Sociology
Explore society. Challenge assumptions. Understand the world.
Why Choose Sociology?
If you enjoy debating ideas, questioning society, and exploring contemporary social issues, Sociology is for you. It develops critical thinking, research skills, and a global perspective, preparing you for higher education and a wide range of careers. A Level Sociology develops your understanding of contemporary UK society and the global context. You’ll study social institutions, inequality, identity, and change while developing analytical, evaluative, and research skills.
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Critical thinking and analytical reasoning
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Research design and evaluation
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Communication, essay writing, and debate
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Understanding social data and evidence
University Courses: Sociology, Criminology, Social Policy, Psychology, Politics, Law, Education, Media, Anthropology.
Career Paths: Teaching, social work, journalism, law, public policy, human resources, marketing, research, civil service, NGOs, and international organisation
These topics are studied by all students and form the backbone of the course:
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The role and functions of schools and their link to the economy and social structure
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Differences in achievement by social class, gender, and ethnicity
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School processes, subcultures, teacher-pupil relationships, and the hidden curriculum
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Educational policies, marketisation, selection, equality initiatives, and global influences
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Nature of crime, deviance, social order, and control
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Patterns of offending and victimisation by social group
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Contemporary issues: media, green crime, human rights, and state crime
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Crime prevention, policing, and the role of the justice system
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Sociological research methods and research design
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Quantitative and qualitative data collection: questionnaires, interviews, observation, statistics
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Positivism vs interpretivism, ethical considerations, objectivity, and value freedom
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Relationship between theory, research, and social policy
Students will study two topics from the following groups:
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Group |
Topic |
Overview |
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Group 1 |
Culture and Identity |
Study how identities are shaped by culture, socialisation, age, gender, class, ethnicity, sexuality, and the influence of production, consumption, and globalisation. |
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Families and Households |
Explore family diversity, marriage, cohabitation, divorce, gender roles, childhood, and UK demographic trends including migration and ageing population. |
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Health |
Investigate health inequalities, access to healthcare, mental illness, and the role of medicine and the global health industry. |
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Work, Poverty and Welfare |
Exmine poverty, wealth and income distribution, labour organisation, worklessness, and the impact of globalisation on life chances. |
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Group 2 |
Beliefs in Society |
Study religion, ideology, secularisation, religious organisations (churches, sects, cults, New Age movements), and global influences on belief and social change. |
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Global Development |
Explore global inequality, underdevelopment, development strategies, transnational organisations, aid, trade, industrialisation, urbanisation, environment, and gender. |
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The Media |
Examine media ownership, globalisation, news presentation, popular culture, and representations of social groups. |
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Stratification and Differentiation |
Investigate social class, status, power, life chances, social mobility, and global changes in inequality. |
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3 written exams, 2 hours each
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A mix of short-answer and essay questions
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No coursework
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AsAssessed on knowledge, application, and analysis/evaluation