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Showing 1 to 15 of 561 results Save | Export
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Stephanie D. Sears – Teaching Sociology, 2024
This teaching note reviews a four-part discussion post assignment that asks Black-identified students enrolled in a class connected to a Black living-learning community to make sociological and personal connections to concepts related to race, anti-Blackness, and institutional racism in Yaa Gyasi's novel "Homegoing." Reflecting on their…
Descriptors: African American Students, Novels, Racism, Intersectionality
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Snedker, Karen A.; Fredriks, Andria; Nye, Emily – Teaching Sociology, 2023
This teaching note describes the design and implementation of an undergraduate research team project to conduct a tent census. Previous studies highlight the importance of real-world research as a part of sociology curriculum. Tents, as a visible sign of homelessness, represent one such contemporary social problem. Our undergraduate research team…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Research, Research Projects, Sociology
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Francis, Robert D.; Hill, Carleigh E.; Overmier, Jenise – Teaching Sociology, 2023
There is no better time than now for sociologists to adopt open educational resources (OER), and sociology as a discipline is well positioned to lead. Adopting OER takes seriously the well-documented financial challenges faced by many students, supports classroom and campus goals of equity and inclusion, and allows for increased instructor…
Descriptors: Sociology, Open Educational Resources, Adoption (Ideas), Textbooks
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Reyes, Victoria; Bruene, Sara; Cohen, Tyler; Farooqi, Shaafi; La Scala, Shayna – Teaching Sociology, 2023
In this conversation essay, the authors incorporate teaching assistants (TAs) into pedagogical theorizing through what they call the teaching triad, an analytic heuristic to understand faculty-TA-undergraduate interactions. TAs are graduate students who are tasked with running discussion sections, smaller settings where undergraduates interact…
Descriptors: Teaching Assistants, College Faculty, Undergraduate Students, Teacher Student Relationship
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Estefan, Michel; Selbin, Jesse Cordes; Macdonald, Sarah – Teaching Sociology, 2023
Current approaches to building inclusive classrooms for first-generation and working-class students tend to emphasize communicative strategies: receiving students with welcoming messages that acknowledge and value their life experience and promoting a growth mindset. These methods are important, but they do little to address structural sources of…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Equal Education, Instructional Design, Assignments
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Stough-Hunter, Anjel; Lekies, Kristi S. – Teaching Sociology, 2023
Rural and first-generation students face unique challenges to accessing and persisting through college. While there is increasing literature on how to better serve first-generation college students, rural first-generation students have received far less attention. By associating student experiences with key concepts such as social groups, social…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Rural Areas, Sociology, Self Concept
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Wahl, Ana-María González – Teaching Sociology, 2023
First-generation students often feel alone on college campuses. These students can find themselves excluded from organizations, traditions, and spaces that require financial, social, and cultural capital they may not have. In my Sociology of Work course, I use a family work history project to center and validate their experiences. Using census…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Working Class, Genealogy, Sociology
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Castillo, Florence Emilia; García, Gustavo; Rivera, Alejandro Mendiaz; Hinostroza, Ana Paula Milán; Toscano, Natalia M. – Teaching Sociology, 2023
El Puente Research Fellowship is a transformative program that uses culturally relevant and reflective pedagogies, curriculum, and praxis for first-generation, working-class college students beyond the traditional classroom. Drawing on the Chicana/Latina feminist epistemologies of "plática" and "convivencia," we argue that the…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Working Class, Culturally Relevant Education, Hispanic American Students
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Taylor, Ann; Brosnan, Caragh; Webb, Gwendalyn – Teaching Sociology, 2022
Sociology teachers often encounter students studying to be future health professionals; sociology content can assist students to increase their understanding of patients, the social context of health and illness, and the social determinants of health. Engaging these students in sociological thinking can be challenging because of their diverse…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Clinics, Sociology, Nursing Education
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Johnson, Amy L.; Gleit, Rebecca D. – Teaching Sociology, 2022
Despite the centrality of data analysis to the discipline, sociology departments are currently falling short of teaching both undergraduate and graduate students crucial computing and statistical software skills. We argue that sociology instructors must intentionally and explicitly teach computing skills alongside statistical concepts to prepare…
Descriptors: College Students, Sociology, Social Science Research, Computer Science Education
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Izienicki, Hubert – Teaching Sociology, 2022
Whereas most sociologists consider sexuality a social construct, the general public tends to view it in more essentialist terms. This tendency is commonly manifested in the idea of sexual drives as internal overpowering biological forces guiding human sexual behavior. To counter this narrative, sociologists William Simon and John H. Gagnon…
Descriptors: Sexuality, Scripts, College Students, Intimacy
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Conner, Christopher T.; Baxter, Nicholas M. – Teaching Sociology, 2022
In this article, we report on the implementation of using the game Werewolf as a student-centered applied-learning activity to teach symbolic interaction theory and concepts. Engaging with symbolic interaction theory can be a powerful experience for students due to its potential to challenge taken-for-granted assumptions and analyze students'…
Descriptors: Games, Role Playing, Student Centered Learning, Undergraduate Students
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Sola, Jorge; Diaz-Catalán, Celia; Sádaba, Igor; Romanos, Eduardo; Rendueles, César – Teaching Sociology, 2022
Social inequality is a central theme in sociology study plans (both in research and education), but it is often one of the most difficult topics to teach. This article presents an innovative student-centered strategy for teaching social inequality that uses a survey to collect data on students' socioeconomic characteristics and perceptions of…
Descriptors: Student Surveys, Student Characteristics, Sociology, Social Stratification
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Estefan, Michel; Seim, Josh – Teaching Sociology, 2022
There has been a growing number of calls to improve theory instruction in sociology. These conversations have focused on what instructors should teach (with a renewed emphasis on racism and sexism) and whom to teach (with calls to diversify the reading list), but comparatively little attention has been placed on how social theory should be taught.…
Descriptors: Social Theories, Sociology, Student Centered Learning, Concept Mapping
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Denardo, Danielle – Teaching Sociology, 2022
The COVID-19 pandemic has both exposed and exacerbated many enduring social inequalities in countries throughout the world. Sociology instructors are thus likely to incorporate content related to this relationship between the pandemic and inequalities in their courses. This article explores the potential of horror films, specifically the subgenre…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Films, Social Bias
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