frustration
Role of law enforcement agencies and the media in defining crime and deviance, stereotyping, labelling and deviancy amplification
The development of sub-cultures and links to crime and deviance (with particular reference to youth)
These comprehensive revision guides cover all of the specification points, with key terms, case study examples and evaluative arguments for the Paper 1 topics.
Examples are shown clearly through Past Paper answer keys.
Although directed for the CIE syllabus, this is applicable to the AQA, OCR and WJEC specifications.
Relevant for IGCSE, GCSE, AS and A2.
These comprehensive revision guides cover all of the specification points, with key terms, case study examples and evaluative arguments for the Paper 2 topics.
Examples are shown clearly through Past Paper answer keys.
Although directed for the CIE syllabus, this is applicable to the AQA, OCR and WJEC specifications.
Relevant for IGCSE, GCSE, AS and A2.
These comprehensive revision guides cover all of the specification points, with key terms, case study examples and evaluative arguments for the Paper 1 and 2 topics.
Examples are shown clearly through Past Paper answer keys.
Although directed for the CIE syllabus, this is applicable to the AQA, OCR and WJEC specifications.
Relevant for IGCSE, GCSE, AS and A2.