welcome to soci 1010 introduction to sociology spring quarter 2008 fort omaha room 218

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Welcome to SOCI 1010 Introduction to Sociology Spring Quarter 2008 Fort Omaha Room 218

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Welcome to SOCI 1010 Introduction to Sociology

Spring Quarter 2008 Fort Omaha Room 218

On your notecard, write your name, 3/25/08 and identify the

variables. • Hypothesis 1

– Men are more likely to have more than $20 cash in their wallets than women

– IV = – DV =

• Hypothesis 2– Open-mindedness and critical thinking skills

improve with more years of education one has completed

– IV =– DV =

Agenda for Classes #6 and #7

• Class Webpage http://www.quia.com/pages/soci1010.html

• Completing Culture• Film: Chaco Legacy• Socialization and Social Structure

Completing Culture

•Subcultures

•Racial, Ethnic and Religious

•Occupational and others

•Ethnocentrism

Film

• Chaco Legacy• http://www.jqjacobs.net/southwest/ch

aco.html

Sky-watchers of Sky-watchers of ChacoChaco

A center of Anazazi culture

Pueblo Bonito http://www.he.net/~mine/anasazi/p_bonito_show_5.html

Pueblo Bonito

• 800 rooms• 2000 - 5000 people• one of several large townsites in the

Canyon• surplus of subsistence goods• trading and ceremonial center

How would you know….

How old you are? What time it is? How soon it would be summer or winter, etc. ? When it would be safe to plant squash seeds?

You look across the Canyon to Fajada Butte

Fajada Butte

Midday Summer Solstice

THE SOLAR "CLOCK"

Did the stone slabs fall there, or were they placed?

Why mid-day rather than sunrise?

Was the spiral carved first or last?

Can it really plot the cycle of the moon?

Solstice Window Pueblo Bonito

Other aspects of life in the canyon

•the arts•agriculture•religion•astronomy

Potters practiced their craft ….

Masons perfected the art of building

Jackson Stairway

Farmers cultivated and irrigated fields

Spiritual life flourished

Sighting the Crab Nebula

Astronomers identified new sites

•Activity

•Get into 3 small groups

Small Group Activity

• If you were to pick 5 things to put in a time capsule to send into space or bury for future generations, what would you pick?

• What would these material things tell others about our cognitive and normative cultures?

• When time is up, write your list on the board.

• You have 8 minutes

Small Group Activity

• If you were to pick 5 things to put in a time capsule to send into space or bury for future generations, what would you pick?

• What would these material things tell others about our cognitive and normative cultures?

• When time is up, write your list on the board.

• You have 6 minutes

Small Group Activity

• If you were to pick 5 things to put in a time capsule to send into space or bury for future generations, what would you pick?

• What would these material things tell others about our cognitive and normative cultures?

• When time is up, write your list on the board.

• You have 4 minutes

Small Group Activity

• If you were to pick 5 things to put in a time capsule to send into space or bury for future generations, what would you pick?

• What would these material things tell others about our cognitive and normative cultures?

• When time is up, write your list on the board.

• You have 2 minutes

Small Group Activity

• If you were to pick 5 things to put in a time capsule to send into space or bury for future generations, what would you pick?

• What would these material things tell others about our cognitive and normative cultures?

• When time is up, write your list on the board.

• You have 1 minute.

Write your list of 5 things on the board…………

Report OutNow!

Tissa

• TISSA FROM SRI LANKA Pemawathie, 42, a female woodcutter, captured a naked, longhaired boy ambling about on all fours with a troupe of monkeys in the jungle near her home village of Tissamaharama, southern Sri Lanka, in early 1973. She named him Tissa after the village. As his habits were more animal than human, she handed him over to the police, who placed him in a private welfare centre 10 miles (16km) outside Colombo, run by Miss LP Morawake. Apparently, two other “animal boys” had been tamed there, one of whom drank milk straight from a cow’s udder. Three months after his admission, Tissa was still learning to walk upright and was not yet talking, although he could eat food from a plate with his hand. Most telling perhaps was that he had learned to smile.

Amala and Kamala

Kamala

Socialization

Chapter 3

http://www.quia.com/files/quia/users/socscimetro/Socialization

Social Structure

Chapter 4 and 5

Social Structure

Assignment

•Test over Chapters 1 – 5 (emphasis on 1 – 3) on Thursday, January 10.

•Be here for review on Tuesday!!