Verified Documents at University of Toronto St. George

Browse the full collection of course materials, past exams, study guides and class notes for SOC100H1 - Introduction to Sociology at University of Toronto St. George verified by …
PROFESSORS
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Rachel La Touche
fall
23
Caron C
fall
3

Verified Documents for Rachel La Touche

Class Notes

Taken by our most diligent verified note takers in class covering the entire semester.
SOC100H1 Lecture 1: SOC100H1
Note: not a full lecture, primary part of the lecture involved going over the syllabus outline. Required readings: soc100: starting points a sociologic
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Social Inequality, Max Horkheimer, Auguste Comte
Sociology: study of patterned relations among humans, and social institutions people create. Social institution: social structure made up of a number o
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SOC100H1 Lecture 1: SOC100 - Lecture 1 - Epistemology Introduction
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Symbolic Interactionism, Zombie, Predatory Lending
Question: who gets what and why? (inequality in humans) Value: (value of rewards) norms that govern behavior. The monkey with the better reward is not
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Body Language, Public Sociology, Symbolic Interactionism
Soc100 lecture 2 sociological perspective: one of many social problems, we can understand inequality by looking at broad social patterns, often operate
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Predatory Lending, Health Equity, Social Inequality
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Gender Inequality, Economic Inequality, Predatory Lending
Inequality: for sociologists, inequality is pervasive, has numerous forms and is uniquely social. Environmental inequality (e. g. unequal access to cle
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SOC100H1 Lecture 3: SOC100 - Lecture 3 - Methodolical Approaches
Research methods: methods social scientists use to answer a research question, once a problem is developed, we must figure out what kind of data is nee
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Online Dating Service, Sociological Inquiry, Social Desirability Bias
What are research methods: research methods are the rules and procedures that social scientists use to approach a research question, it is necessary th
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Online Dating Service, Sociological Inquiry, Catfishing
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Sociological Inquiry, Online Dating Service, Statistical Power
What are research methods: research methods are the rules and procedures that social scientists use to approach a research question. It is necessary th
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Ascribed Status, Status Symbol, Achieved Status
Soc 100 lecture 4 social structures. Why is social life so patterned considering people are so diverse: people come from different backgrounds, have di
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Social Control, Ascribed Status, Symbolic Interactionism
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Charismatic Authority, Road Rage, Commodification
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Baby Boomers, Anomie, Objectified
Soc100 - lecture 6 socialization and culture. Understanding elevator etiquette: development of identity, what roles we play. Success of socialization d
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Interracial Marriage, Monogamy
The family: family: any social unit, or set of social relations, that does what families are popularly imagined to do. P. 358: ans: living in the same
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Nominalism, Structural Functionalism
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Genderqueer, Phenotype
Sex: distinguishes between physiological bodies (defining males, females and intersex. Is biological (defined by sex organs, chromosomes and hormones)
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Talcott Parsons, Intersectionality, Symbolic Interactionism
Discussion questions: some sociologists would say that not all socialization happens from the top down . What do they mean by that: despite the problem
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Petite Bourgeoisie, For Marx, Proletariat
But what about class: the origins of class (from marx) are primarily economic. But, do all differences become inequalities: not all differences lead to
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 11: Hidden Curriculum, Symbolic Interactionism
Functionalism: visible/intended (manifest) and unintended (latent) functions of education in our society and how school fulfil them, manifest functions
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 11: Intersectionality, Androgyny, Cisgender
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SOC100H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 12: Petite Bourgeoisie, Intersectionality, Labour Power
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