DISS Module1 1 8
DISS Module1 1 8
DISS Module1 1 8
in Social Sciences
Quarter 1
Module 1
Nature and Functions of Social Science Disciplines
Learner’s Packet
1
Disciplines and Ideas in the
Social Sciences
2
Week
MELC1: Differentiate the nature and functions of social science disciplines with
the natural sciences and humanities
• Define Social Sciences, Natural Sciences, and Humanities
• Distinguish Social and Natural Sciences, and Humanities
• Compare and contrast the various Social Science disciplines
What to Know
Learning Task 1. What am I in the Society?
A. List down at least five professions or career opportunities you want to pursue in the
future.
B. Scan some articles in the newspaper then identify at least 5 social issues that you
have read.
• Have you listed down professions that belong to the academe? Do you think they
belong to the Social Sciences?
_________________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________________
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• From the social issues that you have identified from the newspaper, what
particular profession do you think can actually address them?
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
What is In
Learning Task 3. Here Comes the Sun
Look closely at the picture then answer the questions that follow:
https://www.pexels.com/photo/sunray-across-green-grass-field-1237107/
____________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________
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• How do you think people process and record human experience? What discipline is
involved?
________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________
What is It
Learning Task 4: Some Good Read
After you have completed the foregoing activities, read thoroughly the text.
5
What is More
• Science and the Social Sciences
Society is commonly defined as “people in general thought of living together in
organized communities with shared laws, traditions, and values” (Merriam Webster Dictionary,
2014). It is “an enduring and cooperating social group whose members have developed
organized patterns of relationships through interactions with one another” (Merriam-Webster
Dictionary, 2014. The term “social” is closely related to human society as it refers to the
interaction of individuals and groups as well as to the welfare of humans as members of the
society.
Science pertains to “knowledge about or study of the natural world based on facts
learned through experiments and observation” (Merriam-Webster Dictionary). Science also
refers to the various methods or modes of inquiry utilized in order to obtain that knowledge.
However, science is oftentimes associated with matter, chemicals, rocks, plants, constellations,
motions, it should be noted that it can also be utilized systematically to study the intricacies
of human experience, such as attitudes, behaviors, opinions, feelings, and ideologies among
others.
Read MORE: Disciplines and Ideas in the Social Sciences (Reader) pp.2-22
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The activity/activities I like most is/are
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________,
because through these activities I have learned that
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
What I Can Do
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Learning Task 7: The Iron Grid
Complete the concept map based on your understanding of the brief discussion (See Annex
_ for the template)
Human Knowledge
defined as
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Learning Task 8. Answer Me
Identify whether the following topic is classified under the natural sciences, the social
sciences or both. Then, briefly explain your answer.
1. How is COVID19 transmitted? _____________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
2. How can the government control the spread of COVID19? __________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
3. Why is there a rising rate of COVID19 in our country? ___________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
4. Why is there an increased number of heavy typhoons that hit the Philippines?
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
5. When will the Mt. Pinatubo likely to erupt again? ____________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
Assessment
Discuss your answer to the following questions: (Have your discussion on a separate
sheet of paper)
1. How are the different branches of knowledge categorized? Illustrate how each domain
contributes in building human knowledge? What makes each domain distinct from one
another?
2.How is social sciences, natural sciences and humanities differ from one another? How
do these sciences complement one another in understanding the world?
Online: Make a 5-minute documentary on a particular social problem that you are most
interested in. You may include the details:
a.) nature of the social problem,
b) cause of the problem,
c.) possible solutions
10
Week
What I Know
Learning Task 1. My Issues
Identify the social science discipline that can resolve or expound the issues listed below.
1. Verifying the WHO report that COVID19 is airborne transmitted.
_______________________________________________________________________________
2. Understanding the concern of parents on Online Distance Learning.
_______________________________________________________________________________
3. Pursuing the Anti-Terrorism Law amidst the time of pandemic.
_______________________________________________________________________________
4. Analyzing the effectiveness of the “Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino program or 4Ps to
the targeted Filipino families
_______________________________________________________________________________
5. Understanding the reason why 27.9% of the Filipino population fall below the
poverty line in 2012.
_______________________________________________________________________________
6. The culture of mendicancy and over reliance of Filipinos to government welfare.
_______________________________________________________________________________
7. Gashing the overzealous “pinoy pride”, our pretense that Pinoys are good at
everything is the silliest clichés.
_______________________________________________________________________________
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8. Observing social distancing helps in the combat against COVID19.
_______________________________________________________________________________
9. Discovering the exact place of the “first mass in the Philippines” that happened in
1521.
_______________________________________________________________________________
10. Explaining the alarming frequency of sinkholes that occurred in various parts of
the Philippines just recently.
_______________________________________________________________________________
Learning Task 2. My Stand
Briefly answer the questions below.
1. What made you choose that particular social science discipline?
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
2. How can social science discipline expound or resolve the issue at hand?
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
Learning Task 3. I am on Track
List down at least five career tracks based on the different social science disciplines.
Accomplish the box below.
Anthropology
Economics
Geography
History
Linguistics
Political Science
Sociology
Psychology
Demography
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What Is In
Learning Task 4. My Previous Thought
Read the text to review on the last topic.
The domain of the social sciences attempts to explain and predict various
phenomena in nature. There are at least eight disciplines that are mentioned in this
module, e.g. Anthropology, Economics, Geography, History, Linguistics, Political
Science, Sociology, Psychology, and Demography. To reiterate, each discipline has its
own way of looking at society depending on its focus of study based on human behavior.
While the emergence of each discipline happened in different periods of time, most of
them occurred between the periods of 18th to 19th centuries. Others are relatively new,
while others have long been established by the Greeks, such as History.
To further enlighten you with the topic at hand, do the task below.
Learning Task 5. Trace the Roots
Give the etymology of the different Social Science disciplines and their meaning.
You may refer to a dictionary or any references of your choice online.
1. socius _____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
2. polis ______________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
3. linguistique________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
4. Anthropos ________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
5. oikanomia ________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
6. istoria _____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
7. geo ________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
8. psyche _____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
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What Is New
Learning Task 6. My Network
Study the picture. How can you relate the image to Social Sciences especially nowadays that
technology seems to be indispensable? In three to five sentences, what do you think the
picture depicts?
https://viterbischool.usc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/COSINE.jpg
What is it
Learning Task 7. Read Me
Read thoroughly the text below.
There are eight disciplines in the Social Sciences that you will be familiarized with as you go
through the discussion. Be able to note details of the important events that gave way to the
emergence of each discipline including its proponent/pioneer and their contributions to the
field.
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Anthropology - Its roots can be traced from natural history which is the study of
plants, animals and humans with reference to their history and native environment.
The discovery and contact to new civilizations by European explorers and colonizers
led to curiosity and questions of who these people are, who their ancestors were, how
they are related to other people in other places, what makes them distinct, what
similarities they share with the rest, how they conduct their way of life, and what
culture they have in terms of knowledge they possess, their beliefs, technology that
they have, etc. It was only in the 19th century that the discipline began its formative
years as a social science, though since the ancient times, there were already many
illustrations, chronicles and travelogues containing descriptions of human culture
and civilizations.
https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.n9KJbyN_vFbwSaP1SI03rAHaIi&pid=Api&rs=
1&c=1&qlt=95&w=105&h=121 (image)
Economics - It was not considered a separate discipline until the 19th century. The
Greeks examined wealth accumulation and inquiries on whether property should be
in the hands of private or public institutions. During the medieval times, scholars
argued that it was a moral obligation of businesses to sell goods at a just price.
Economic thought evolved through feudalism in the Middle Ages to mercantilist
theory in the Renaissance, when people were concerned to orient policy to further the
national interest. Changes in the economic thought have always accompanied
changes in the economy, just as the changes in economic thought can propel change
in economic policy.
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Smith is also known for creating the concept of gross domestic product (GDP) and
for his theory of compensating wage differentials. 2 According to this theory,
dangerous or undesirable jobs tend to pay higher wages as a way of attracting
workers to these positions.3 Smith's most notable contribution to the field of
economics was his 1776 book, "An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth
of Nations."
1 https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.di_t4-
efpg7HYQPA8TLg4gAAAA&pid=Api&rs=1&c=1&qlt=95&w=122&h=122(image)
https://www.investopedia.com/updates/adam-smith-economics/
By RAKESH SHARMA Updated Feb 16, 2020
Geography - It is an ancient and honorable field of learning with its roots firmly set
in classical antiquity. People engaged in the study of geography because it satisfies
their natural curiosity about foreign places and the different ways of life. The ancient
Greeks made the first contribution to the subject through measuring the earth using
grids and meridians.
Eratosthenes of Cyrene (c. 276 BCE–192 or 194 BCE) was an ancient Greek
mathematician, poet, and astronomer who is known as the father of geography.
Eratosthenes was the first person to use the word
"geography" and other geographical terms that are still in
use today, and his efforts to calculate the circumference
of the Earth and the distance from the Earth to the Sun
paved the way for our modern understanding of the
cosmos. Among his other many accomplishments were
the creation of the first map of the world and the
invention of an algorithm known as the sieve of
Eratosthenes, which is used to identify prime numbers.
https://www.thoughtco.com/eratosthenes-biography-1435011 By Matt Rosenberg
Updated July 03, 2019
https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.Fj_hCILjgIWG_S5H69X80gHaEK&pid=Api&rs=
1&c=1&qlt=95&w=160&h=90 (image)
History - Influences of ancient Greeks have helped spawn variant interpretations of
the nature of history which have evolved over the centuries and continue to change
today. The groundwork for professional historiography in East Asia was established
by the Han dynasty. Through the Medieval and Renaissance period, History was
often studied through a sacred or religious perspective. In the West, historians
developed modern methods of historiography in the 17th and 18th centuries, especially
in France and Germany. In the 20th century, academic historians focused less on
epic nationalistic narratives, which often tended to glorify the nation or great men, to
more objective and complex analyses of social and intellectual forces. Recently, the
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filed of digital history has begun to address ways of using computer technology to
pose new questions to historical data and generate digital scholarships.
Herodotus was a Greek writer and geographer credited with being the first
historian. Sometime around the year 425 B.C., Herodotus published his
magnum opus: a long account of the Greco -Persian Wars that he called “The
Histories.” (The Greek word “historie” means “in quiry.”) Before Herodotus,
no writer had ever made such a systematic, thorough
study of the past or tried to explain the cause-and-effect
of its events. After Herodotus, historical analysis
became an indispensable part of intellectual and
political life. Scholars have been following in Herodotus’
footsteps for 2,500 years.
https://www.history.com/topics/ancient-history/herodotus
https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.7C22WCcmNiaezNkqVrRMBQHaJQ&pid=Api&
rs=1&c=1&qlt=95&w=85&h=106 (image)
Linguistics – It was the Babylon who first created linguistics texts called Sumerian
whereas the Hindus also created text called Vedas. The formal study of language
begun in India and it started with the formulation of 3,959 rules of Sanskrit
morphology. Early interest in language in the West was a part of Philosophy, not
grammatical description.
Political Science – It was once part of the many related fields of study like history,
philosophy, law and economics. The theoretical and practical study of the state and
the politics began way back to the time of the ancient Greeks, about 500-300 B.C.
During the ancient times, men had formed basic social linkages, inherently
persuaded by the needs to associate themselves to protect their survival and
interests. Families came to organize collective unions from simple bands to more
organized associations forming a village whose membership span to more than a
hundred that in the process ushered the birth of a city. The chieftain who headed a
village was chosen from the ranks of leaders with the power to make laws, judge and
execute laws. Eventually, the chiefdom became a state.
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Aristotle, Greek Aristoteles, (born 384 BCE,
Stagira, Chalcidice, Greece—died 322, Chalcis, Euboea)
Ancient Greek philosopher and scientist, one of the
greatest intellectual figures of Western history. He was the
author of a philosophical and scientific system that became the
framework and vehicle for both
Christian Scholasticism and medieval Islamic philosophy. Even after the intellectual
revolutions of the Renaissance, the Reformation, and the Enlightenment, Aristotelian
concepts remained embedded in Western thinking.
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Aristotle
https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.8bbnpajXw19XeSHKn7iwmgHaHa&pid=Api&r
s=1&c=1&qlt=95&w=98&h=98 (image)
Psychology – It has its first roots in ancient Greek philosophy such as epistemology,
metaphysics, religion and oriental philosophy. Its seeds were sown from natural
sciences such as biology and physiology. Over the centuries, psychology and
physiology became increasingly separated resulting to the two conceptions of
psychology that is phenomenological (experiential) and mechanistic (physiological).
Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920)
Wilhelm Wundt was a 19th century psychologist who established the discipline
of experimental psychology and is considered to be one of the fathers of
psychology.
Wilhelm Wundt was born in Baden, Germany on August 16, 1832, to a Lutheran
minister and his wife. Wundt studied medicine at the
University of Tubingen for one year, but his academic
performance was poor. Wundt continued studying at
the University of Berlin after graduation.
In 1857, Wundt accepted a position as a lecturer at the
University of Heidelberg, where he also worked as a
lab assistant to Hermann Helmholtz, a physiologist.
Wundt taught the first scientific psychology course
beginning in 1862. That same year, he introduced the discipline of experimental
psychology in the book Contributions to the Theory of Sensory Perception. In 1864,
Wundt advanced to assistant professor of physiology, and he began to
explore neuropsychology.
https://www.goodtherapy.org/famous-psychologists/wilhelm-wundt.html
https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.c2uDvbkxu9qA0WFd7lpLugHaGL&pid=Api&rs
=1&c=1&qlt=95&w=136&h=113 (image)
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Sociology and Demography - The intellectual, scientific and industrial revolution
which happened in Europe in the middle of the 19th century led to the development
of Sociology. The intellectual revolution opened new perspectives in society which
offered the people new principles, ideals and beliefs, changing their outlook in life
and the way they perceive themselves, their environment and relations with
fellowmen. The scientific revolution empowered men to overcome their natural
limitations and improve society. The industrial revolution led rapid progress and
economic stimulus. The revolutions in Europe brought rapid and radical changes
which resulted to social problems, issues and social unrest prompting some
individuals to direct their attention and investigation of social phenomena.
Auguste Comte (1798-1857)
A French sociologist who advocated the application of scientific
method to social life and positivism. He was the one who coined
the term “sociology” and wrote the “Cours de Philosophie Positive”
published from 1830-1842 in six volumes
https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.pMEAxQCmGrTYSPEo5Sj_TgHaJe&pid=Api&r
s=1&c=1&qlt=95&w=87&h=111 (image)
What Is More
Let us also take note of some Filipinos who have contributed significantly in the different
Social Science disciplines in the Philippines.
Learning Task 8. Say My Name
Identify the Filipino personalities and their contribution to the social sciences. Tell
something about them based on the choices given below. You may write your answer on
the line provided for.
https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.uvxPqCVQfQU9V233LiAuQQAAAA&pid=Api&rs=1&
c=1&qlt=95&w=67&h=107
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B. Teodoro Agoncillo (1912 – 1985)
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.ZeH23kZtqSiSXmRcXhzHiAAAAA&pid=Api&rs=1&c
=1&qlt=95&w=95&h=115
https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.cjT22xwZTV9sFAe0VpO7OgHaJb&pid=Api&rs=1&c
=1&qlt=95&w=86&h=110
https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP._CWM1ASBRVO0I6Px4eRM2AHaFj&pid=Api&rs=1
&c=1&qlt=95&w=166&h=124
https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.TSnVl6WJ2TLNkmPnNmSZ_AAAAA&pid=Api&rs=1
&c=1&qlt=95&w=119&h=119
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Choices:
1. A noted Filipino psychologist known for his work on kapuwa. He was known as the
“Father of Filipino Psychology”
2. A prominent Filipino historian known for his “Pantayong Pananaw”
3. An influential Filipino historian who advocated a greater role of the masses in
history
4. A prominent Filipino historian named “National Scientist of the Philippines” in 1985
5. He was dubbed as “the country’s first and foremost cultural anthropologist”
Learning Task 9. My Term
Read thoroughly the statements below. Then choose from the word pool below the
appropriate term that corresponds to them.
1. ____________ A description of society’s customary behaviors, beliefs and attitudes.
2. ____________Objects or materials made or modified for use by hominids.
3. ____________The period in the past before people could write.
4. ____________The customary ways of thinking and behaving of a population or society
5. ____________The difference in value between a country’s imports and exports over a
certain period.
6. ____________The official process of counting the number of people in a country, city,
or town.
7. ____________The movement of people from one country or place to another in order
to live or work.
8. ____________Any of a family of erect bipedal primate mammals that includes recent
humans
9. ____________The behavioral, cultural, or psychological traits typically associated
with one sex
10. ______________The hardened remains or impressions of plants and animals that
lived in the past.
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Poor Average Excellent
I can identify
personalities who
have contributed to
the Social Sciences
WHY?
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Learning Task 11. The Iron Grid
Complete the grid below. Fill out each heading with the correct answer.
Proponent/Pioneer Discipline Work/s Significant event/s
Auguste Comte
Geography
Principles of
Physiological
Psychology
Ferdinand de
Saussure
History
Prepared the
earliest maps of the
known world
Edward Burnett
Taylor
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Learning Task 13. Tell Me
Answer the question comprehensively.
1. Why do you have to study Anthropology? Do you agree that anthropology can be considered
as the fundamental discipline concerned with humans? Justify your answer.
What I Can Do
Learning Task 14. My Search
Write a single page essay on the topic, “ If I become a social scientist, I would…”,
highlighting your passion to a particular discipline and your probable contribution in
enriching the field of study in the future. You may want to do a simple research on the
lives of people who have contributed much in a certain field to have an idea on their
motivation and outlook in life.
You will be graded based on this rubric.
Criteria Description Points Points
Gained
Total 20
Assessment
Learning Task 15. On My Own
A. Create a timeline showing the major historical events and social context in the
emergence of the social science disciplines.
B. Be able to discuss what and how these events contributed to the emergence of each
discipline. You may include the personalities involved and their contribution.
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Weeks
What I Know
Learning Task 1. The Iron Grid
Fill up the grid below with the given concepts according to the specific theory.
Structural Functionalism Marxism Symbolic Interactionism
Concepts:
Society is systematically structured, and maybe likened to a biological organism
Social functions refer to results or effects for the operation of the society in
general
Manifest functions are those that are intentional or known
Latent functions are the unexpected effects of the institutions
Manifest dysfunctions are expected disruptions of social life
It is a social science approach which depends on the symbolic meaning
developed by people in the process of interaction
Symbols refer to the means by which people extensively and creatively
communicate
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Society distinguishes between the infrahuman (lower animal) and human life
The self refers to the conscious, contemplative personality of the individual
The mind or the mental aspect of the individuals materializes human
communication
Bourgeoisie, proletariat, and historical materialism
Alienation means separation from ones true or necessary nature
False consciousness or the Marxist belief that members of the working class are
deceived from their true class position when they fail to realize their class
oppression
Praxis encourages the community or group under study to become empowered
and help them challenge their oppression
What Is In
You have learned in the previous module the nature of social sciences and its
various disciplines. You are now also familiar with how these social science disciplines
emerged and the remarkable personalities behind them. This module introduces to you
the most dominant approaches and ideas employed in the social sciences. These
concepts may help provide plausible explanations on why humans act and think the
way they do. These theories will help you understand and explain human behavior.
Open (known by both you and others) Blindspot (unknown to you but known
by others)
Hidden (known to you but not by others) Unknown (Unknown by both you and
others)
https://www.wiseinsights.net/self-awareness-blindness-johari/
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Be guided by the following questions as you reflect while filling out the grid.
❖ How much do you know yourself?
❖ What social theory do you think govern your actions and dispositions?
❖ How does knowing oneself make us better understand others in the society?
❖ What quadrant is the hardest one to fill out? Which comes next?
❖ How could these social science theories help you in understanding the
individual in the society and the society per se in general?
What is it
Learning Task 3. My Approach Differs
Read thoroughly the text. Take note that each approach is discussed along with its
historical context, key concepts and strengths and weaknesses. Then be prepared for
the activities/tasks that follow.
Structural Functionalism
It is one of the approaches categorized under positivist Social Science. In this
approach, social balance and equilibrium are created when all parts of society are
operating well. Study the picture below.
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Historical Context
The foundations of this theory were laid by the French sociologist Emile Durkheim in
the 19th century discussed in his books, The Division of Labor in Society and Suicide.
Another contribution would come from England, through the initiatives of Bronislaw
Malinowski and A.R. Radcliffe-Brown. The early 20th century had Malinowski speculated
that cultural practices had psychological and physiological functions. Meanwhile,
Radcliffe-Brown focused on social structure. In the United States, Talcott Parsons
introduced the idea of homeostasis, or the idea that these are constant types of
structures which compose the inner reliant systems of a society and worked to maintain
society.
Key Concepts
Among the important concepts in structural functionalism are social structure, social
function, social dysfunction, manifest function, and latent function. Study the figure
below.
government
SOCIAL STRUCTURES
(patterned social relations)
Church (religion)
School (education)
media
Structural
Functionalism
MANIFEST FUNCTIONS
(intended functions)
SOCIAL
FUNCTIONS/DYSFUNCTIONS
(effects for the operations of
society
LATENT FUNCTIONS
(unintended functions)
(
What about the manifest and latent functions of education? Can you determine what they are?
Social Dysfunctions. Dysfunctions may also be manifest or latent and can have a
negative effect on society. Manifest dysfunctions are expected disruptions of social life.
For instance, a manifest dysfunction of heavy migration from rural to urban areas might
include over population and unemployment. Latent dysfunction might include rise in
crime rate due to massive unemployment generated by the said migration.
Strengths and Criticisms of Structural Functionalism
One of the strengths of structural functionalism is the existence of general agreement
on the values and norms of the society by the majority. For example, sharing is good,
stealing is bad. This helps keep order and harmony in society. Another strength of the
theory is the belief that society is made up of integrated parts that are bound together,
and that if something is wrong with one part, it will affect the other parts. Lastly,
structural functionalism tends to seek stability and avoid conflict, thus maintaining
social order.
However, these strengths are also seen as weaknesses by some critics. For
instance, it is seen as wary of social change because of its focus on integration and
consensus which in doing so, ignores independence and conflict. Another weakness is
its tendency to ignore inequality in terms of race, gender and class, which causes
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conflict. It is also criticized for having no agency for it sees individuals as puppets
playing out their respective roles in society. Furthermore, the theory was only able to
explain the development of institutions through recourse to the consequences attributed
to them. For the postmodernists, structural functionalism is criticized for its claim to
objectivity and propagation of a grand narrative in explaining society in all its modes.
Marxism
Marxism refers to the political and economic theories of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.
In this theory, the concept of class struggle plays an important role in abolishing class
oppression. Marx believed that consciousness is shaped by the material and economic
environment; hence history is a product of material circumstances. It espouses a
dialectical view of social change and serves as a critique of capitalism. Marxism is
associated with conflict theory, the view that society is divided into social classes which
are always in conflict with one another. It analyzes how society functions to serve the
powerful class and disadvantage the others, thereby causing conflict. It views social
order as a product of coercion and power being exercised by the more powerful group
(bourgeoisie to the disadvantage group (proletariat).It sees society as being fragmented
into groups that compete for social and economic resources, with power in the hands of
those with the greatest political, economic, and social resources.
Historical Context
After Marx death in 1883, Marxism as a political ideology came into existence. It was
primarily the product of the attempt by Engels and other followers of Marx. They
condensed Marx ideas into a comprehensive worldview. Overtime, there emerged
different types of Marxism: Classical Marxism, Orthodox Communism, and Neo-
Marxism or Modern Marxism.
Classical Marxism refers to a philosophy of history that explains why socialism is meant
to take the place of capitalism (Heywood,2007).
Orthodox communism emerged during the 20th century. It was characterized by the
Russian Revolution led by Vladimir Lenin in 1917 which became the Communist Party
in 1918.
Modern Marxism or Neo-Marxism is an updated or revised from of Marxism was
developed which rejects determinism and emphasizes the importance of economics and
the privileged status of the proletariat. Neo-Marxist rejected the idea that class struggle
is the beginning and end of class analysis. They also rejected orthodox communism.
Did you know that Marx was able to devote time to study and develop his economic and political theories
because Engels supported him financially? Engels gave Marx the royalties of his book, Condition of the
Working Class in England and sought for donations from other sympathizers
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Key Concepts
Historical materialism is an important concept in Marxism. Marx emphasized that
material conditions shape consciousness and history. For Marx, the emergence of a
classless society would signal the eventual end of history because it is the ideal state
where wealth would be owned collectively by the people. Only through class struggle
would the establishment of a classless society be possible.
In his work, The German Ideology (1845), Marx discussed the four stages of society:
primitive communism, slavery, feudalism, and capitalism. In primitive communism,
there was no concept of ownership and everything was communal, but conflict was
determined by material scarcity. Slavery was characterized by ancient societies where
the source of conflict was between master and slave. Meanwhile, feudalism had its
source of conflict between landowners and serfs; and lastly, capitalism wherein the
conflict was between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat.
Another important concept to help us better understand Marxism is the alienation
which means separation from one’s true or necessary nature and the idea was used by
the Marxists to describe the process by which labor is reduced to being a mere
commodity under capitalism. From their labor, workers are expected to produce
surplus, or the amount of resources that exceeds the portion that is needed, which can
be utilized for profit. From this, surplus value was generated, or the value extracted
from the labor of the proletariat by the mechanism of capitalist exploitation. In order to
mask the true nature of workers’ oppression, capitalists propagate false
consciousness, the Marxists belief that members of the working class deceived from
their true class position when they fail to realize their class oppression. This false
consciousness is said to cause workers to disregard the true nature of their oppression
because of the belief in the possibility of upward mobility. In order to expose this false
consciousness and eventually end class oppression, Marxists emphasized praxis, or the
process by which theory is enacted to realize by critically assessing the world and
change society based on the workers’ own class interests, rather than accepting the
ideology of the capitalist class.
In capitalist society, two conflicting classes emerged: the bourgeoisie or the middle class who
controlled the mode of production, and the proletariat or the workers whose labor brought profit for
the bourgeois class
Did you know that George Orwell’s Animal Farm (1945) was a critique of Russian Communism which he
described as a “brutal dictatorship, built upon the cult of personality and enforced by a reign of terror” For
a full story of George Orwell’s Animal Farm, please visit msxnet.org/orwell/print/animal_farm.pdf.
Symbolic Interactionism
Symbolic interactionism refers to a key framework of sociological theory which depends
on the symbolic meaning developed by people in the process of interaction. Through
the lens of symbolic interactionism, society is examined by concentrating on the
subjective meanings that people impose on things, incidents and actions. Subjective
meanings are prioritized because of the belief that people behave based on what they
perceived to be true and not on what are objectively true. Hence, society is seen as
socially constructed based on human interpretation.
Historical Context
Symbolic interactionism was a reaction to behaviorism of psychological theories
dominant at the time it was first formulated in the 1920s and 1930s. Its origin can be
traced back to American sociologists George Mead and Herbert Blumer. In this
approach, humans are differentiated from animals who merely react to their
environment, because humans have the ability to disrupt process of stimulus response.
Symbolic Interactionism is also rooted in phenomenology, for its asserts that the
objective world has no reality for humans, only objects which are subjectively identified
have meaning.
Symbolic Interactionism traces its origins to Max Weber’s assertion that individual’s act according to
their interpretation of the meaning of their world. However, it was the American philosopher, George
Herbert Mead who introduced symbolic interactionism to American sociology in the 1920s.
35
Key Concepts in Symbolic Interactionism
One of the concepts that is important in this approach is that of symbols, which refer
to the means by which people extensively and creatively communicate. Symbols are
culturally derived social objects having shared meanings that are created and
maintained in social interaction
Society is also another important concept in symbolic interactionism. It distinguishes
between the infrahuman (human animal) and human life. In human life, collaboration
is cognitive and conscious while an infrahuman life, cooperation is determined
physiologically. Human cooperation can only be made possible by each individual
determining the purpose of other people’s action, and each individual choosing his or
her own reaction based on that purpose.
The self is another important concept in symbolic interactionism. It refers to the
conscious, contemplative personality of the individual. It is the being or nature of a
person one imagines when he or she thinks about who he or she is. The development
of self is made possible through role-taking: in order to see yourself, you have to be able
to take the role of another, which in turn allows you to contemplate upon your own self.
Another important concept is the mind, or the mental aspect of individuals which
materialize from human communication. The mind becomes evident when significant
symbols are being used in communication. It becomes apparent whenever the individual
is interacting with himself or herself using significant symbols.
Strengths and Criticisms
Among the strengths of symbolic interactionism is the recognition that people are
symbol users, that one can examine society by concentrating on the subjective meanings
that people impose on things, incidents, and actions.
Another strength is the claim that people respond to others based on their
understanding of the situation, that people behave based on what they perceive d to be
true and not on what are objectively true.
Another strength would be the recognition that society is a process by which people
have constructed meaning and have negotiated social interaction. Lastly, its focus on
microlevel analysis serves as one of its strengths since it concentrates on individuals
rather than larger structures or institutions.
One of the criticisms against symbolic interactionism is its focus on small scale aspects
of social life and its over emphasis on the individual. It tends to neglect the over all level
of social interpretation—the “big picture”.
36
Another criticism is that it downplays the role of the social forces and institutions on
individual interactions. It is not able to explain how structures affect individual
meanings, perceptions, and interpretations.
What’s More
Learning Task 4. My Function
After thoroughly reading the text, you are now ready to answer the proceeding tasks.
A. Write MF if the statement is a manifest function and LT if it refers to latent
function.
1. _______ School provides education for children.
2. _______ School provides day care service for children of working parents.
3. _______ Religion provides courtship opportunities for single churchgoers.
4. _______ Religion provides moral standards for society.
5. _______ Sports clubs provide opportunities for social interaction among people
B. Tell whether the concept below is True or False based on Marxism theory
1. _______ Historical materialism is an important concept in Marxism.
2. ________Slavery is a characteristic of the ancient societies where the source of
conflict was between master and slave.
3. ________Marxism is associated with conflict theory.
4. ________Bourgeoisie is the powerful group and proletariat is the disadvantaged
group
5. ________Class struggle plays an important role in abolishing class oppression.
C. Tell what concept of Symbolic Interactionism (SI) is stated below.
1. This refers to the means by which people extensively and creatively
communicate. _______________________
2. It distinguishes between the infra human and human life. _________________
3. It refers to the conscious, contemplative personality of an individual. ________
4. It is the mental aspect of the individual which materializes from human
communication. _________________
5. It consists of two parts: the I and the Me. _____________________
D. Fill up the grid below with according to the heading. Provide the table with at
least three for each column.
37
Approach Concepts Strengths Weaknesses
Structural
Functionalism
Marxism
Symbolic
Interactionism
WHY?
Share your thoughts about going through this lesson for two weeks.
2. The differences between the human and infrahuman life are _________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
What I Can Do
Learning Task 7. My Concepts
Complete the statements based on the concepts and principles that you have read in
the foregoing phase of the module. Make sure to discuss each concept briefly and
concisely.
39
2. The differences between the human and infrahuman life are _________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
40
Learning Task 9. Issues and Approaches
Think of the current and pressing social issue in the country. Analyze the said
social issue, how it can be solved by any of the theoretical approaches
discussed in this module. (Be guided by the rubric)
Assessment
Learning Task 10. On My Own
Make a comparative analysis of the three theories discussed in this module based on
their concepts and principles. Identify whether there are similarities or differences
existing among the three theories. You may use graphic organizers to help you in your
analysis. (Be guided by the rubric)
Total 20
41
Weeks
What I Know
Learning Task 1: My Issues
Think and list down social issues in the Philippines that can be analyzed using the
dominant approaches that were discussed in the previous weeks’ module. You may list
down as many as you can think of.
Functionalism Interactionism
Whats In
Learning Task 2. Approach Recall
Before delving deeper into the lesson in this module, take a glimpse of what you have
learned in the previous modules. Read carefully the key concepts below then think of
what particular social science approach/es they bespeak of.
44
Social Science Approach/Theory
Key Concepts (Structural Functionalism, Marxism,
Symbolic Interactionism)
1. self
2. symbols
3. mind
4. society
5. manifest function
6. latent function
7. social structure
8. conflict
9. proletariat
10.bourgeoisie
Whats New
Learning Task 3: Gallery Walk
Reflect on the compilation of pictures below then be guided by the questions that
follow:
45
Processing Questions:
46
What Is It
Learning Task 4: I Read
Read thoroughly the text.
Again, Parsons’ main interest was the system as a whole rather than the actor of
the system – how the system controls the actor, not how the actor creates and maintains
the system. This reflects Parsons’ commitment on this issue to structural functional
orientation.
Merton made it clear from the outset that structural functional analysis focuses
on groups, organizations, societies, and cultures. He stated that any object that can be
subjected to structural functional analysis must “represent a standardized (that is
patterned and repetitive) item” (Merton, 1949/1968:104). He had in mind such things
as “social roles, institutional patterns, social processes, cultural patterns, culturally
patterned emotions, social norms, group organization, social structure, devices for
social control, etc.” (Merton, 1949/1968:104)
Early structural functionalists tended to focus almost entirely on the functions
of one social structure or institution for another. However, in Merton’s view, early
analysts tended to confuse the subjective motives of individuals with the functions of
structures or institutions. The focus of the structural functionalist should be on social
functions rather than on individual motives. Functions, according to Merton, are defined
as “those observed consequences which make for the adaptation or adjustment of a
given system” (1949/1968:105). However, there is a clear ideological bias, when one
focuses only on adaptation or adjustment, for they are always positive consequences. It
is important to note that one social fact can have negative consequences for another
social fact. To rectify this serious omission in early structural functionalism, Merton
developed the idea of a dysfunction. Just as structures or institutions could contribute
48
to the maintenance of other parts of the social system, they also could have negative
consequences for them.
Merton also posited the idea of nonfunctions, which he defined as consequences
that are simple irrelevant to the systems under consideration. Included here might be
social forms that are “survivals” from earlier historical times. Although they may have
had positive or negative consequences in the past, they have no significant effect on
contemporary society.
Merton also introduced the concepts of manifest and latent functions. These two
terms have also been important additions to functional analysis. In simple terms,
manifest functions are those that are intended, whereas latent functions are unintended.
As further clarification of functional theory, Merton pointed out that a structure
maybe dysfunctional for the system as a whole and yet may continue to exist; for
example, discrimination against females is generally functional for males. However,
these forms of discrimination are not without some dysfunctions, even for the group for
which they are functional. Males do suffer from their discriminatory against females.
One could argue that these forms of discrimination adversely affect those who
discriminate by keeping vast numbers of people underproductive and by increasing the
likelihood of social conflict.
Merton contended that not all structures are indispensable to the workings of the
social system. Some parts of our social system can be eliminated. This helps functional
theory overcome another of its conservative biases. By recognizing that some structures
are expendable, functionalism opens the way for meaningful social change. Our society,
for example, could continue to exist (and even be improved) by the elimination of
discrimination against various minority groups.
Merton’s clarifications are great utility to sociologists (for example, Gans, 1972)
who wish to perform structural functionalism analyses.
• Marxism
Marxism, a body of doctrine developed by Karl Marx and, to a lesser extent, by
Friedrich Engels in the mid-19th century. It originally consisted of three related ideas:
a philosophical anthropology, a theory of history, and an economic and political program.
There is also Marxism as it has been understood and practiced by the various socialist
movements, particularly before 1914.
The written work of Marx cannot be reduced to a philosophy, much less to a
philosophical system. The whole of his work is a radical critique of philosophy, especially
of G.W.F. Hegel’s idealist system and of the philosophies of the left and right post-
Hegelians. It is not, however, a mere denial of those philosophies. Marx declared that
philosophy must become reality. One could no longer be content with interpreting the
world; one must be concerned with transforming it, which meant transforming both the
world itself and human consciousness of it. This, in turn, required a critique of
experience together with a critique of ideas. In fact, Marx believed that all knowledge
involves a critique of ideas. He was not an empiricist. Rather, his work teems with
concepts (appropriation, alienation, praxis, creative labour, value, and so on) that he
had inherited from earlier philosophers and economists, including Hegel, Johann
Fichte, Immanuel Kant, Adam Smith, David Ricardo, and John Stuart Mill. What
uniquely characterizes the thought of Marx is that, instead of making abstract
49
affirmations about a whole group of problems such as human nature, knowledge, and
matter, he examines each problem in its dynamic relation to the others and, above all,
tries to relate them to historical, social, political, and economic realities.
Raised to the level of historical law, this hypothesis was subsequently called
historical materialism. Marx applied it to capitalist society, both in Manifest der
kommunistischen Partei (1848; The Communist Manifesto) and Das Kapital (vol. 1,
1867; “Capital”) and in other writings. Although Marx reflected upon his working
hypothesis for many years, he did not formulate it in a very exact manner: different
expressions served him for identical realities. If one takes the text literally, social reality
is structured in the following way:
1. Underlying everything as the real basis of society is the economic structure.
This structure includes (a) the “material forces of production,” that is, the labour and
means of production, and (b) the overall “relations of production,” or the social and
political arrangements that regulate production and distribution. Although Marx stated
that there is a correspondence between the “material forces” of production and the
indispensable “relations” of production, he never made himself clear on the nature of
the correspondence, a fact that was to be the source of differing interpretations among
his later followers.
2. Above the economic structure rises the superstructure, consisting of legal and
political “forms of social consciousness” that correspond to the economic structure.
Marx says nothing about the nature of this correspondence between ideological forms
and economic structure, except that through the ideological forms individuals become
conscious of the conflict within the economic structure between the material forces of
production and the existing relations of production expressed in the legal property
relations. In other words, “The sum total of the forces of production accessible to men
determines the condition of society” and is at the base of society. “The social structure
and the state issue continually from the life processes of definite individuals . . . as they
are in reality, that is acting and materially producing.” The political relations that
individuals establish among themselves are dependent on material production, as are
the legal relations. This foundation of the social on the economic is not an incidental
point: it colours Marx’s whole analysis.
o Analysis of society
To go directly to the heart of the work of Marx, one must focus on his concrete
program for humanity. This is just as important for an understanding of Marx as are
The Communist Manifesto and Das Kapital. Marx’s interpretation of human nature
begins with human need. “Man,” he wrote in the Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts
of 1844,
is first of all a natural being. As a natural being and a living natural being, he is
endowed on the one hand with natural powers, vital powers…; these powers exist in him
as aptitudes, instincts. On the other hand, as an objective, natural, physical, sensitive
being, he is a suffering, dependent and limited being…, that is, the objects of his instincts
exist outside him, independent of him, but are the objects of his need, indispensable and
essential for the realization and confirmation of his substantial powers.
50
The point of departure of human history is therefore living human beings, who seek
to satisfy certain primary needs. “The first historical fact is the production of the means
to satisfy these needs.” This satisfaction, in turn, opens the way for new needs. Human
activity is thus essentially a struggle with nature that must furnish the means of
satisfying human needs: drink, food, clothing, the development of human powers and
then of human intellectual and artistic abilities. In this undertaking, people discover
themselves as productive beings who humanize themselves through their labour.
Furthermore, they humanize nature while they naturalize themselves. By their creative
activity, by their labour, they realize their identity with the nature that they master,
while at the same time, they achieve free consciousness. Born of nature, they become
fully human by opposing it. Becoming aware in their struggle against nature of what
separates them from it, they find the conditions of their fulfillment, of the realization of
their true stature. The dawning of consciousness is inseparable from struggle. By
appropriating all the creative energies, they discover that “all that is called history is
nothing else than the process of creating man through human labour, the becoming of
nature for man. Man has thus evident and irrefutable proof of his own creation by
himself.” Understood in its universal dimension, human activity reveals that “for man,
man is the supreme being.” It is thus vain to speak of God, creation, and metaphysical
problems. Fully naturalized, humans are sufficient unto themselves: they have
recaptured the fullness of humanity in its full liberty.
(From Henri Chambre, Professor, Institute of Social Studies, Catholic Institute of Paris,
1947–78. Associate Director of the Laboratory, College of France, Paris, 1968–73. Author
of De Karl Marx à Lénine et Mao Tsé-toung)
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Marxism
• Symbolic Interactionism
The idea of symbolic interactions was first crystalized in the work of George
Herbert Mead who coined the term symbolic interaction and is the foremost exponent
of the perspective. Symbolic interaction is a loosely structured cluster of fundamental
ideas, assumptions, or propositions about human beings in society. It is a perspective,
a point of view, which guides the way one sees the social world. It is frequently called a
perspective in social psychology. Symbolic interaction is a perspective on the social
world which focuses on interaction as the unit of study, and should be used to study
and to understand the larger social structure as well as the nature of individual
interactions.
Symbols refer to meanings. For symbolic interactions, things (objects, ideas,
beliefs, people, values, states of being) do not simply exist, they exist in the meanings
they have. What is meaning, how personal life takes on meaning, how meaning persists,
is transformed, lost, and regained—these are core questions for symbolic interactions.
Meanings are established in communication: hence the importance of interaction. Our
world exists in the meanings it has for us, and our meanings come from our interactions.
People, like meanings, exist in a social context.
51
o The Basic Premises
According to Blumer, symbolic interaction rests on three basic premises:
1. Human beings act toward things on the basis of the meanings the things have for
them.
2. The meanings of such things are derived from, or grow out of, social interaction.
3. These meanings are handled in and modified through an interpretative process used
by the person in dealing with the things he encounters.
o Mind
Mind is a process, not a thing, a process through which people carry on transactions
with their environment, and deal with their world. The mind works by making
indications to itself, that is, by noting things in the world. Mind is the symbolic
interaction the individual engages in with herself. People interact within themselves all
the time. This process is called self-indication—"a moving communicative process in
which the individual notes things, assesses them, gives them a meaning and decides to
act on the basis of the meaning.”
Related to the process of self-indication is the idea of conceptualizing. For the
symbolic interactionist, a concept is how we know an object. It is formed as the end
product of this process of making indications to ourselves and conceptualizing reality.
The concept serves three functions:
1. It introduces a new orientation or point of view.
2. It serves as a tool or as a means of transacting business with one’s
environment.
3. It makes possible deductive reasoning and so the anticipation of new
experience.
o Society
“Human society” according to Blumer, “is seen as consisting of acting people, and the
life of the society is to be seen as consisting of their actions.” Shibutani said, “human
society might be best regarded as an ongoing process, a becoming rather than a being.”
52
Social change is just inherent in the definition of society, because society is seen as
constantly undergoing organization and reorganization. “The arrangements that make
up society are constantly being ‘worked at’ by those who live within them; they are
constantly being arranged, modified, rearranged, sustained, defended and
undermined.”
o Socialization
Socialization, within the symbolic interactionist perspective, is an ongoing process.
People go through life seeing themselves as seen by others, and do sometimes take on
new others, or new reference groups. This new reference groups can give rise to new
views on self.
Adult socialization is a ubiquitous process, something made especially clear in complex
societies. Socialization into a new job, college, marriage, medical school, hospitals, and
old age homes, all these and many more situations, involves the reformulation of the
self. In some circumstances, especially within the context of the total institution, such
as the army, jail, or a mental hospital, this socialization can be so dramatic as to lead
to basic changes in individual conceptions of self. In the symbolic interactionist
perspective, the individual is, above all, an actor. Socialization is not the manipulation
or modification of the person, but the ongoing creation of the person, a creation in which
the individual is an active participant. The individual learns from her society. Minded
behavior the person the person to construct the society for herself. Creating constructs
and defining situations are also a way she can construct society for others.
o The Definition of Situation
“If men define situations as real, they are real in their consequences.” The statements
represent a dual focus in symbolic interaction: first, what goes into the definition of a
situation, that is, what are the processes involved in defining situations; and second,
what are the consequences of that socially defined situation.
Situations clarify or organize reality by providing people with categories of
meaning, for the things, people, and behavior to be found in the situation. Let us
consider some examples. First, what is a situation, and how does it order reality? If
you suddenly woke up to find yourself lying on a high bed in a pale green and white
room with only a metal chest of drawers with a plastic pitcher and drinking glass on
top. Where would you be? And if a doctor opened and a woman in a white dress holding
a clipboard under one arm walked in, who might she be? You are almost going to figure
yourself to be in a hospital, which means you must be sick, hurt, or damaged in some
way. Even if you felt no pain, you would probably begin exploring your body to find the
problem which must, you assume, have brought you here. You “recognize” the
situation: you take cues, put them together, and construct what “must” be going on.
And the person walking in? Knowing the situation, you know the probabilities: a doctor,
nurse, maybe a lab technician, or some other hospital staff member. If the same woman,
same costume, showed up somewhere else, say a dentist’s office, you would think she
is a dental hygienist, dentist, dental assistant perhaps. Thus, the situation provides
people with a way of ordering the social world and the other people in it. Some situations
are very clear, very conventional, or standard.
53
What Is More
Based on your understanding of what you have read in the preceding pages, you are
now ready to do the following activities as instructed.
Learning Task 5. A. The Organic Analogy
On a sheet of paper, draw a body then decide what function each body performs if it
represents a society. Be guided by the diagram. For additional insight, you may watch
the clip for not more than 3 minutes at
http://www.youtube.com/user/lizvoges1#p/u/16/Ri2lh6ZB4LU
Source:
https://image.slidesharecdn.com/sociologyexchangecouk-shared-resource4170-120627073037-
phpapp01/95/sociologyexchangecouk-shared-resource-8-728.jpg?cb=1340782274
54
B. Take the Big Bag!
Source: https://rdln.files.wordpress.com/2017/03/takethebigbag.jpg?w=233&h=300
C. The Tree
55
Source:https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-
C7Hg4y0UIBQ/V15216TdcLI/AAAAAAAALro/F1NY1_5doUYSmbelCvoDZAZhZpJDzwsVgCKgB/s1600/Mo
lave_tropical_theferns_info.jpg
Source:
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/ce/62/91/ce6291dfef3b5e50a7548cf6c26d7593.jpg
Through the different approaches that were discussed in this module, I learned that
society is about
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_________.
What I Can Do
Learning Task 9. Play a Role
Read and analyze the scenario then share in writing what possible solutions can be
done based on the approaches that were discussed.
Assessment
Learning Task 10. On My Own
Read thoughtfully the situation then discuss your answer. Your answer will be grade
based on the rubric given.
2. Analyze the impact of corruption on some government agencies and its toll on the
economic and political situation of the country. How would you apply the theory of
structural functionalism in your analysis of the Philippine society
today?_____________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
57
__________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
3. Who are the bourgeoise and the proletariat of today? in this modern times? How can
you compare them with the capitalists (bourgeoise) and the workers (proletariat) in
Marxism’s
theory?_____________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
58
Weeks
What I Know
Learning Task 1: Mind’s Eye
Organize the concepts listed down below under the appropriate heading in the
grid.
61
What is In
Learning Task 2. I Recall
Let us look back at the lesson that you have worked on in the last module. Can you still
recall? To help you connect this to the present lesson, answer the brief task. Carefully
read each statement then tell whether what the statement says is True or False.
1. ____________ Structural Functionalism sees society as a complex system whose
parts work together to promote solidarity and stability.
2. _____________ Symbolic Interactionism is a social science approach which depends
on the symbolic meaning developed by people in the process of interaction.
3. ____________ Marxism is a social science approach that is associated with conflict
theory.
4. _____________ Marxism views social order as being a product of coercion and power
exercised by a more powerful group to the disadvantaged group
5. ____________ Structural Functionalism refers to the viewpoint that institutions in a
society are parts of a whole, each with important functions to maintain social stability.
What is New
Learning Task 3: Say Something
Write at least three words that you can think of about the picture. Write them
on the space provided for.
https://tse2.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.AfPfQInVuSpwzLIwK34QkgHaIP&pid=Api&P=0&w=300&h=300
https://tse4.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.QFPp1ditfQ92taQ15dpTwQHaHa&pid=Api&P=0&w=300&h=300
____________________________________ ____________________________________
____________________________________ ____________________________________
____________________________________ ____________________________________
62
https://libraryofprofessionalcoaching.com/wp-app/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/002qq-850x491.jpg
https://64dollarquestion.files.wordpress.com/2019/03/downloadfile-11896010240968370410.jpg
____________________________________ _________________________________
____________________________________ __________________________________
https://static.vecteezy.com/system/resources/previews/000/554/314/original/green-energy-and-save-environment-
concept-human-head-with-brain-man-and-dog-are-running-in-city-parks-creating-a-new-idea-background-vector.jpg
https://cardinaldirections.weebly.com/uploads/6/2/6/8/6268585/4307359.png?411
____________________________________ ________________________________
____________________________________ ________________________________
63
Processing Questions:
What is It
Learning Task 4. Read Me
Read the text thoroughly.
• PSYCHOANALYSIS
Psychoanalysis can be described in two ways: first,
it is a comprehensive theory about human nature,
drive, actions, growth, and experience. Second, it also Oedipus complex refers to
a male child’s sexual
refers to a method of treatment for psychological
feeling s of jealousy and
problems and challenges in living a successful life,
anger towards his father.
(APsaA). Psychoanalysis, which traces its roots to
The boy resolves his desire
psychologist Sigmund Freud, means “analysis of the for his mother through
mind”. It came from the word psychoanalyse, coined in fear of castration from his
French by Freud in 1896 from Latinized form of Greek father.
psyche, which means mental, plus German analyses, Electra complex refers to a
from Greek analysis. Freud used psychische analyse in girl’s feelings of desire for her
1894. It began as Freud’s approach to counseling and father and jealousy of her
psychotherapy and is considered a time-consuming mother.
approach which can involve 4 one-hour sessions each
week over a period of several years. Psychoanalysis has Penis envy is the female
been used as a social science approach as early as the counterpart to Freud’s
twentieth century and is sometimes considered as the castration complex. It refers
only school of psychology that paints a complete and to a girl’s distancing herself
dynamic picture of personality. Psychoanalysis as a from her mother and
social science approach liberates people by acquiring devoting attention to her
consciousness of the unconscious. By making father after realizing that she
conscious of the unconscious, people will understand has no penis, concluding that
why they behave in a certain way or why they hold she is in a disadvantageous
certain values and beliefs. position, blaming her mother
o Historical Context for her misfortune.
Psychoanalaysis began with Sigmund Freud when
he broadened his practice from medicine to
psychiatry in 1882 (Nystul,1999). He was
influenced by Joseph Breuer, a prominent Viennese
physician who believed that a client can be helped by simply talking about
64
his or her problem, also known as the talking cure. Experiencing serious
emotional problems himself, he engaged in extensive self-analysis. From
his self- analysis he was able to develop theories such as the Oedipus
complex, the Electra complex, and penis envy among others.
o Key Concepts in Psychoanalysis
In Freud’s theory of personality, central to which is the structure of the
personality such as the id, ego, and superego. The id serves as the
original system of the personality. It is considered as the pool of psychic
energy from which the energy from the ego and the superego emerge. It is
referred to as the self-gratifying branch of the personality in that it is
driven by the pleasure principle, which attempts to reduce tension by
satisfaction of sexual and aggressive impulses. The ego is referred to as
the decision-making branch of the personality. It is ruled by the reality
principle in that it attempts to exert a sensible influence over the id and
the superego. The superego, on the other hand, is referred to as the
discriminating branch of the personality in the sense that it is concerned
with moralistic issues deciding what is right or wrong. According to Freud,
the key to a healthy personality is a balance between the id, ego, and
superego.
Id vs. Superego and Ego: I want to steal
Superego to Id: You should not steal because it is wrong.
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explain themes such as voting, coalition formation, ethnic relations, social
mobility, class reproduction, crime, and marriage.
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discrimination, crime and punishment, human capital, families, and
organ market. For that, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1992.
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Old Institutionalism focused on how formal institutions constraints
human behavior, New Institutionalism recognizes the importance of both
formal and informal institutions in shaping social behavior. Historical
institutionalism uses institutions to find cycles of social, political, and
economic behavior and change across time. In the Philippines, the
historical institutionalist approach can be utilized in examining the role of
the state as being structurally unable to provide genuine democracy to the
Filipino people as it is still controlled by the political and economic elites,
making it challenging to broaden political participation and making
equitable distribution of resources impossible.
o Historical Context
The American economist and sociologist Thorstein Veblen was a leading
figure who described the neoclassical approach as being too focused on
individuals when Institutionalism made its debut during the late 19th and
early 20th century. In the mid-20th century, institutionalism found its way
to anthropology through the works of Karl Polanyi, who argued that
economic interactions are historically dependent and can only be
understood in terms of their social context. Institutionalism made its
appearance in political science through Carl Friedrich. Institutionalism
also made its way to sociology through Chester Irving Bernard.
In the 1980s, studies in social structures paved the way for a resurgence
of interest in institutions and the appearance of New Institutionalism as
initiated by political scientists James March and Johan Olsen.
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INSTITUTIONS
Humanly devised constraints that affect human behavior
types of institutions
Formal Institutions
Informal Institutions
Legally introduced and
Rules outside official channels
enforced by the state
examples
money dowry
holidays Tipping
Max Weber - He was born on April 21, 1864 in Erfurt, Prussia (present day
Germany). In 1903, he resigned from teaching and became the associate
editor of the Archives for Social Sciences and Social Welfare where his
interest lied in more fundamental issues of social sciences. He died on
June 14, 1920. Some of his notable works are: The Protestant Ethic and
the Spirit of Capitalism, 1904; The City, 1912; The Sociology of
Religion,1922; General Economic History, 1923; and The Theory of Social
and Economic Organization, 1925.
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James March – He was born in 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. He is best known
for his research on organization and organizational decision making.
Together with Olsen, he launched new or neo-institutionalism in 1984 as
a reaction against various reductionist approaches that attempt to explain
how non-political factors affect the operation of political institutions.
• FEMINIST THEORY
Basically, feminism promotes the belief that women and men should be
treated equally and that steps have to be taken to realize the goal of gender
equality. Feminist theory as an approach is still considered by some as
being in the developmental stage compared to other theoretical approaches
in social sciences. Almost all feminist research is undertaken by women
who espouse a feminist perspective and use a feminist methodology by
letting women be heard and rectify male-oriented view that most feminist
research is sexist, favoring men over women, because of cultural beliefs
and the prevalence of male researchers.
o Historical Context
Women have been fighting for their rights to achieve equal status with
men as early as the 19th century. The so-called first wave feminism was
characterized by initiatives taken by women to fight for women suffrage or
the right to vote and be educated, labor rights and other privileges.
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The second wave feminism in the 1960s was characterized by the so
called women’s liberation. In this period, feminists realized that the gains
of first wave feminism were not enough. Second wave feminism realized
that giving women the right to vote was not enough to solve the problem
of women’s oppression. The goal of second wave feminism was women’s
liberation and not merely political emancipation.
There are dominant feminist theories that emerged out of the feminist
discourse, some of which are liberal feminism, socialist feminism, and
radical feminism.
Betty Friedan – She was considered the mother of women’s liberation. Her
work, The Feminine Mystique stimulated the emergence of second wave
feminism. She was born in Illinois to Jewish parents. In 1966, she founded
the National Organization of Women (NOW) and became its first president.
She died at the age of 85 of congestive heart failure in 2006.
In her book, The Feminine Mystique (1963), Friedan explained how
female domesticity causes a sense of frustration and despair among
women. She labeled this phenomenon as “the problem with no name” the
unhappiness many women experienced as a result of being confined to the
roles of homemaker and mother.
• HERMENEUTICAL PHENOMENOLOGY
Hermeneutics refers to the art of understanding and the theory of
interpretation while phenomenology means the science of phenomena.
Hermeneutics means “to interpret” and the term came from the name of
Hermes, the wing-footed messenger of gods in Greek mythology.
Hermeneutic phenomenology came up out of German philosophy and aims
to reveal the life world or human experiences as it lived. It advocates the
idea that instead of simply one truth as conceived by the scientist, there
are in fact, many truths. Hermeneutics, therefore, means the process of
making the incomprehensible understandable.
Meanwhile, phenomenology becomes hermeneutical when its
method takes an interpretive instead of solely descriptive in nature. Every
description is always ready interpretation; to understand is already to
interpret, and every mode of human knowledge is interpretive.
Understanding is already a form of interpretation. This approach asserts
that meanings are not straightforwardly handed down to us, and we must
use hermeneutics to understand human actions and behavior.
HERMENEUTICS PHENOMENOLOGY
Art of understanding and The study of experience and
theory of interpretation how we experience
HERMENEUTIC PHENOMENOLOGY
Concerned with human experience as it is lived
o Historical Context
Hermeneutics is a broad discipline that includes communication, both
verbal and non-verbal. It came out as a theory of human
understanding beginning in the late 18th and early 19th centuries
through the works of German theologian, biblical scholar, and
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philosopher Friedrich Schleiermacher and German historian,
psychologist, sociologist, and hermeneutic philosopher Wilhelm
Dilthey.
Edmund Husserl, a German philosopher, is the father of
phenomenology who criticized psychology for applying methods of the
natural sciences to human issues, thus paving the way for the
beginnings of phenomenology. His focus was on the world as lived by
a person, not the world or reality as something separate from the
person.
Martin Heidegger, a disciple of Husserl, started hermeneutical
phenomenology. Hermeneutical phenomenology emphasizes the
instructive facts and minor aspects within experience that are often
taken for granted in everyday lives, hoping to create meaning and
obtain a sense of understanding. While Husserl focused on
understanding beings or phenomena, Heidegger focused on Dasein or
“the mode of being human,” or the authentic human being.
Hans-Georg Gadamer extended Heidegger’s work into practical
application. He agreed with Heidegger that language and
understanding always go together as structural aspects of human
“being-in-the-world.” Gadamer believes that language is the
widespread medium for understanding to happen, and understanding
takes place in interpreting. He considers interpretation as a “fusion of
horizons,” a dialectical interaction between the expectation of the
interpreter and the meaning of the text.
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o Thinkers and their Contributions
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Emilio Moran, it is a cross-disciplinary venture based on the belief that
social and natural systems are inseparable. It builds on the discipline of
human ecology, ecological anthropology, environmental geography,
economics and other fields. It deals with broader studies into the intricate
nature of mutual interactions and feedbacks between humans on the
environment and the effect of the environment on humans. It is a
collaborative work between scientists and social scientists working on the
interactions between humans and the environment (Moran, 2010).
o Historical Context
Research about global environment change until 1988 was carried out by
earth science disciplines such as meteorology, atmospheric chemistry,
atmospheric sciences, and geology. From 1987 to 1990 a Special
Committee was tasked to initiate the planning and implementation of the
program, and in 1988 this team, composed of around 500 scientists
turned to social scientists and asked them to collaborate in an effort to
understand the human dimensions of global environmental change. In
1992, they were able to publish the book, Global Environmental Change:
Understanding the Human Dimensions, which set the tone for research in
this area. It focused on climate change, biodiversity, pollution, and
international environmental driven by a rising awareness of global impacts
such as build-up of earth-warming gases, the increasing amount of
ultraviolet radiation due to the change in the appearance of ozone layer,
and proof of glacier meltdowns. Because of these global changes, human-
environment research became important (Moran,2010).
o Key Concepts in Human Environment Systems
Landscape is an important concept in the study of coupled human-
environment systems. It includes physical features such as rivers, hills,
forests, and soils as well as human-made buildings, roads, bridges, and
mines. The concept of landscapes refers to both human and non-human
phenomena, stressing the idea that in reality it is impossible to absolutely
separate the human from non human. A good example of a landscape is
our very own Banaue Rice Terraces, showing a closely-joined human
environment system: the Ifugaos built terraces because the environment
was hilly (impact of environment on humans); the terrace structure itself
makes crops easier to harvest by hand (impact of humans on
environment).
Another important concept is feedback mechanism, which refers to the
phenomenon of system components both affecting each other and which
creates a feedback loop: feedback is effect to a system component that is
a result of an action done by that component. In human-environment
systems, humanity affects the environment, and the environment affects
humanity; but if the environment affects humanity, then that can in turn
affect how humanity affects the environment. There are two types of
feedback: the positive feedback (a condition in which carrying out an
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action causes more performances of the action); and negative feedback ( a
condition in which carrying out an action causes fewer performances of
the action.
Sustainability is another key concept in human-environment systems. It
refers to the ability for something to be maintained. It is the capacity of a
system to maintain its health and continue in existence over a period of
time. When applied to human environment systems, sustainability limits
human goals and material aspirations because it requires that production
does a little damage as possible to the delicate global ecosystem. Concepts
related to it are carrying capacity, resilience, and stability.
What is More?
Learning Task 5. What Am I
Identify the concept being described in the following statements. Choose your
answer from wordpool in the box.
______________________________________
______________________________________
______________________________________
______________________________________
______________________________________
https://pm1.narvii.com/5781/3f5d579f87c1ef0c31ee6a4b2e7f40045dfd927e_hq.jpg
Carlos is currently engaged with Laura. They are both looking for a nice
apartment to rent so they can move together after they get married. They have
seen five different options; each of them with several advantages and
disadvantages. Carlos thinks the best choice is a small apartment located in the
town proper close to where he works. Laura, on the other hand, believes the best
place is the one located somewhere far from the town proper, since it is much
bigger than the apartment type as she is thinking of having children in the
future.
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Learning Task 8. Institutions in a Graph
Present the given data in a graph showing the constitutive interaction of
Institutionalism; informal institutions, formal institutions; laws, business
corporations, labor unions, religious organizations, courtship and marriage,
tipping, triskaidekaphobia (fear of the number 13), filial piety
1. What relationship can you root out between gender ideology and gender
inequality based on Feminism theory?
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
2. Explain hermeneutics as a theory of text interpretation.
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
3. What are the ways by which human-environment interactions shape
cultural and natural landscapes?
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______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
4. Choose at least three from the six major theories that were discussed in this
module. Evaluate their strengths and criticisms. Fill out the grid.
2.
3.
Through the different approaches that were discussed in this module, I learned
that society is about
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________.
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What I Can Do
Learning Task 11. My cause
Based on the different approaches that you have learned in this module, what
do you think are the causes of the following social issues indicated in the grid
below.
Social Issues Causes
1. Climate Change
2. COVID 19
3. Domestic Violence
Against Women
4. Religion/Spiritual
Affiliation
Assessment
Learning Task 12. On My Own
Listen to the song, “Payag” by Gloc9. Analyze its lyrics by relating it to the
theory/ theories that were discussed in this module. You may underscore the
terms and concepts of the theory/theories that bear significance to your
analysis. Write your analysis on a separate sheet of paper.
Be guided by the rubric.
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References
Jose, M.D. and Ong, Jerome, 2016. Disciplines and Ideas in the Social Sciences, Vibal
Group, Inc., Araneta Avenue, Quezon City.
https://www.pexels.com/photo/sunray-across-green-grass-field-1237107/ (picture)
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Department of Education Division Rizal