Overview
Its time to get creative! Throughout this course you have explored a variety of sociological concepts and ideas regarding the differences between real and ideal societies. The An Ideal Society project assignment allows you to create an ideal society through application of course concepts.
What is an ideal society?
Key Components:
What are the norms, ideals, values, and beliefs within the society? How do these influence how people behave?
How do people socialize? How do the members learn the cultural rules, norms, and beliefs?
How does the society maintain social control? What rules and structure are in place to create balance and safety?
What types of social groups exist?
How does deviance play a role?
How does the society rank people according to wealth, income, race, education, and power?
What social classes exist?
What are the gender roles? Do gender roles exist? Why or why not?
Theory:
How can theories and research from the field of sociology explain what an ideal society is and assist with developing a healthy society?
Comte, Spencer, and Marx held different perspectives regarding society. Which of these perspectives fit an ideal society? Which of them fit a real society? How do they fit?
People:
How do members within the groups behave? How do they interact with each other? How do the members in minority groups engage with members from the majority? What roles do in-groups, out-groups, and subcultures play?
How do people within the society address issues of deviance? Are there consequences for harmful actions?
How can people change social positions within the ranking?
How do social classes impact how people interact? How do these impact services and goods within the society?
How do gender roles impact the daily functioning of the society? If gender roles do not exist, how do groups (families, social groups, communities) divide required tasks?
How do members in the society engage with members who are aging?
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