COMPARATIVE SOCIAL INEQUALITY

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COMPARATIVE SOCIAL INEQUALITY Course Syllabus: Spring 2013 (Draft) School of Social Development and Public Policy Fudan University Introduction to Research Methods Spring 2013 Instructor: Dr. Jiaming Sun Office: Social Science Building 1021 Phone: 021-65643755. Email: jmsunsh@fudan.edu.cn Course Website: http://homepage.fudan.edu.cn/jmsunsh/ Meetings: Office Hours: This syllabus is intended to help you clearly understand the course goals, expectations, testing methods and topics we are going through so you may maximize your performance. It should also help you to avoid mistakes and misunderstandings that will affect your grade adversely. Text Charles E. Hurst. Social Inequality: Forms, Causes, and Consequences. 7th Ed. Allyn and Bacon 2010 (required). ISBN-10: 0205698298, ISBN-13: 9780205698295 Harold R. Kerbo: Social Stratification And Inequality: Class Conflict in Historical, Comparative, and Global Perspective. ISBN-10: 007811165X; ISBN-13: 978-0078111655 R. 9787208105843 2012-07-01 Additional materials will be posted in the course website. Student Learning Outcomes/Objectives The main purpose of this course is to examine Social Inequality from a Sociological Perspective and provide an overview of the field of Social Stratification with a cross-national approach. Social Inequality, or Social Stratification, is a major feature of our daily experience. This course studies the distribution of three primary resources: class, status and

power. Special attention is given to examine the ascribed statuses such as age, sex and race interacting with achieved statues such as class, status and power stratification systems among nations, with a particular attention on comparison between United States and China. Also the course will inspect the popular and scientific explanations of inequality, especially with respect to the high and low ends of the distribution of income and wealth across nations. To examine the basic sociological concepts and perspectives on social inequality and stratification in comparative perspective; To understand the major sociological explanations for social inequality both within the United States as well as the global; To recognize what practices and institutions shape these diverse social groupings; To enable you applying the course material to your real-life experiences with a global view and a cross-national approach; Course requirements: This course is an elearning online supporting course (http://elearning.fudan.edu.cn/portal). elearning is a campus wide web-enhanced internet teaching and learning support system. Students taking this course will be able to surf online course website, get reading material, download and upload assignments, take online quizzes and exams, check grades and cumulative points with percentiles anytime online while having regular face to face in class lectures. If you are not familiar with the use of elearning, you may send email to: elearning@fudan.edu.cn or make phone call to 65643247, 65643207. As per the university rule, students taking one course with three credit-hours are expected to spend six hours in each unit on watching lecture online and short movies, reading material, doing assignments, and preparing for quizzes and exams. Attendance and Participation- Students are required to attend all in class lectures and participate in some online activities assigned by the instructor. Recovering missed lecture content or assignment information is the responsibility of the student. Office appointments will not be used to substitute for class attendance. Fellow students may be asked for providing notes for recovery of missed information. There will be 3 points for each full attendance of class (total 50 points). The attendance points will not be given to those who are tardy or packing up early. Excessive tardiness may result in a further loss of points from your overall performance points. It can mean a difference of a final letter grade. Take it seriously. Writing and Presentation Your Project: As part of the course work students must complete a project Experiencing Inequalities in My Life. It is based on your cumulative knowledge of social inequality and its consequences learned in this course so that work diligently from the beginning of the semester is needed. Students will also be arranged in presentation of his/her own project. Virtual presentations will be taken place about Week 14 of the semester. The instructor will provide assistance online or during office hours and, if

necessary, appointments can be set up to discuss any problems that could arise. Assignments and Quizzes Assignments will include reading chapters, writing reading summary, and doing chapter exercises, etc. Doing these exercises helps understand class material and prepare the exams. Assignments are due on specific dates, as assigned. You will have a plenty of notifications sent by emails. If you know you are going to be out of town and unable to access a computer, plan ahead. Late submission will cause a minimum 20% deduction of penalty for the first week, and then 10% each subsequent week late (up to 50 % deduction). No late submission will be accepted by the day and after taking the exams. Quizzes will be given to evaluate what have been covered in previous lectures. In order to do well on your quizzes and tests, be sure to bring your textbook to class, take notes, read chapters, and highlight important materials in the text and alternate reading materials. The style of quizzes will be multiple choices, true/false. Open questions with page numbers will be given to students looking for answers for after-class reading. Those questions will be included in quizzes and exams also. Make-ups will be given for students who have extraordinary circumstances but the grading will be an average of the two quizzes. Exams- There will be two exams during the semester. These exams are close-book format with multiple choice, short essays questions that based on class lectures, readings, and those quizzes you have taken. These exams will be taken in a computer lab. Students may use one sheet of compact notes arranged in convenient reference form. Students may not share notes with another student during the exams. The final exam is not cumulative and will cover the lectures presented after the midterm exam. Students will be provided with a study guide prior to the exams. Make-ups will be given to students who have extraordinary circumstances but the grading will be an average of the two exams. Class Behavior As stated in the student handbook: all students enrolled at the University shall follow the tenets of common decency and acceptable behavior conducive to a positive learning environment. When you are in class, you are expected to abide by common-sense rules of courtesy and respect. They include: 1. No tardiness: no one likes it when somebody walking into class after the lecture has been started. 2. No early departures, unless you and the instructor have an agreement on it beforehand. 3. No chatting, corresponding with your friends and classmates while lecturing. 4. Turn off your cell phone during the class time. These behaviors will be disturbing the class while lecturing. Student Performance Expectations Students enrolled in this course will automatically be entered in a Stimulative Grading Scheme (SGS). This scheme provides an incentive to students who are excelling academically in this course. The SGS provides students with "Distribution Points to Date" three or four time in the semester, so students will be easily having a perception of his/her performance with a percentile rank in the class. So students are highly encouraged to have great user activities, submitting all assignments on time, and standing in the higher percentile of the distribution charts.

Grading Policy YOU EARN YOUR OWN POINTS Online Activity 60 Homework/Reading/Quizzes 160 Research Project 80 Midterm Exam 80 Final Exam 80 Overall performance 40 Total 500 Overall performance points (40 points) based primarily on a ranking percentile in the class will be added on a student s total points by the end of the semester. For instance, a student who is at the 80th percentile will receive 36 points, and a student who is at the 60th percentile will receive 28 points and so on (See the detail at Stimulative Grading Scheme in ecollege). Final letter grade: A: 450-500 B: 400-449 C: 350-399 D: 300-349 F: below 299 Cheating & Plagiarism It should go without saying that every student is expected to do his/her own work. Department policy provides that anyone caught cheating in any form or fashion will receive an F for the course and may be subject to further disciplinary action by the university. Plagiarism (the use of others words, phrases, and ideas in your writing without giving credit to the original author) is a form of cheating and not only violates academic ethical standards, but is against the law. COURSE OUTLINE / CALENDAR The course schedule is tentative and somewhat subject to change. Although this course will follow the schedule, it is possible that some adjustments will be made as we progress through the semester. Week Dates Topic Readings 1 The course outline and syllabus. An Introduction to the Study of Social Inequality CH 1 2 Economic Inequality CH 2

3 Status Inequality CH 3 4 Political Inequality CH 4 5 Sex and Gender Inequality, Sexual Orientation and Inequality CH 5, 6 6 Racial and Ethnic Inequality CH 7 7 Review CH 1-7 8 *** Mid Term Exam *** 9 Classical Explanations of Inequality CH 8 10 Contemporary Explanations of Inequality CH 9 11 The Impact of Inequality on Personal Life Chances CH 10 12 Social Consequences of Inequality CH 11 13 Social Mobility and Status Attainment: Openness in U.S. Society 14 Virtual presentation of your project; Discussion of presentations CH 13 15 Review CH 8-13 16 ******Final Exam*** As scheduled by the University CH 8-13