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Understanding the Modern World

Unit Code: LSS101




Duration

Contact Hours

Campus

Prerequisite

Corequisite

One Semester

36 hours over the semester, normally 3 hours per week

Lilydale

NIL

Credit Points: 12.5 Credit Points


Related Course/s:

Formerly known as LSS200 Difference, Deviance and Conformity

Effective 2010

This is a prescribed unit of study in the Social Science Major/s. It may also be undertaken as a unit of study in any other Swinburne degree program, subject to the prerequisite and degree requirements.

Aims & Objectives:

This unit is designed to enhance students’ understanding of the social worlds in which they live and work. It provides a historical overview of the evolution of societies and examines the variety of cultural and institutional practices evident around the globe. The key features and central dynamics of modern societies are explored, and students are introduced to the sociological perpsective on human beings and their social creations.

On completion of this unit students should be able to:
• identify the key features of contemporary societies
• analyse the dynamics transforming social relations
• think critically about the historical forces shaping and reshaping social life

Teaching Methods:

Units will be taught in a variety of modes including face to face, online, distance and blended modes. Delivery of this unit may be through a mixture of lectures, tutorials, laboratories, seminars and online.

Assessment:

Essays 40 - 50%
Assignments 20 - 30%
Test 20 - 30%
Participation 0 - 10%

Generic Skills Outcomes:

This unit will provide discipline-based knowledge and professional capabilities and experiences contributing to students’ progress in attaining generic skills such as:
• Analysis skills developed through essays, reflective journals and film reviews requiring critical thinking
• Communication skills developed through written and oral presentations
• Ability to work independently developed through library research

Content:

Topics may include:
• types of society and varieties of cultures
• society, culture, subcultures
• modernisation
• industrialisation and urbanisation
• democracy and totalitarianism
• science
• consumption and commodification
• women’s movement
• agency
• rationalisation
• individualisation
• globalisation
• multiple modernities
• sociological diagnoses of the present: alienation, sickness of infinity, the iron cage

Textbooks:

Macionis, J.J, & Plummer, K , 2011, Sociology: A Global Introduction, 5h edn, Pearson Education Limited, Harlow. UK.