SOC263H5 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Note-Taking, Social Inequality, Intersectionality
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Preparation: read the assigned materials, flag where you have questions, imagine what might be discussed during class. Sit close to the instructor and listen for: themes, arguments, definitions, take notes below each subheading so that you capture key points don"t write down. In soc263, the ppf slides provide mainly subheadings everything the professor says write in abbreviations, much like texting. After class: review your notes, flag where you miss something and get the missing information from other students or the professor. Relatively long-lasting differences among individuals or groups of people that have implications for individual lives, especially for the rights or opportunities they [people] exercise and the rewards and privileges they enjoy" (p7, quote from grabb 2007, 1). The key ideas within this definition is that social inequality is a patterned set of relationships that develop overtime. The way experience affect our individual lives; especially the rights and privileges that some of us have and that others lack.