Affiliation:
1. Theodore C. Wagenaar is professor of sociology at Miami University (Ohio). In 1999, he was selected as a Carnegie Scholar, a program of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and Learning to promote the scholarship of teaching and learning. He served as the inaugural editor of Teaching Sociology (under ASA auspices) and has served on the editorial boards of The Teaching Professor and the Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, as well as on the boards of various sociology journals. He...
Abstract
I report on a study of 301 sociologists to determine which concepts, topics, and skills they deem most important to cover in the introductory course and in the sociology curriculum. Respondents indicated high agreement that the list of skills, topics, and concepts adequately represented the range of possible items. I use both the raw ratings and the results of asking respondents to select their “top five” items. Results show strong agreement on core concepts, topics, and skills, with both overlaps and differences between results for the introductory course and the sociology curriculum. Issues of difference and inequality are important for both the introductory course and the curriculum. Core concepts are seen as more critical for the introductory course, and theory and methods are seen as more critical for the curriculum. Values and commitments as well as applied sociology rank lowest for both the introductory course and the sociology curriculum. Implications for the sociology curriculum as well as for introductory textbooks are discussed.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Education
Cited by
54 articles.
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