This is a GCSE sociology lesson [EDUQAS]. The lesson focuses on qualitative sources of secondary data, how sociologists make choices about research and the lesson finishes with an ethics task. The power point consists of 9 slides, and is designed to last a 90 minute lesson.
Included:
-Starter activity which is a quiz on the theories of the family.
-Title page. Encouraging students to think about what qualitative sources of secondary data sociologists might use.
-Explanation of what qualitative secondary sources are. Challenge question included.
-Using public and private documents in sociological research. Task- students to put the documents under the correct heading in the table. Challenge question provided.
-Strengths and weaknesses of using qualitative secondary data in research.
-Secondary data task. Students to decide which method would be best when researching certain areas.
-Explanation of how sociologists make choices about research. Challenge question- gets students to think about what things need to be considered before starting a research study.
-Reading task. Covers considerations such as: funding, the purpose of sociology, interests and availability. Extension task provided.
-Ethical issues in sociological research poster task. Students will need access to the Eduqas sociology textbook. Pages 250-251.
This is a GCSE Psychology revision lesson. The lesson focuses on revising some key aspects of the social influence unit. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 13 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter activity- key terms match up. Separate worksheet attached.
Issues and debates- social and cultural issues in Psychology. Students could create a mindmap when going through the key information.
Explanation of Haney, Banks and Zimbardo including aims, procedure, findings, conclusion and evaluation.
Explanation of bystander intervention. Situational and personal factors.
4 mark exam question- answer provided.
Conformity reading task. Students will need access to the edexcel GCSE psychology textbook (pages 106-107) to complete this task. Reading/ question activity.
Plenary- students to answer as many key questions as they can from the power point, these are ranked in difficulty level. (Differentiated task)
This is an A-Level sociology lesson which focuses on the research methods unit. The lesson is based on observations. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 13 slides on the power point.
Included:
-Starter activity- blankety blank. Students to work out the missing words in the statements. Methods recap.
-Issues with conducting a participant observation such as: getting in, staying in and getting out.
-Why use overt observation? strengths and weaknesses
-Practical and ethical issues of using covert observation
-Advantages and disadvantages of participant observation- student task. Students will need access to the AQA A-Level textbook (book one) to complete this task. Pages 140-142. The answers are then included on the power point (can just use the answers if students do not have access to the textbook)- worksheet is attached separately
-Positivism, Interpretivism and observations
-10 mark exam question practice. Power point includes examiners advice, an example paragraph and how students should answer this question.
This is a GCSE Sociology lesson. The lesson focuses on the Feminist view of education. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there is a total of 11 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter activity- recapping research methods.
Title page- encouraging students to think about what they already know about Feminism. Recapping key concepts such as patriarchy.
Branches of Feminism. Explanation of liberal, radical and marxist feminists and what they say about the education system.
Explanation of how schools are patriarchal.
Explanation of how gender messages are passed through the hidden curriculum. Student task- mind map. Answers provided on the power point.
Men in top positions and gendered subjects. Students to read through the key information on the slide and answer key questions, also included on the power point.
Becky Francis- boys dominating space.
Sue Lees- social control.
Exam practice question - 15 marks. Encourage students to think about how they would answer this question. The power point provides a short overview of how students could structure/ answer this question. Students should then spend 10 minutes planning this question using the sheet provided. (separate document)
Plenary- summarising feminism. Students to summarise what they have learnt in under 50 words using the key concepts on the power point.
This is a GCSE Sociology lesson, the lesson focuses on recapping the theories of education. The lesson also involves a 15 mark question which students should completed. Ideally, students would have learnt about the functionalist, marxist and feminists view of education before completing this lesson. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and the power point contains 9 slides.
Included-
Starter, recap of research methods. Students to unscramble the key concepts.
Title page, encouraging students to define key concepts.
Comparing the theories of education- worksheet for students to complete. Attached as a separate document.
Outline of functionalist, marxist and feminist view of education. Challenge questions provided throughout.
Practice 15 marker on theories of education. Example structure outline provided.
Example PEEL paragraph provided. - Students then complete the exam question.
Plenary- scrabble. Students to try and work out the highest scoring key concept from the unit so far.
This is an A-level sociology lesson [AQA]- which focuses on methods in context. The lesson goes through the basics of research characteristics when studying education, along with using experiments to study educational issues. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 10 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter activity, true or false. Education unit recap.
Title page- encouraging students to think about what some of the issues may be when researching education.
Research characteristics. Such as, teachers, pupils, schools, classrooms and parents. Students to fill in their worksheet (separate document) whilst going through the key ideas on the power point.
Quick check questions. Provided on the power point. Students will need to use their knowledge about researching education in order to complete these. EXT task provided.
Linking methods to education. Examples of how to link research characteristics to methods.
The issues of using lab experiments to research teacher expectations in education.
The issues of using field experiments to research teacher expectations. Focus on Rosenthal and Jacobson’s study. Reading/ question task. Provided on a separate worksheet.
Plenary- look through an example MIC question answer. Student and teacher copy provided on separate documents.
This is a GCSE Sociology lesson [WJEC/ EDUQAS]. This is the first lesson of the education unit, the lesson focuses on introducing the different types of school. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and has a total of 9 slides. There are also 4 worksheets included as separate documents.
Included:
Starter activity- recap of research methods, focusing on interviews.
Title page. Encouraging students to think about the type of school they go to, and the purpose of school.
Key studies, key concepts and ‘know it well’ checklist included on separate word documents. Students keep these and fill them in as the unit is taught.
Outline of the history of education in Britain. Timeline starts from 1940s- 2000s. Educational policies also mentioned here.
Introduction to different types of school- state and private. Students start to think about which theory would dislike private schools.
The price is right game. Students to guess how much it costs to attend a private school. Key question- is it fair that some people can pay for their education?
What is a public school? explanation and example provided.
Documentary about Harrow. Students to answer questions on the worksheet provided whilst watching the documentary. Youtube link provided on the power point.
Plenary- discussion task. Students discuss some key questions, including how a public school differs to other types of schools.
GCSE Sociology (WJEC/ EDUQAS)- the Marxist view of education. This lesson is designed to last a 90 minute lesson and contains a total of 10 slides on the power point. This lesson follows on from the Functionalist view of education.
Included:
Starter activity which focuses on recapping research methods.
Title page. Recapping functionalism. Encouraging students to think about what they already know about Marxism and start to apply this to education.
Explanation of Marxism and capitalism.
Bourdieu- schools reproducing the class system- Cultural capital.
Bowles and Gintis correspondence principle.
correspondence principle VS role allocation. Encouraging students to think about what viewpoint they agree with- functionalism or marxism.
Schools and giant myths.
Evaluating the marxist view.
Summarising the marxist view. Discussion about whether students think the education system is meritocratic?
Short answer exam practice question. 2 marker- mark scheme included.
This is a GCSE Sociology lesson{WJEC/ EDUQAS]. The lesson focuses on the Functionalist view of education. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and has a total of 12 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter activity- recap of research methods. True or false task. Answers provided.
Title page- students to think about what they already know about Functionalism and to predict what they think they may say about the education system.
Theory recap.
Recap of consensus and conflict theories. Do we need education for society to function effectively?
Schools as agents of socialisation.
Durkheim and social cohesion.
Parsons and status.
Schools are preparation for employment. Mind map task, students to write down all the ways school prepares students for work.
Parsons, meritocracy and role allocation.
Evaluation of Functionalist view of education.
Functionalism quick quiz.
Cram your brain activity. Students fill their brain outline with as many key concepts as they can remember from the education unit so far. Brain outline provided on a separate worksheet.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on the importance of cultural factors. Students will be able to explain what the cultural factors are and make connections to educational achievement. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there is a total of 10 slides on the power point.
Included:
starter, research methods recap. Exam questions, two marker and four marker.
explanation of internal and external factors.
explanation of material and cultural factors. (this lesson will focus on cultural factors)
parental encouragement and how it can lead to middle class children performing better in education. Ext task provided.
values- how it can lead to certain children underachieving in education. Challenge questions provided.
Language skills- students are challenging by being encouraged to think about what the restricted language code might mean.
parental aspirations- students to think about what type of parents are likely to place higher value on education.
explanation of cultural deprivation.
student independent task- they will need access to the EDUQAS GCSE sociology textbook to help them. Students are asked to create either a poster or mind map of the different cultural factors influencing achievement. EXT task- linking to cultural capital. Challenge task- 4 mark exam question.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson [EDUQAS/ WJEC] which focuses on the importance of material factors within education. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 12 slides on the power point. By the end of the lesson students will be able to outline and explain the different material factors and start to make connections to class differences in achievement.
Included:
Starter, methods recap. Primary Vs. Secondary data (retrieval practice)
Title page- encouraging students to think about what material factors are and whether they are internal or external.
How free is school? student task- write down all the things their parents need to pay for within education. Example list with prices included on the pp.
Explanation of material factors and material deprivation.
Explanation of how material factors could lead to working class underachievement. Link back to key question ‘is education meritocratic?’.
The effects of income on attainment.
Student task- rank the material factors in order of biggest impact on educational achievement.
Link to choice of school.
Short youtube clip- students to make a note of the cultural and material factors affecting the student’s achievement at school.
Poor housing and underachievement.
Wider connections to class differences- student task.
Plenary- Bingo.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on class differences in educational achievement. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 12 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter activity- recap of methods.
Title page- students to think about who performs better in education and the reasons for this.
Explanation of how class is measured.
Reasons for inequality- cultural and material factors.
Introduction to cultural capital- quiz for students to have a go at. Attached as a separate document.
Explanation of cultural capital.
How is cultural capital different to cultural deprivation?
Introduction to language codes. Restricted and elaborate language code. Student task- facebook statuses attached as a separate document.
Language codes summary- fill in the blanks task.
How does the nature of schools favour the middle class?
Outline of material factors and class differences.
Plenary- practice exam questions. 5 marker and 8 marker.
This is a GCSE sociology [WJEC/ EDUQAS] lesson which focuses on the education unit. The lesson is centered around the hidden curriculum and anti-school subcultures. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 13 slides on the power point. Challenge questions and extension tasks provided throughout.
Included:
Starter, methods recap. Board rush game. Instructions on the pp. Post-it notes are needed for this task.
Title page, encouraging students to think about what a anti-school subculture is.
Explanation of what an anti-school subculture is. Easy and difficult explanation provided. Students choose which one they write down.
Short video clip outlining the behaviours of an anti-school and pro-school subculture.
The impact of labelling on anti-school subcultures. Reading/ question task. Questions and answers provided on the pp. However, students will need access to the GCSE eduqas textbook to complete this task (pages 102-103).
Paul Willis and anti-school subcultures.
Explanation of the difference between the formal and hidden curriculum.
Explanation of what each theory argues about the hidden curriculum. Feminists, Marxists and Functionalists. Examples and challenge questions provided. This then leads on to an application task whereby students summarise what each theory says using the key concepts on the power point.
Plenary- guess the fact. Teacher will need an envelope with a key fact written down from the lesson. (most important piece of information from the lesson) Students to guess what key fact the teacher has written. A key fact is provided in the notes section of the pp.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on gender differences in education. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and has a total of 11 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter, methods recap, true or false.
Title page- encouraging students to think about who performs better in education and why this is the case.
Key statistics, graph.
Articles on gender differences in attainment, links to the articles are in the ‘notes’ section on the pp.
Outline of the internal and external factors affecting achievement.
Student task- information pack which goes through the reasons for gender differences. Including; changes in norms and law, feminisation of education, laddish subcultures, crisis of masculinity. Key studies including: Sharpe and Jackson are also included. Students read through the information and complete the grid. The information pack and grid are provided on separate documents. Answers also provided on the power point.
Plenary- retrieval practice, questions from the education unit.
Homework- 8 marker. Mark scheme provided.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on the stratification and differentiation unit. This is an introductory lesson to Max Weber, and his views on social stratification. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and has a total of 12 power point slides.
Included:
Starter, education recap. Retrieval practice- students to answer as many questions as possible.
Title page- student task, write down the groups they belong to.
Quick quiz of what has been covered so far (functionalism, Marxism and stratification). Answers provided on the pp.
-Explanation of the two ways we can look at society- structural and social-action perspectives. Intro to Max Weber.
Weber and identity
Weber and market position- student task, add the images of different occupations to the class structure diagram. Images provided on a separate document.
Weber and status
Students to think about what other things can affect our status in society - answers on the pp.
Weber and social power
Evaluation
Plenary- applying their understanding of the theories of stratification
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on Feminist views on stratification. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 9 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter, retrieval practice of the education unit. Students to work out the missing words. Answers on pp.
Title page- encouraging students to think about the key ideas of feminism.
Quick recap of stratification so far- quiz. Questions and answers on pp. This replies on students having learnt functionalism and marxism.
Discrimination in a patriarchal society.
The feminist view of patriarchy.
Sylvia Walby and patriarchy- fill in the blanks task.
How does gender affect life-chances? - reading task. Provided on a separate word document.
9 mark exam question practice. The power point outlines how the question should be answers and provides some ideas of what students could include. There is also an example/ model paragraph provided.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on authority and power. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 12 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter, retrieval practice - education unit. Answers on pp.
Title page- students to start to think about who has the most power in school.
What is power?
Feminist view on power in society.
Explanation of social control.
Links between social control and theory.
Who has more power and authority why? images on board- discussion task.
Do some people have more power than others? student task- worksheet provided. Explanation on power point.
What is authority?
Weber three types of authority.
Student task- what type of authority do the people in the images have?
Plenary- key question on pp slide.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on the year 11 unit- social stratification and differentiation. This lesson specifically focuses on class and differentiation. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 9 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter, education recap. True or false activity- provided on a separate worksheet.
Short answer exam style question (4). Based on previous learning, formal and informal sources of power. Model answer provided on pp.
Title page- discussion task, is class still important today?
Recap of what differentiation means.
Is class still important? explanation.
Student task- apply it question.
Research into social class- includes key studies.
Are inequalities of social class still important in the UK? - reading task. Students will need access to the GCSE sociology WJEC textbook to complete this task. The question sheet is attached as a separate document.
Summary task- students to summarise the arguments for and against the idea that class is no longer important.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on the stratification and differentiation unit. This lesson specifically focuses on gender and differentiation. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and has a total of 12 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter, education recap. Students to unscramble the key concepts.
Title page- encouraging students to think about Feminism and stratification.
How does society present gender roles in the UK today?
Male and female roles- image, students to discuss what the image shows.
Socialisation- reference to Ann Oakley.
Labelling and gender.
How have men been affected by changes in society? short video clip. Link on pp slide.
New roles for men.
Men and life chances.
The crisis of masculinity.
9 mark exam question, example structure provided on pp.
Plenary- articulate.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on the stratification and differentiation unit. The lesson covers age and differentiation. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and has a total of 12 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter, education recap. Students to work out the highest scoring key concepts using the scrabble board.
Title page- encouraging students to think about key questions to do with the lesson.
How do the norms of different ages vary in different societies?
How are different ages presented in the media? - extension task provided.
How does age affect life chances?
Students will then look at each of these three topics in more detail using the textbook. The students will become the expert for one of two roles, they will then teach their partner what they have found out. All instructions are on the pp and resources provided. Students will need access to the GCSE sociology textbook. Question sheets are provided for students to fill in whilst their partner teaches them their expert topic.
How are different ages presented in the media? - key information on the pp, students to add this to their summary sheet.
Summary sheet provided, students fill this in at the end to make sure they have all the relevant information they need.
Plenary- consolidating their knowledge. This allows students to share their opinion on whether the voting age should be reduced.