chapter 13 education and religion. chapter outline education and religious institutions the...

24
Chapter 13 Education and Religion

Upload: dwayne-elliott

Post on 29-Dec-2015

216 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Chapter 13 

Education and Religion

Page 2: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Chapter Outline

Education and Religious Institutions The Sociological Study of Education:

Theoretical Views Education, Symbolic Interactionism, and

Self-Fulfilling Prophecies Current Controversies in American

Education

Page 3: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Chapter Outline 

The Sociological Study of Religion: Theoretical Views

Tension Between Religion and Society Religion in the United States 

Page 4: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Manifest Functions of Education

Cultural reproduction. Social control. Assimilation. Training and development. Selection and allocation of statuses. The promotion of change.

Page 5: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Latent Functions and Dysfunctions

1. The production of a generation gap.

2. The custodial care of children.

3. The creation of a youth subculture.

4. The rationalization of inequality.

5. The perpetuation of social inequality.

Page 6: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

 Conflict Model of Education

The hidden curriculum teaches students obedience and conformity.

Credentialism amounts to using diplomas as passports to higher status.

Those of higher status can pass on their status-heritage in procuring superior education for their children.

Page 7: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Symbolic InteractionistPerspective

Two processes that take place within the schools:– interpersonal interactions – self-fulfilling prophecies

Page 8: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Self-fulfilling prophecy

Studies show teachers demand the most from students who share their backgrounds:

As a result, students learn less when they are from a lower social class or different race/ethnicity than is their teacher.

When teachers assume that certain students cannot succeed, they give those students less opportunity to do so.

Page 9: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Social Class and Schooling

Schools are a middle class domain dominated by middle class teachers.

Middle class or upper middle class children have likely been read to, and given opportunities to understand art and music.

Page 10: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Current Controversies inAmerican Education

Tracking - the use of early evaluations to determine the educational programs a child will be encouraged to follow.

High-Stakes Testing - In many school districts, students must now pass standardized tests before they can move on to a higher grade.

School choice - Options including tuition vouchers, tax credits, magnet schools, charter schools, and home schooling that allow families to choose where their children go to school.

Page 11: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Going to College

45% of recent high school graduates are enrolled in two or four-year colleges.

The number of minorities in college has declined relative to Whites since 1975.

Non-Hispanic white women are most likely to be enrolled in college and the group most likely to graduate.

Page 12: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Educational Achievement ofPersons 25 and Older

Page 13: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

% of High School Graduates Ages 18 to 21 Enrolled in College

Page 14: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Median Annual Income

High school

4 yrs. College

Master’s degree

Male 28,342 49,984 61,959

Female 15,664 30,972 40,744

White 20,294 37,600 49,804

African American

17,384 35,510 42,505

Hispanic 17,483 31,235 42,899

Page 15: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Sociological Study of Religion

Sociologists define religion as a system of beliefs and practices related to sacred things that unites believers into a moral community

Sociologists who study religion treat it as a set of values.

Sociologists examine the ways in which culture, society, and class relationships affect religion and the ways in which religion affects individuals and social structure.

Page 16: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Religious Affiliation: United States and Worldwide, 2000

Page 17: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Durkheim: Structural-Functional Theory of Religion

Three elementary forms of religion:

1. Distinction between things sacred and things profane.

2. A set of beliefs about the supernatural that help people explain and cope with the uncertainties associated with birth, death, creation, success, failure, and crisis.

3. A body of rituals or practices.

Page 18: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Functions of Religion

At the social level, religion gives the tradition a moral imperative.

At the personal level, religion provides support, consolation and reconciliation in times of crisis or need.

Page 19: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Conflict Theory

Marx saw religion as an “opiate of the people.”

Modern conflict theorists are more interested in how religion may act either to express or repress class and ideological struggles.

Page 20: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Weber: Religion as an Independent Force

Weber combined ideas from structural and conflict perspectives.

Interested in the forms of religion and their consequences for individuals and society.

Argued that Protestantism incubated fundamental values, such as the work ethic which linked work to salvation.

Page 21: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

U.S. Civil Religion

Important source of unity for the U.S. Beliefs: God guides the country. Symbols: The flag. Rituals: Pledge of Allegiance.

Page 22: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Distinctions Between Churches and Sects

Churches Sects

Examples Catholics Amish

Tension with society Low High

Attitude toward other religions

Tolerant Intolerant

Type of authority Traditional Charismatic

Organization Bureaucratic Informal

Page 23: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Changing Religious Commitment, 1962–2001

1962–65 2000–01

Belong to a church or synagogue

73% 66%

Attended church last week 46 41

Have no religion 2 8

Religion is very important to their own lives

70 60

Believe Bible is actual word of God

65 33

Page 24: Chapter 13 Education and Religion. Chapter Outline  Education and Religious Institutions  The Sociological Study of Education: Theoretical Views  Education,

Consequences of Religiosity

People with higher levels of religious affiliation tend to be friendlier, happier, cooperative, and more satisfied with their lives than others.

Religious affiliation has also been linked to socially conservative and authoritarian attitudes that maintain the status quo.