So creating a timeline with key dates around the classroom can be a good place to start. In terms of key dates, encourage students to think about the dates of events they already know about as this will help them to appreciate the wider social and cultural context of the times. Where gaps appear, use this as an opportunity to find out more about those time periods. Spending time on this is valuable as examiner’s reports frequently comment on students’ lack of awareness of when things happen.
To this timeline, you can then identify ‘premodernity’, ‘modernity’ and ‘postmodernity’ before adding the ‘age of enlightenment’ so that this knowledge hangs onto what they already know. Share this article from the British Library with students and ask them to pick out the key phrases from the text, writing their own definitions (with research as needed):
Discover More The Enlightenment
Like Marxists, Feminists take a conflict view of society here the conflict exists between men ...
The correspondence principle was proposed by Bowles and Gintis and is the suggestion that educ...
A school subculture can be described as a group of pupils who share similar behaviours and views ...
Marxists take a conflict view of education and argue that it operates as an ideological tool. ...
The material provided in the ‘subcultures’ section above has links to social class...
Functionalists adopt a consensus view of society, that is, one based on harmony and agreement ...
For the New Right, the purpose of education is to promote drive, enterprise and initiative in ...
Sue Sharpe’s classic study ‘Just Like A Girl’ can be used to introduce the n...
The DfES, amongst others, have conducted surveys into the attainment of different ethnic groups i...
It is important for Sociology students to be aware of contemporary issues in society by reading a...
This topic is therefore useful as it allows students to apply, what can sometimes be quite abstra...
In this RSA video (Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce), Si...
This collection of documents (see link below) presents a sample of the British Library’s archi...