"Ethnomethodology" Essays and Research Papers

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    “Out of the Norm” Sociology Project Breaching Experiment Breaching experiments are most commonly associated with ethnomethodology‚ a Breaching Experiment is an experiment that seeks to examine people’s reactions to violations of commonly Accepted social rules or norms. Norms are defined as the expectations‚ or rules of behavior‚ that Develop out of values. For this Project‚ I was required to violate a norm. Basically doing Something "out of the ordinary" it’s not common at all in society

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    Bruno Latour’s notion of nonhuman actors and Donna Haraway’s notion of the companion species are both concepts that are based around the view that humans are not alone in the creation and maintenance of society. They are unique concepts as animals are so often excluded from the sociological field. Jim Johnson states ‘the most liberal sociologist often discriminates against nonhumans’ (1988 p.1). Both Haraway and Latour seek to change this. Haraway has a background in science‚ with a PhD in biology

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    tension among the roles connected to a single status Social construction of reality: the process by which people creatively shape reality through social interaction Thomas Theorem: situations we define as real become real in their consequences Ethnomethodology: the study of the way people make sense of their everyday surroundings Dramaturgical Analysis: the study of social interaction in terms of theatrical performance Presentation of self: a person’s efforts to create specific impressions in the

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    s/12S1-HW0101-C-TUT/Assignment%203%20articles.pdf How do emplyers view online degrees? (2011). Back to College. Retrieved on November 4‚ 2012 from http://www.back2college.com/onlinedegrees.htm Thomson‚ S.‚ Straubhaar‚ J.‚ Bolyard‚ D. (1998). Ethnomethodology and the study of online communities: Exploring the cyber streets. Bristol‚ UK: IRISS ’98. U.S. Regional Accreditation: An Overview. (n.d.). Retrieved 8 November‚ 2012 from http://cihe.neasc.org/about_accreditation/regional_accreditation_overview/

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    Exam #2 Study Review Chapter 4 social interaction • The process by which we act and react to those around us. microsociology • The study of human behavior in contexts of face-to-face interaction. civil inattention • The process whereby individuals in the same physical setting demonstrate to one another that they are aware of each other’s presence. impression management • Preparing for the presentation of one’s social role. social position • The social identity an individual has

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    Blumer‚ Herbert. 1969. Symbolic Interactionism: Perspective and Method. Englewood Cliffs‚ NJ: Prentice-Hall. Griffin‚ E. (1997). A first look at Communication Theory. New York: The McGraw-Hill Companies. Garfinkel‚ Harold. (1967). Studies in Ethnomethodology. Englewood Cliffs‚ NJ: Prentice-Hall. Goffman‚ Erving. (1958). The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh‚ Social Sciences Research Centre. Ed. by McDermott‚ J. (1981). The Philosophy of John Dewey‚ Chicago

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    Review Test Submission: Exam #1 – Chapters 1 and 2 User Monique Ates 1 hour‚ 30 minutes Course ETROY Intro to Social Scientific Inq SS-3375-XTIA 14/T3 (Goodwin) Attempt Score 85 out of 100 points   Question 1 0 out of 5 points A __________ approach seems more aligned with idiographic explanations‚ while nomothetic explanations are more easily achieved through a _________ approach. Selected Answer: b. quantitative; qualitative Correct Answer: quantitative‚ complicated Question

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    consists of over 30 different approaches which often overlap and whose distinctions are subtle. The type of approach used depends on the research question and/or the discipline the researcher belongs to. For instance‚ anthropologists commonly employ ethnomethodology and ethnography‚ while sociologists often use symbolic interaction and philosophers frequently use concept analysis (Atkinson and Hammersley‚ 2007). A frequent criticism of ethnographic research is that ‘observer effects’ will somehow

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    Outline for Essentials of Sociology: SOC-102 Chapter 3 - Socialization Section 1 – In this section it talks about how personality‚ emotions and internal control are all parts of who we are. How emotions depend on socialization. “Socialization during childhood centers on learning our culture’s feeling rules.” By socializing with others‚ that is how we learn how to think‚ act‚ and feel. This section explains how socialization and culture can guide us in feeling and expressing emotions. But there

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    theories which take a bottom-up approach to studying society; they look at how individuals within society interact with each other. There are many forms of social action theories‚ the main ones being symbolic interactionism‚ phenomenology and ethnomethodology. They are all based on the work of Max Weber‚ a sociologist‚ who acknowledged that structural factors can shape our behaviour but individuals do have reasons for their actions. He used this to explain why people behave in the way in which they

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