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Soc
101 Introduction to Sociology
An examination
of the basic concepts, principles, and findings of sociology: addressing
the nature of human social relations from simple, face-to-face relationships,
through formal organizations, to whole societies. Discover how social
patterns are created, how they become organized and established,
and how they change. (Offered every semester.) 3 credits.
Soc
102 Cultural Anthropology CH II
Some people
have learned to live in lands of ice and snow, while other exist
in steamy rain forests. How have humans learned to adapt to an incredibly
diverse set of circumstances and environments? Students will explore
this question while exploring the wide variety of human cultures.
At the same time, students will explore their own cultures and origins.(Offered
every semester.) 3 credits.
Soc
201 Social Research Design
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. Learn how sociologists
carry out investigations of social life. Students will learn how
to design and conduct surveys, experiments, and do participant observation.
Equal attention will be given to the needs of students as consumers
of social research, trying to make sense out of daily reports on
sociological findings in newspapers, television, and magazines.
(Offered every semester.) 3 credits.
Soc
204 Marriage and the Family
This course studies the family as a social institution; socio-cultural
as well as historical factors as related to sexuality, love, and
marital choice; adjustment and conflict in marriage, microsociological
analysis of family structure and dynamics. (Offered every semester.)
3 credits.
Soc
211 Social Problems
Society is beset
by numerous social problems such as crime, war, hunger, homelessness,
divorce, ethnic/gender conþict, violence, and economic power struggles,
political corruption, and overpopulation. The class will focus on
how we define, treat, and possibly solve social problems. (Offered
every semester.) 3 credits.
Soc
229 Experimental Course
(Same as
Soc 329.) 3 credits.
Soc 253 Conict Resolution
(Same as Pcst 253.) 3 credits.
Soc
267 Social Science Forum
(Same as
Posc, Hist, Pcst 267.) The Social Sciences Forum is a weekly
informal lunch time meeting for all students and faculty in the
social sciences. A wide range of outside guests (from ex-CIA agents
to forensic pathologists, from green politicians to fundamentalist
republicans) as well as members of the department present and discuss
material from a broad range of their various disciplines. (Offered
every semester.) 1 credit.
Soc
290/291 Independent Internship/Cooperative
Education
(Same as
Soc 490/491.) Supervised experience in an approved setting where
sociological services are provided. Required approval of academic
advisor and department chair. (Offered every semester.) 1-3 credits.
Soc
293 Introduction to Social Work
Prerequisite,
Soc 101. This course will provide an introduction to the ecological
perspective of the social work profession. The focus of the course
will be on the various levels of social work practice: individual
and group casework, community organization, cultural diversity and
policy making practice arenas with an emphasis on the interaction
between human behavior and the social environment. (Offered every
year.) 3 credits.
Soc
295 Topics in Sociology
(Same as
Soc 395.) Courses that treat different themes may be repeated
for credit. 3 credits.
Soc 302
Quantitative Data Analysis
Prerequisite, Soc 201. Students analyze data from a national
survey of Americans and make original discoveries about the nature
of social life. Students will learn to use SPSS, a computer program
used widely by professional sociologists. Each student will prepare
an original research report modeled after published journal articles,
and especially good papers from this course may be suitable for
publication. (Offered alternate years.) 3 credits.
Soc
305 Social and Political Theory
Prerequisite,
Soc 101 or instructor's consent. How is society possible? How
does society change? Critical study of contributions of social and
political philosophers and contemporary theorists in sociology to
these questions. Emergence and evolution of sociology as a systematic
discipline. Emphasis on macrostructural theory. Reading of more
recent critical theorists, black theorists, feminist theorists and
post-modernists. (Offered every year.) 3 credits.
Soc
310 Society and Advertising
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. An interdisciplinary
investigation into the foundations of advertising. Topics include:
historical origins of advertising; the economics of advertising;
legal, social, and ethical issues; advertising as a global philosophy,
the politics of consumerism; decoding the hermeneutics and semiology
of advertising; advertising as behavior modification and manipulation;
subliminal advertising; advertising’s inuence on the experience
of self in modern society; advertising as the modern art form. (Offered
alternate years.) 3 credits.
Soc
311 Society and Mass Communications
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent.
An analysis of mass communications media as a social institution.
The course employs an interdisciplinary approach asking what are
the origins, history, evolution, and social functions of the mass
media; the impact of the media on the social self; the transitions
from oral to print to electronic media; the view that the medium
is the message. Strong emphasis on electronic media and the impact
of media on the social construction of reality. (Offered every year.)
3 credits.
Soc
320 Sociology of Death
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. An interdisciplinary
investigation of death, dying, and the grieving process. Topics
include: the American way of death as a social institution; dying
as a psychological process; how society conditions us to deny death
and repress grief and loss; how I relate to my own death and the
death of significant others. How the experience, fear, and quality
of death has changed historically over the centuries. (Offered every
year.) 3 credits.
Soc 321 Getting Love Right: Romantic
Relationships in Contemporary Society
Prerequisites, none. This course is intended to be a workshop,
highly participatory and highly exploratory, rather than a lecture
series. We will address our current media permeated models of romantic
love – we’re in love with "falling in love." We will explore
the distinction between "falling in love" and "loving,"
the role of commitment versus feelings within a relationship, and
the model of friendship and its bearing on romantic, sexual relationships.
(Graded on a pass/no pass basis.) 1 credit.
Soc 322 Introduction to Meditation
Prerequisites, none. A course engaging in actual meditation
practice. Both Zen and Tibetan teachings are utilized. Mindfulness
and awareness practice, deep relaxation and seeing the mind clearly
are emphasized. (Graded on a pass/no pass basis.) 1 credit.
Soc 323 Sexual Literacy and Society
Prerequisites, none. This course is intended as a workshop,
highly participatory and highly exploratory – rather than a lecture
series. An examination of our current sexual ideologies, mythologies,
and sex education strategies. We address popular and scholarly debates
about modern sexuality. We inquire into sexuality, socialization
and social repression, as well as explore current understandings
of the relationship between sexuality and spirituality. (Graded
on a pass/no pass basis.) 1 credit.
Soc
324 Sleeping, Dreaming, Awakening: Reality 101
Prerequisites, none. This is a personal, hands-on seminar/workshop-styled
exploration of the experience of sleeping, dreaming, and awakening;
lucid dreaming; dream control; dream journals; dream interpretation;
dream meditation; conscious sleeping and unconscious sleeping; sleep
and death analogies; the nature and meaning of sleeping, of dreaming,
of awakening; daytime and nighttime. (Offered every year.) (Graded
on a pass/no pass basis.) 1 credit.
Soc
326 Topics in Sociology of Religion
Prerequisites, Soc 101, 102, or instructor’s consent. An examination
of selected topics in the sociology of religion. The topics may
be relatively narrowly focused and involve an intensive study of
a single religion or more broadly focused involving the study of
issues across religions. Courses that treat different themes may
be repeated for credit. (Offered every year.) 3 credits. Some examples:
Society
and Religion
How does social
structure quietly yet powerfully shape religious beliefs? How do
religious beliefs in turn affect social organizations and cultural
and political values?
Mind, Self,
and Society in Tibetan Buddhism CH II
This is a ten-day
retreat at a Tibetan/American Meditation Center in the spectacular
Colorado Rockies. For those interested in the eastern paths of liberation
this is a wonderful opportunity to explore your own mind in a new
way and to personally experience the teachings of Tibetan Buddhism
and their deep relevance for modern life. (Lab/travel fees.) (Offered
Interterm.)
Taming the
Monkey Mind: Buddhist Psychology and Sociology
(Same as
Hon 346.) This is an eight-day retreat at Land of Medicine Buddha
in the beautiful lush evergreen forests of Santa Cruz, California.
Students examine the similarities and differences between Western
models of the mind and psychology and Buddhist spirituality. (Lab/travel
fees.) (Offered Interterm.)
The Quest
for a New Age: Contemporary Spiritual Movements in the West
An examination
on both a critical scientific and a personal level of what William
James has called the "varieties of religious experience"
that human beings have undergone, cultivated, and institutionalized
with particular emphasis on modern Western society. We will look
at the proliferating variety of both exotic and familiar spiritual
experiences and traditions currently growing all around us.
Soc
328 Social Inequality, Social Diversity
Prerequisites,
Soc 101, 102, 211, or instructor's consent. Inequality among
members of the American and international community. Theoretical
emphasis on class, racial/ethnic, occupational, age, and sexual
inequality. Students examine the social structural bases of inequality
and theories to explain the creation of systems and ideologies of
subordination. 3 credits.
Soc
329 Experimental Course
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. Designed to
provide additional opportunities to explore experimental areas and
subjects of special interest. May be repeated for credit provided
the course content is different. 3 credits.
Soc
335 Society and the Environment
Prerequisites, Soc 101, 211, or instructor’s consent. The air
is thick with smog, famine breaks out with frightening regularity,
and resources continue to accumulate in selected regions. Yet, in
the long run, we are all citizens of this planet and must manage
to survive on it and with each other. What are the key issues in
this crucial debate that will determine all our futures? What ideas
underlie environmentalism, what policies have to be debated, and
what are the costs and benefits of different solutions to these
problems? (Offered every year.) 3 credits.
Soc
345 Social Psychology
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. Discussion
and analysis of the relationship between culture, group life, social
structure, and human behavior; emphasis upon the dialogue between
the individual and the social collective. Focus is on microsocial
theory. (Offered every year.) 3 credits.
Soc
347 Society, Culture, and Literature
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. (Same as Eng
347.) (Offered alternate years.) 3 credits. Some examples:
Literature
of Peace and Justice
Under conditions
of violence and oppression literature often may be one of the few
means to challenge injustice and promote peace. Literature may serve
as a voice against censorship; it may preserve the humanity of the
victim; it may rally those striving for justice. This course is
designed to explore the literatures of different cultures as they
treat issues of racism, sexual oppression, or economic exploitation.
The Passionate
Pair
This class presents
the dual perspectives of sociological and literary views of man
and woman in their loving struggle to define themselves as individuals,
partners, and as members of society. This course includes films,
videotapes, visits to museums and/or theatrical events (when appropriate),
as well as field research.
Soc
366 Area Studies
Prerequisites, Soc 101, 102, or instructor’s consent. These
courses are designed to give a more in-depth examination of the
cultures of a given area of the world. Courses which cover different
areas may be repeated for credit. (Offered every year.) 3 credits.
Some examples:
North and
Middle American Indians
Origins, archaeology,
ethnology, and linguistic relationships of the Indians of North
and Middle America; Mexican peasant culture; contemporary Indian
problems. 3 credits.
Latin American
Societies
Students examine
the cultures of South and Central America both modern and ancient.
Mayan, Quiché, Aztec, Inca, Miskito, and Yanomamo are a few of the
societies covered.
Pacific Island Cultures
Study of the geography, anthropology, and socioeconomic history
of the Pacific Islands, a largely oceanic region characterized by
diversity in the environment and culture. Colonial relationships
and more recent political transformations are examined. Polynesian,
Micronesian, Melanesian, and indigenous Australian peoples are discussed.
Soc
367 Public Interest Research
(Same as
Posc 367.) 3 credits.
Soc
372 Images of American Indians
Prerequisites, Soc 101, 102, or instructor’s consent. Students
explore the artistic, political, folk, and scientific images of
American Indians as demonstrated in literature, art, anthropology,
film, and folklore. The accuracy or inaccuracy of these images will
be examined along with reasons for their formation. The impact of
these images on popular culture and on American Indian societies
will be examined. (Offered every year.) 3 credits.
Soc
381 Sociology of Sex and Gender
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. Students examine
the ways in which macro institutions, (e.g., educational or work
systems) and micro institutions, (e.g., ways of conversing) structure
gender relations in society, and how gender in turn structures and
stratifies the social order. From the perspective of personal identity,
we will ask how it is that we experience ourselves as male and female.
The social consequences of gender stratification are considered,
including such substantive topic areas as the sexual division of
labor, sexual politics, and sexual violence. (Offered alternate
years.) 3 credits.
Soc 382 Women and Criminal Justice
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. Examines how
women’s involvement with criminal justice, whether as offenders
or victims, reflects prevailing ideology about women’s place and
function in the wider society. Particular attention is paid to the
differential "justice" made on the basis of sex, as well
as class and race. 3 credits.
Soc 383 Sociology of Deviant Behavior
(Same as Cj 383.) Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent.
This course examines why societies label behavior deviant and explores
the distinction between behaviors considered "socially unacceptable
and those considered "criminal." Theories of deviance,
as well as the amount, distribution and patterns of deviance are
considered. Discussions may also include political influence, social
change, and selected types of deviant activity. 3 credits.
Soc
390 Socialization Through the Life Span
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. A comprehensive
birth through old age study of human growth and behavior tracing
the psychosocial development stages. Students survey the social
and environment factors including the inuences of society, culture,
small groups, and the family on development of the person. (Offered
every year.) 3 credits.
Soc
395 Topics in Sociology
(Same as Soc 295, 495.) Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s
consent. An examination of selected topics in sociology. Courses
that treat different themes may be repeated for credit. (Offered
every year.) 3 credits. Current examples:
Group Seminars
and the Craft of Teaching
Undergraduate
students take on the real role of teachers and guide seminars, read
journals, and evaluate their students' work with grades.
The Sociology
of Self
A sociological
investigation of the persistent question, "Who am I?"
Students explore the extent to which answers are drawn from the
social construction of status and role thus driving the experience
of a real self undercover.
Population
and Demography
At current rates
the 5.7 billion population of the planet will double in forty years
making current problems of overpopulation even worse. This course
examines the size and composition of human populations as determined
by births, deaths, and migration. Age-sex profiles and the theory
of demographic transition are examined, as are policy issues such
as birth control, family planning, and national and global population
policies.
Social Movements
in the Sixties
Through film,
literature, and direct commune-experimentation a fresh look with
beginners eyes at this most outrageous decade, this most idealized
and despised decade, this most creative and anarchic decade. Protests,
civil rights, Vietnam, sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll.
Women at
Work
A redefinition
of "work" on the part of those who do it and those who
study it might facilitate a better understanding of the work lives
of women. Students examine the concept of "work force"
as a male category which has consigned women to a residual place.
Specific topics will include paid and unpaid labor in public and
private settings, the division of labor in the home, the gendered
wage-gap, global social change and women's work, and the meaning
of work in women's lives.
Sociology
of the Family
This course
engages a critical, in-depth analysis of the ways in which families
are seen by society and the ways in which they see themselves. Topics
to be covered include: family politics, division of labor, child
care, economics, health, leisure, and the politics of the family.
Child Abuse
An introduction to and overview of the phenomena of child abuse
as it relates to the helping professional. This class will examine
the definition and cause of child abuse from a sociological, cultural,
and psychological perspective. The legal and child welfare systems
will be studied in addition to treatment and prevention aspects
of the child abuse issue.
Soc 396 Indians of California CH II
California is the state with the largest American Indian population.
There are over 200 cultures indigenous to the Golden State with
104 reservations; 32 of these are in Southern California. Students
will become familiar with the history, culture, and contemporary
lives of this rich California heritage. Topics include early man
in California, the development of Spanish, Mexican, and American
presence and their effects on the native people. (Offered every
other semester.) 3 credits.
Soc
401 Field Research Methods
Prerequisite, Soc 201, Soc 305. An introduction to field research
in naturally-occurring settings. Data collection through participant
observation and interviewing with emphasis on the construction of
field notes. Ethics of field research, entree to the field site,
maintenance of the research relationship, and closure are emphasized
through classroom discussion and activity in selected field sites.
Analysis of data using the comparative method of grounded theory
is introduced. (Offered every year.) 3 credits.
Soc
402 Quantitative Data Analysis
Prerequisite, Soc 201. Students will analyze data from a national
survey of Americans and make original discoveries about the nature
of social life. Students will learn to use SPSS, the computer program
used widely by professional sociologists. Each student will prepare
an original research report modeled after published journal articles,
and especially good papers from this course may be suitable for
publication. 3 credits.
Soc
404 Global Family Systems
Prerequisites, Soc 101, 102, 211, or instructor’s consent.
Students examine the concept of family from the perspective of culture.
Every society has families which vary widely in their structure.
How is the family related to the structure and function of the larger
society? What forms does the family take and why? 3 credits.
Soc
410 Topics in Criminal Justice
Prerequisites, Soc 101, 211, or instructor’s consent. Students
examine selected topics in criminal justice. Topics may include
a range and variety of courses such as gangs, women in criminal
justice, pornography, violence, government, victimless crime, organized
crime, and criminal careers. The topics may be narrowly focused
and involve an intensive study of a single issue or application,
or more broadly oriented toward the study of a subject. Courses
that treat different themes may be repeated for credit. 3 credits.
Current examples:
Gangs and Gang Behavior
(Same as Cj 410.) This course addresses theories of gang behavior,
modes of law enforcement, and correctional intervention dealing
with street gang formation and activities (e.g., Latino, Samoan,
Vietnamese, Armenian, Filipino), as well as characteristic differences
among Gangbangers, Taggers, and others.
Victimless Crimes
(Same as Cj 410.) This course examines various criminal offenses
that often lack a complaining "victim" in the usual sense
that tend to generate intense social debate due to the consensual
nature of these crimes (e.g., drug use, prostitution, certain sexual
activities, gambling). The societal implications of social control
policies will be discussed.
Death and the Law
This course provides an introductory view of the various components
of a medicolegal death investigation with emphasis on the resultant
societal impact. The student will examine their personal perspectives
as they study types of death which come to the attention of the
Coroner’s Office. The course also introduces the student to assorted
career opportunities available within forensic science and related
careers.
Soc
415 Sociology of Organizations and Institutions
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. How and why
are organizations created? What are their purposes? How does the
need for organizational survival come to supersede whatever human
purposes lay at their origins? Course will look at organizations
through numerous metaphors: as machines, as organisms, as autopoietic
systems, etc. 3 credits.
Soc
425 Social Change
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s
consent. Human social structures are constantly in a state of
flux. This course looks at how and why these changes occur, and
the role we all play as actors in this ever changing drama. Analysis
of social and technological change and its consequences for major
systems of society. Discussion of the future of social and technological
change in post-industrial societies. 3 credits.
Soc
426 Crime and Delinquency
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. Crime and delinquency
are integral parts of human society. This class scrutinizes the
causes of crime, crime prevention and control, and the treatment
of criminals. Emphasis on the sociological causes, extent, constraint
and deterrence of juvenile delinquency and juvenile crime. Topics
include bio/psycho/sociogenic causation, youth criminalization,
professional versus amateur criminals, violence and sexual crimes,
victims and juvenile punishment alternatives. (Offered every year.)
3 credits.
Soc
429 Experimental Course
(Same as
Soc 329.) Prerequisites, Soc 101, 102, 211, or instructor's
consent. 3 credits.
Soc
440 Drugs and Society
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. Study of drug
use from a sociological perspective. Discussion will include the
effects and toxicity of legal drugs such as alcohol, nicotine, caffeine,
and over-the-counter pharmaceuticals, as well as illegal drugs such
as marijuana, cocaine, ecstasy, and heroine. Course topics include
the integration of drugs with everyday life, the prescription drug
industry as a social problem, addiction, recovery as the trope of
popular culture, drug-testing, HIV/AIDS and intravenous drug use,
criminal behavior and drug use, drug legalization debates and other
policy issues. 3 credits.
Soc 453 Conflict Resolution
(Same as Pcst 453.) Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s
consent. 3 credits.
Soc
460 White Collar Crime
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. This class
examines the underlying theories, changing definitions and diverse
nature of white-collar crime. These crimes may include offenses
perpetrated by "the rich," corporations and businesses,
and/or individuals. Topics may include embezzlement, political corruption,
employee theft, fraud, "con games," and emergent areas
such as computer crime and environmental crime. (Offered every year.)
3 credits.
Soc
480 Topics in the Sociology of Health
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. Health care
is presently in crisis, and the solution of that crisis requires
that health care and medical systems be re-examined from a critical
perspective. These courses examine problems of health and illness
in society and the world in relation to structural correlates (economics,
social organization, culture) and in respect to how health and illness
is experienced by individuals and groups. Courses that treat different
topics may be repeated for credit. 3 credits. Some examples:
Holistic Health
Analysis of the socio-cultural correlates of health and illness
with emphasis upon cross-cultural belief systems of etiology, diagnosis,
and intervention strategies. Focus of study is upon widely diverse
belief systems, including, but not limited to: allopathic, homeopathic,
Oriental, Aboriginal, and Native American. "Hands-on"
in-class activities and field trips, as well as traditional pedagogical
approaches.
Women, Health, and Healing
An exploration of the way in which lay, medical, and research
assumptions about women have influenced clinical care and scientific
inquiry. The course focuses on the health status and health needs
of women, including chronic illness, reproductive health and childbirth,
occupational health hazards, mental health, AIDS, physical and sexual
abuse, and addictive disorders relating to food, alcohol and drugs.
Medical Sociology
An introduction to health and medicine as a social institution.
A number of sociological concepts are examined: social epidemiology,
comparative definitions of health and healing, the social organization
of medical care, ideology of the health professions, the doctor-patient
relationship, and the social psychology of the sick role.
Political Economy of Health and Medicine
An examination of health, illness and medical care in the context
of the social and political structure of society. The health care
delivery system is analyzed at the macrosocial and microsocial levels
in visits to key health care sites in Orange County. Topics include
the crisis in health care funding, allocation of resources, the
ways in which power is distributed in the health care arena and
the outcome for the health and well-being of adults and children.
Soc
482 Gerontology
Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent. We live in
a rapidly aging society. The elderly are confronted by pressing
issues of economic support, social support, social support, chronic
illness, and medical care. The course provides an introduction to
major issues affecting the aged, to gerontological theories, and
to public opinion and public policy regarding aging. In addition,
specific topics such as aging and race and gender, Alzheimer’s Disease,
elder abuse, and death and dying will be considered. 3 credits.
Soc
490/491 Independent Internship/Cooperative
Education
(Same as
Soc 290/291.) Prerequisites, Soc 101, 102, 211, or instructor's
consent. (Offered every semester.) 1-3 credits.
Soc
492 Social Work Field/Practicum
Prerequisite, Soc 293 or instructor’s consent. Students begin
supervised fieldwork in a human service agency concentrating on
the practical application of skills and techniques in case planning
and organizational analysis. This course also provides classroom
analysis of the fieldwork practicum focusing upon establishing basic
casework and organizational skills and techniques of the social
work profession. (Offered every year.) 3 credits.
Soc
495 Topics in Sociology
(Same as Soc 395.) Prerequisites, Soc 101 or instructor’s consent.
3 credits.
Soc
496 Integrative Seminar
Prerequisite, completion or concurrent enrollment of all required
sociology courses. Each sociology major is required to do a significant
research project, usually resulting in a substantial research paper.
Choice of topics will be made in consultation with the instructor.
This course serves as a capstone experience as majors complete and
integrate their undergraduate studies in sociology. (Sociology majors
are strongly urged to take this course their senior year.) (Offered
spring semester.)
Soc
499 Individual Study
Prerequisites, instructor’s consent and approval of petition.
Directed reading and/or research designed to meet specific needs
of superior upper-division students. (Offered every semester.) 1-3
credits.
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