The study of human behavior and societal development can be explored through various academic disciplines such as sociology, anthropology, and psychology. Sociology focuses on understanding how multiple factors influence individual and group behavior, examining the impact of social institutions and structural developments on society.
Course concepts:
A1.1: investigate in many topics that relate to Anthropology, Psychology, and Sociology.
A2.2: locate and select relevant information from primary sources (ex: interviews, observations, questionnaires etc)
A3.4: showcase the websites that thoroughly provided assistance towards your research projects.
A4.4: demonstrate the apprehending of the general research process by reflecting on and evaluating their own research inquiry and communication skills
Social Science
Sociology:
The human education of social behavior, and development of societal issues.
Subject Matters
Religion
Family
Divisions of race
Social Class
D2.1: describe from a sociological point, how multiple factors influence and form and individual and group behavior
D1.2: paraphrase the main concepts of the ultimate sociological schools of thinking and describe how they can be contributed to study social behavior.
D3.1: describe how structural developments origin in social institutions in reverse to multiple influences
Psychology:
The study of human behavior, human minds, and mental state.
Clinical
Counseling
Experimental
Forensic
Human Factors
Industrial Organizational
School
Social
C1.2: paraphrase the main ideas of psychological hypothesis and describe how they can be incorporated in understanding human development.
C2.1: describe from a psychological point how various influences contributes to an individual psychological development.
C3.1: specify and explain the role of socialization in the psychological development in an individual.
Anthropology:
The scientific learning
of humans and their behaviors, origins,
social, physical, and cultural development.
Cultural
Archaeology
Linguistic
Biological
B1.1: describe the most valuable of contributions of persuasive anthropologists
B2.3: explain how acknowledging cultural systems of different times, places, and groups help anthropologists apprehend human behavior and culture now.
B3.1: describe how culture constructs multiple types of human behavior