Quarter 1 - Module 3:: Week 5: Analyze The B
Quarter 1 - Module 3:: Week 5: Analyze The B
Quarter 1 - Module 3:: Week 5: Analyze The B
a. Structural-Functionalism
b. Marxism
c. Symbolic interactionism
Prepared by:
Julio M. Bocauto Jr. Ruel O. Perez
SHS TEACHER II SPST I
Introductory Message
For the facilitator:
This learning resource hopes to engage the learners into guided and independent
learning activities at their own pace and time. Furthermore, this also aims to help
learners acquire the needed 21st century skills while taking into consideration
their needs and circumstances.
As a facilitator you are expected to orient the learners on how to use this module.
You also need to keep track of the learners' progress while allowing them to
manage their own learning. Furthermore, you are expected to encourage and assist
the learners as they do the tasks included in the module.
The hand is one of the most symbolized part of the human body. It is often used to
depict skill, action and purpose. Through our hands we may learn, create and
accomplish. Hence, the hand in this learning resource signifies that you as a
learner is capable and empowered to successfully achieve the relevant
competencies and skills at your own pace and time. Your academic success lies in
your own hands!
This module was designed to provide you with fun and meaningful opportunities
for guided and independent learning at your own pace and time. You will be
enabled to process the contents of the learning resource while being an active
learner.
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What I Need to Know
This module was designed and written with you in mind. It is here to help you
Introduce and Analyze the Basic Concepts and Principles of the Major Social
Science Theories. The scope of this module permits it to be used in many different
learning situations. The language used recognizes the diverse vocabulary level of
students. The lessons are arranged to follow the standard sequence of the course.
But the order in which you read them can be changed to correspond with the
textbook you are now using.
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Pretest
Directions. Choose the letter of the best answer. Write the chosen letter on a
separate sheet of paper.
3. Which among the following is not a part of the four action system?
a. Behavioral Organism c. AGIL Scheme
b. Personality System d. Cultural system
4. It is termed as the base and the source of energy in the action system
created by Parsons.
a. Personality System c. Social System
b. Cultural System d. Behavioral Organism
5. Theory believed that the society has social order where the dominant groups
manipulate and control the society.
a. Consensus theory c. Symbolic interaction
b. Evolution theory d. Conflict theory
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9. Type of economic system in which factories, equipment, or other means of
production are privately owned rather than controlled by the government.
a. Feudalism c. Capitalism
b. Socialism d. Communism
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Lesson
This lesson will introduce you the macro level of the major social
science theories in sociological analysis includes the Structural-functionalism and
Marxism. These two approaches concerned with the broad aspects of society such
as institutions and large social groups that influence the social world. It looks at
the big picture of society and suggests how social problems are affected at the
institutional level. On the other hand, the Symbolic Interactionism is a micro level
of sociological analysis concerned with the social psychological dynamics of
individuals interacting in small groups.
1.STRUCTURAL FUNCTIONALISM
It is a theory that focused on the large scale social structures and
institutions of society, their interrelationships, and their constraining effect on
actors. It is a type of a consensus theory and believed as the dominant and the
most significant sociological theory (Ritzer, 1996 & Turner and Maryanski, 1996).
However, it’s importance as a sociological theory declined after the World War II
and evolved into a new theory called neo-functionalism (Demerath and Paterson’s,
1967).
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“proper” individuals the desire to fill certain positions? (2) Once people are in the
right position, how does the society then instill in them the desire to fulfill the
requirements of these positions?
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The Action System
The overall shape of the action system created by Parson is a system of level
of social analysis. Where the lower levels provide the conditions, the energy, needed
for the higher levels. While the higher levels control those below them in the
hierarchy. (See figure 1)
L I
Cultural System Social System
Behavioral Personality
A Organism System G
Social System
A social system consists in a plurality of individual actors interacting with
each other in a certain situations motivated to achieve gratification that are
mediated by the culture.
Based from the analysis of Parsons a social system must have functional
prerequisites in order to survive. The following are the prerequisites according to
Parson:
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He also believed that the integration of norms and values is important in the
process of internalization and socialization. Thus, socialization must be
supplemented through the life cycle with a series of more specific socializing
experience. Due to the conformity induced by lifelong socialization, wide range of
varying individuals in the social system arise. In order to reduce variations and
maintains equilibrium in the system, social control was implemented and built
social order into the structure of Parson’s social system.
As a result of his work regarding the AGIL scheme, he distinguished four
subsystems in the society representing the functions of the AGIL Scheme he
created. The economy is the subsystem that performs the function for the society
of adapting to the environment through labor, production, and allocation. The
polity (political system) performs the function of goal attainment by pursuing
societal objective and mobilizing actors and resources. The fiduciary system that
handles the latency function by transmitting culture to actors allowing it to be
internalized by them. Societal/Social Community which coordinates the various
components of the society.
L I
Social
Fiduciary System
Community
Economy Polity
A G
Figure 2. Subsystems and Functional
Imperatives
Cultural system
According to Parson’s Cultural system is not simply a part of the social
system but also has a separate existence in the form of social stocks of knowledge,
symbols and ideas. Culture is the major force binding the various elements of the
social world. It is seen as patterned and ordered system of symbols that are objects
of orientation to actors. Thus, through learning and socialization culture can be
passed from one social system to another.
Personality system
It is the main content of the structure derived from socialization, it is an
independent system with unique personality based from its experiences.
Personality means as the organized system of orientation and motivation of action
of the individual actor.
Behavioral Organism
It is the source of energy or resources needed by the rest of the system.
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Robert Merton’s Structural Functionalism
One of the students of Talcott Parsons and authored some of the most
important statement in structural functionalism in sociology. He criticized the three
basic postulates of functional analysis and stated that any object can be subjected
to structural functional analysis must “represent a standardized item” meaning it
has organizational framework. According to him, structural functionalism should
focus on the function of the social structure or institution rather than on individual
motives. Functions according to Merton, are those observed consequences which
make for the adaptation or adjustment of the system.
Neo-funtionalism
Due to the declined in significance of structural functionalism in 1960,
Jeffrey Alexander and Paul Colomy revive the theory and name it as
Neofuntionalism. Neofunctionalism according to them, is a self-critical strand of
functional theory that seeks to broaden functionalisms intellectual scope while
retaining the theoretical core. However, in the Mid-1980’s Alexander conclude
that neofuntionalism is not a developed theory due to some weaknesses.
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Problems of structural functionalism according to Alexander needed
to overcome to redefine the theory:
A. Anti-Individualism
B. Antagonism to change
C. Conservatism
D. Idealism
E. Anti-empirical bias
1. MARXISM
What is Marxism?
Historical Materialism
Material Production
Process of Production
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1. Forces of Production including all those things which determine the
technical efficiency of the production process, such as human skill, tools,
knowledge, energy, land and etc.
2. Relations of Production refers to the social relations which govern the use
of labor production and disposition of the economic product.
Capitalism
Advantages
Disadvantages
1. Larger corporations out compete the smaller producers.
2. There is big gap between the rich and poor. Rich get Richer and leaving the poor
behind.
Communism
An economic or political system in which the state or the community
owns all property and the means of production, and all citizens share the
wealth.
Communist Manifesto
1. Abolition of Property
2. Heavy, progressive taxes
3. Confiscation of property of all emigrants and rebels
4. Central banking
5. State controlled communication and transportation
6. State controlled education of the children
Advantages
1. The basic needs of the people are the priority. everyone would have a job, house,
wealth, and care are provided by the government.
2. Government owns the means of production and determines what goods will be
sold at what price
3. No competition and low quality goods are produced
4. Everyone expected to be the same.
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Disadvantages
1. People does not have freedom to choose.
2. No reward for being a better worker or punishment for being a slacker.
3. SYMBOLIC INTERACTIONISM
Symbolic interactionism mirrors the miniaturized scale sociological
viewpoint, and was to a great extent affected by the works of early sociologists and
scholars such as George Simmel (1858-1918), Charles Cooley (1864-1929), George
Herbert Mead (1863-1931), and Erving Goffman (1922-1982). Symbolic
Interactionism is a theory that centered to human communication both verbal and
non-verbal and to images, symbols significance through language and the manner
of individual understanding.
The symbolic interactionism focuses on the study of human interaction in
which people make sense of their social world through exchange of language and
symbols. The establish meanings come from human interactions with others and
the society. These definitions develop their views in life and use it to communicate
with each other. Communicating with one another makes society goes on and
continues.
Sociologist W.I. Thomas (1966) highlighted the significance of definitions and
implications in social conduct and its outcomes. He recommended that humans
react to their meaning of a circumstance as opposed to the objective circumstance
itself. Subsequently Thomas noticed that circumstances that we characterize as
genuine becomes genuine in their outcomes. Representative interactionism
additionally proposes that our personality or feeling of self is formed by social
cooperation. We build up our self-idea by seeing how others collaborate with us
and mark us. By seeing how others see us, we see a reflection ourselves that Cooley
calls the "looking glass self."
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Activity 1. Essay Writing. Directions. Write at least five (5) sentences by
answering the question below.
1. Are garbage collectors really any less important to the survival of the
society than advertisers? Why? Why not?
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
Rubrics
Total
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Posttest
I. Multiple Choice. Directions. Choose the letter of the best answer. Write the
chosen letter on a separate sheet of paper.
8. Which among the following is not part of the four subsystems of the action
system based on their functions?
a. Fiduciary system c. Economy
b. Proletariat d. Polity
9. These are the negative effects of social systems, sometimes intended and
unintended to happen.
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a. Function c. Corruption
b. Non-function d. Dysfunction
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Answer Key
1. A 1. Essay
1. essay
2. B
3. C
4. D
5. D
6. B
7. C
8. A
9. C
10. B
Posttest
I.
1. B
2. C
3. D
4. A
5. B
6. C
7. D
8. B
9. D
10. B
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References
A. BOOK
Abulencia, Arthur S. Sadera, Jefferson, Arabit-Zapatos, Ma.
Lorella C., Reyes, Wensley M., Serafico, Nikolee Marie A.
(2017). Disciplines and Ideas in the Social Sciences. Pasig
City, Philippines: DepEd-Bureau of Learning Resources.
B. ONLINE SOURCES
http://warehouse.olc.edu/~sauer/webfolder/SoSc103/SoSc10
3_reader_30MB_color.pdf
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