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Lyon, Katherine; Roberson, Nathan; Lam, Mark; Riccardi, Daniel; Lightfoot, Jennifer; Lolliot, Simon – Teaching Sociology, 2023
Multiple-choice questions (MCQs) are widely used in large introductory courses. Recent research focuses on MCQ reliability and validity and overlooks questions of accessibility. Yet, access to the norms of academic discourse embedded in MCQs differs between groups of first-year students. We theorize these norms as part of the institutionalized…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Multiple Choice Tests, Sociology, Psychology
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Foster, John D. – Teaching Sociology, 2022
This article examines the presentation of caste systems of stratification in U.S. introductory sociology textbooks. First, the "caste versus class" debate from the 1930s and 1940s is summarized and its competing perspectives are evaluated. Second, after an in-depth analysis of introductory sociology textbooks presenting material on the…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Textbook Content, Social Stratification, Sociology
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Wyatt, Randall – Teaching Sociology, 2022
This article provides tips on how popular media, specifically that of science fiction and horror, can be utilized in the classroom to elucidate complex concepts concerning race and ethnic relations. Drawing from the television series "Lovecraft Country," I highlight how concepts found in the work of authors such as W. E. B. Du Bois and…
Descriptors: Racism, Science Fiction, Literary Genres, Racial Relations
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Jafar, Afshan – Teaching Sociology, 2021
This article details an exercise for the first day of class in an introductory sociology course. Students in two sections of Introduction to Sociology taught by the same professor and covering the same content, with the exception of the exercise on the first day of class, were surveyed at the end of the semester regarding the first day. Student…
Descriptors: Sociology, Student Attitudes, Class Activities, Memory
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Adkins, Angela M. – Teaching Sociology, 2021
Prior literature suggests that self-transcendence (other-oriented) values may be a primary mechanism for moving beyond transitory feelings of empathy toward a compassionate orientation to addressing structural injustice. Active learning techniques in the classroom may then offer a fruitful platform for students to engage in the critical reflection…
Descriptors: Social Values, Social Justice, Consciousness Raising, Altruism
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Better, Alison – Teaching Sociology, 2021
Introduction to Sociology is a widely enrolled course that gives students both an overview of the field of sociology and tools to view and analyze the social worlds we live in. This course provides students new ways to see and understand themselves and the world around them. This teaching note describes ways to queer the Introduction to Sociology…
Descriptors: College Students, Introductory Courses, Sociology, Teaching Methods
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Oyinlade, A. Olu; Christo, Zachary J.; Finch, David W. – Teaching Sociology, 2020
The introductory sociology course is typically the only course most students take in sociology; hence, the introductory textbook becomes the only sociology textbook they may ever read as college students. The textbook, however, often lacks rigor in explaining concepts. This study focused on the thoroughness of explanations of the relations of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Sociology, Introductory Courses, College Students
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Bulanda, Jennifer Roebuck; Frye, Shelby – Teaching Sociology, 2020
Team-Based Learning (TBL) is a highly structured, immersive teaching strategy that emphasizes active learning through peer teams. Despite its many potential benefits for teaching introductory sociology, it has been slow to gain traction in the discipline. Instructors may debate whether the value of TBL is sufficient to justify its challenges,…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Sociology, Teamwork, Cooperative Learning
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Rogers, Kimberly B.; Nemeroff, Adam; Caputo, Kelly – Teaching Sociology, 2020
Scholars of teaching and learning in sociology have argued that introductory courses should teach toward foundational learning goals instead of providing an exhaustive review of the discipline. Nevertheless, prior research has provided far more guidance on what instructors ought to teach than how they can cohesively support learning across the…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Sociology, Student Educational Objectives, Private Colleges
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Laz, Cheryl – Teaching Sociology, 2020
Although there is a great deal of available material on using nontraditional resources for teaching sociology, the pedagogical uses of science fiction have not been examined for 20 years. This essay first asserts the need for an update based on changes in society and in science fiction over the past two decades. The paper then focuses on the uses…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Sociology, Introductory Courses, Science Fiction
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Nurse, Anne M.; Staiger, Trish – Teaching Sociology, 2019
Data reproducibility is becoming increasingly important in the social sciences, but it has yet to be incorporated into many undergraduate sociology programs. This note describes a service-learning activity that can be added to an introductory statistics course. Students partner with a nonprofit and analyze quantitative data to answer questions…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Sociology, Undergraduate Students, Service Learning
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Liu, John Chung-En; Szasz, Andrew – Teaching Sociology, 2019
Sociology has been slow in responding to the challenge of climate change. In this conversation, we advocate adding more climate change content to Introduction to Sociology courses. To support our arguments, we present data from a content analysis of the top 11 best-selling introductory textbooks in the United States, demonstrating that…
Descriptors: Sociology, Climate, Introductory Courses, Curriculum Development
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Rockwell, Ashley; Vidmar, Chris M.; Harvey, Penny; Greenwood, Leanna – Teaching Sociology, 2019
Assessing course goals is often challenging; assessing an abstract goal, like empathy, can be especially so. For many instructors, empathy is central to sociological thinking. As such, fostering empathy in students is a common course goal. In this article, we report the initial findings of a semester-long assessment of empathy change in…
Descriptors: Sociology, Empathy, Outcomes of Education, Undergraduate Students
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Cebulak, Jessica A.; Zipp, John F. – Teaching Sociology, 2019
A considerable amount of research across the past several decades has documented the emergence of a new racial ideology of "color-blindness" as well as evidence that white college students have difficulty recognizing the racial privileges that are obscured by this color-blindness. To address this, we developed a cooperative group White…
Descriptors: Infant Mortality, Racial Differences, Social Differences, Cooperative Learning
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Linneman, Judith A. – Teaching Sociology, 2019
Impacts of incorporating active learning pedagogies into a lecture-based course were examined among 266 students across nine research methods course sections taught by one instructor at a large public university. Pedagogies evaluated include lecture only, lecture with small group discussions, and lecture with simulations. Although…
Descriptors: Group Discussion, Simulation, Lecture Method, Teaching Methods
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