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PUBLIC SOCIOLOGY (SOCY 673) ONLINE Dr. Meredith Katz ([email protected]) (Please put SOCY 673 in subject line) Office Hours: Tuesdays 2:00-4:00 pm or by appointment| 231 Founders Hall (827 W. Franklin) (I know some of you taking this course are on campus, so please feel free to stop by) _____________________________________________________________________________________ Public Sociology Inspiration "If we aren't doing public sociology, we're just talking to each other. To claim to study society and to say that you needn't bother to make your work relevant or accessible to social members--well, that seems to me just plain insane."--Sharon Hays, Streisand Professor of Contemporary Gender Studies, University of Southern California “A public sociologist is a public intellectual who applies sociological ideas and findings to social issues about which sociology has something to say.”—Herbert Gans "Once we acknowledge the sharp divisions in our society, we have to decide which publics we want to work with. I propose … that we strive to address the public and political problems of people at the lower end of the many hierarchies that define our society."—Frances Fox Piven, past president of the American Sociological Association Course Description In this course, you will have an opportunity to reflect on public sociology, as well as to produce public sociological work. Some of the major questions we will address in this class include: what/who is the sociological audience? What is the relationship between academia and public intellectual life? How does the internet influence the availability of publics? How does our style of writing determine our relationship to different publics? As an online course, we will collaborate as a community of learners on our course webpage to teach one another, and also to share our reflections and thoughts about what we’re learning. This course will involve five major components: blogs and reflections on readings; creation of a digital meta-resource of public sociologists (nothing of this nature exists…yet!); the creation of a virtual timeline about a topic of interest to you related to public sociology; the creation of individual ePortfolios, the creation of your “public face” and finally, a final paper. Course Objectives 1. 2. 3. 4. To develop an understanding of the value and historical contribution of public sociology To investigate and problematize the distinction between sociology and public sociology To create open-access online archives about public sociology/sociologists To develop skills to be able to translate sociological knowledge outside academia Texts Badgett, M.V. Lee. 2016. The Public Professor: How to Use Your Research to Change the World. New York: NYU Press. Clawson, Dan, Robert Zussman, Joya Misra, Naomi Gerstel, Randall Stokes, and Douglas Anderton. 2007. Public Sociology: Fifteen Eminent Sociologists Debate Politics and the Profession in the Twenty-First Century. Berkeley: University of California Press. Loeb, Paul. 2010. Soul of a Citizen: Living with Conviction in Challenging Times. New York: St. Martin’s Press. Additional readings are linked off this syllabus. Assignments There are four main assignments for this class. Detailed instructions and guidelines will be posted for each of these assignments on the course webpage. 1. 2. 3. 4. 8 total blogs (due weekly by Wednesday at noon, and responses by Friday at midnight); 30% Timeline of public sociology (due April 17); 10% Individual ePortfolios (due Friday April 24th); 10% Organizational assessment or public sociologist paper (due Friday May 1st); 50% Note about Online Assignments: In this course, there is a fair amount of creation of material online. I recognize that we all come to the table with differing degrees of knowledge and skills regarding online proficiencies. In the course RamPages site, there will be a section for trouble-shooting, in which I hope you all will pose questions (and help each other answer them) about the assignments. Online Preparation to do ASAP: Create a RamPages Site: Go to rampages.us and select create an account (you should login using your VCU eID but you can use a different password). If you are having difficulty, please consult the troubleshooting page. Please use your name as a name for the site—that will be an easy way for us all to see one another and for you to use this webpage as the foundation for your ePortfolio (NOTE: after you name your site, you cannot change it!). Also, please remember to keep the default privacy setting open so we can see each other’s sites (this means your site is accessible to anyone who has the url, so please keep your comments and visuals professional). If you already have a RamPages site from another graduate course, you can continue to use it for this course, though please note this course will require specific components, including an ePortfolio. COURSE SCHEDULE: The course readings are organized by weeks of the semester. You are responsible for reading everything posted here and/or that is from your texts. By Wednesday at noon of each week, you should post a blog response to the weekly course readings. In total, you must post 8 blogs and respond to two classmates blogs four times. Those comments must be completed by Friday at midnight of the same week. Think of this as an online conversation you’re having with one another. Your blogs should be approximately 750 words (3 typed pages) and should not merely be a summary of the course readings. I want you to critically reflect on the readings—do you agree? Have you seen research to the contrary of the reading? How would you use this reading to implement or advance public sociology? These by no means are an exhaustive list of questions, but should get you started. I’ve provided specific blog prompts per week, as well. Note: This course schedule is subject to change based on course progress/student interest. Additionally, there may be videos posted that you should watch in addition to the readings. WEEK OF JANUARY 16: Introduction to Public Sociology The Public Professor, Chapters 1 and 2 (pp. 1-44) What is Public Sociology? Why and How it Should be Made Stronger, Ragnvald Kallenberg For Public Sociology, 2004 American Sociological Association Presidential Address, Michael Burawoy ASSIGNMENT: Post on Blackboard discussion board anything you know about Public Sociology, your expectations for the course, and/or any questions you may have. Additionally, I want everyone to identify an area or a topic of public sociology you are interested in pursuing or a social issue that you think public sociology could contribute to (this could be your line of research, etc. We will gear this course towards the application of that topic in a public realm). Due by Sunday, January 22. WEEK OF JANUARY 23: Introduction Continued Listen to University of Michigan Podcast on “The Strong Case for Sociology in Public Sociology” Public Sociology; Introduction by Robert Zussman and Joya Misra (pp. 3-22) Breaking Down the Otherness of Applied Sociology, Zuleyka Zevallos The Promise and Perils of Public Sociology, Karen Sternheimer ASSIGNMENT: Blog post regarding the first two weeks’ readings. You may opt (although this is not required) to concentrate on how public sociology is being defined, as well as the need for it within the discipline. Do you agree? What is one (or more) particular current events/social issues that you see public sociology contributing to the discussion of (or currently absent from?). Make sure to reference specific readings in your argument and to see the guidelines for blog posts. WEEK OF JANUARY 30: Professionalization of Sociology The Public Professor, Chapter 5 (pp. 91-112) Discipline and Punish—Public Sociology in an Age of Professionalization, Arlene Stein Truth Telling and Intellectual Activism, Patricia Hill Collins How Academics Can Become Relevant, Nathan Jurgenson ASSIGNMENT: Blog post regarding this weeks’ readings. You may opt (although this is not required) to discuss this controversy of academic relevance—are academics relevant? Are sociologists relevant? In addition, you should search the internet for who you consider to be 3 prominent public sociologists (could be current and/or in the past). You should note what you think distinguishes them as “public” sociologists, and post this in a separate post on your blog as well. Your descriptions should each be at least a paragraph long and accessible to other students. Once someone is taken, you can’t reuse them, so get the posts done early! WEEK OF FEBRUARY 6: Institutionalizing Public Sociology Public Sociology; Public Sociology and the End of Society by Alain Touraine (pp. 67-78); Stalled at the Altar? by Sharon Hays (pp. 79-90); If I were the Goddess of Sociological Things by Judith Stacey (pp. 91100); and Going Public by Patricia Hill Collins (pp. 101-113) ASSIGNMENT: For this weeks’ blog post, I’d like for you to take a position either agreeing or disagreeing with the authors of this weeks’ readings regarding the critique of Burawoy’s notion of public sociology (reading from the first week). So this week’s posting is not topically optional. Use the readings to support your argument. WEEK OF FEBRUARY 13: Digital Revolution in the Academy The Public Professor, Chapters 6 and 7 (pp.113-165) The Future of Open Access: Why Has Academia Not Embraced the Revolution? So You Want to Blog: Academic Edition, Liana Silva The (Coming) Social Media Revolution in the Academy, Joe Feagin and Jesse Daniels Should Every Sociologist Blog?, Philip Cohen So You Want to Start an Academic Blog? 4 Tips Before You Start ASSIGNMENT: For this weeks’ blog post, implement some of the how-to’s mentioned in the above articles. This will also be useful as you develop your ePortfolio and your public online presence. What are your thoughts on this—should all sociologists blog? Do we all need to have an online presence? If so, do we leave anyone out of the conversation? Again, use the readings (and/or any of the prior readings) to support your argument. WEEK OF FEBRUARY 20 : Academy and/or Activism Soul of a Citizen, Chapters 1-3 (pp. 21-81) How Sociologists Made Themselves Irrelevant, Orlando Patterson Why Activism and Academia Don’t Mix, Fabio Rojas Academic Freedom and Tenure Passenger Removed from Jet Blue after Ivanka Trump Tirade Additional reading: I want you to find three readings linked from the course blogs and read three readings and address them in your blog post this week. ASSIGNMENT: Blog regarding this weeks’ readings (including blog posts). Something to possibly blog on could be this distinction between the academy and activism. Is it a false dichotomy? Should all academics be activists? What about sociologists? Did this CUNY professor in the Ivanka Trump encounter overstep his bounds on Twitter? Should he be protected? WEEK OF FEBRUARY 27: Public(s) Sociology Soul of a Citizen, Chapters 4-6 (pp. 82-160) Public Sociology; Speaking to Publics by William Julius Wilson (pp. 117-123); Do We Need a Public Sociology? By Lynn Smith-Lovin (pp. 124-134); Speaking Truth to the Public, and Indirectly to Power by Arthur Stinchcombe (pp. 135-144); The Strength of Weak Politics by Douglas Massey (p. 145-157) Should Writing for the Public Count For Tenure? ASSIGNMENT: For this weeks’ blog, you may choose to consider how public sociology has been defined through the course readings so far. What does it mean to engage multiple publics? Who is the “public” being spoken about with public sociology? Additionally, you should begin developing your Timeline for public sociology (detailed instructions posted on course webpage). WEEK OF MARCH 6: SPRING BREAK ASSIGNMENT: Take a break! WEEK OF MARCH 13: Public or Politicized Sociology? Soul of a Citizen, Chapter 7-8 (pp. 161-227) Public Sociology; From Public Sociology to Politicized Sociologist by Frances Fox Piven (pp. 158-166) Can Power from Below Change the World? Frances Fox Piven Passion Through the Profession: Being both Activist and Academic, Cathleen Burnett (linked off webpage) Additional reading: I want you to find three readings linked from the course blogs and read three readings and address them in your blog post this week. ASSIGNMENT: Blog regarding this week’s readings is fairly open. Have you started to re-conceptualize what it means to be a sociologist, an academic, an activist by this point in the semester? Is sociology inherently political and should sociologists take political stands? What does public sociology mean? Just an option for blogging. Remember to rely upon the readings for specific citations. WEEK OF MARCH 20: Public Sociologists and Contemporary Social Problems Soul of a Citizen, Chapter 9-11 (pp. 228-315) The Outside Game, Adam Gopnick ASSIGNMENT: Blog about the weeks’ readings. You are free to choose any direction, as always, but may want to consider how sociological knowledge and/or insight was beneficial in these examples, or could have been. WEEK OF MARCH 27: Unresolved Distinctions Soul of a Citizen, Chapter 12 (pp. 316-353) Public Sociology; The Sociologist and the Public Sphere by Immanuel Wallerstein (pp. 169-175); About Public Sociology by Orlando Patterson (pp. 176-194); For Humanist Sociology by Andrew Abbott (pp. 195-209) ASSIGNMENT: Blog about this weeks’ readings. How do you see these readings connecting with what you’ve already read? WEEK OF APRIL 3: Whose Public Sociology? Public Sociology; Whose Public Sociology? By Evelyn Nakano Glenn (pp. 213-230); A Journalist’s Plea by Barbara Ehrenreich (pp. 231-238) Academic Blogging: Minority Scholars Cannot Afford to be Silent Additional reading: I want you to find three readings linked from the course blogs and read three readings and address them in your blog post this week. ASSIGNMENT: Make sure this weeks’ blog post addresses the blogs you read, in addition to the required reading. Reminder Timeline Assignment April 17, at midnight. WEEK OF APRIL 10 : Media literacy in an age of all things public How to Spot Fake News How Do You Deal with a Problem Like Fake News? Misleading Axes on Graphs Food Stamp Fraud (case study) Musicians and Mortality (case study) ASSIGNMENT: For your blog post, you can feel free to write a critical analysis of these articles and case studies. In addition, I want you to create your own “fake” news using this website. http://breakyourownnews.com/. Make it believable, but also fake. Then upload it to your course blog. WEEK OF APRIL 17: Media Literacy and the Public(s) A Peak Inside the Strange World of Fake Academe Why Fake Data When you Can Fake a Scientist? Bait and Switch Inside a Fake News Sausage Factory: This is All About Income Watch President Elect Trump: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver ASSIGNMENT: Reminder that your timeline assignment is due by April 17 on your blog. What do you think of the idea of media literacy and “fake news?” Where does public sociology play a role? Do you play a role? If so, how and how does this reading inform your thoughts? WEEK OF APRIL 24: Conclusions? Public Sociology; The Field of Sociology by Michael Burawoy (pp. 241-258) Rethinking Public Sociology by Randy Stoecker ASSIGNMENT: This is your last blogging assignment, so you can use this as an opportunity to synthesize your thoughts on public sociology, questions that still remained unanswered for you, possible future directions for public sociology. Also, your ePortfolio due by Friday, April 24. WEEK OF MAY 1: COURSE PAPER DUE BY MAY 1 AT MIDNIGHT ASSIGNMENT: Final paper due by Friday, May 1 at midnight COURSE WITHDRAWL: The last day to withdrawl from this course with a “W” marked on your transcript is Friday, March 25, 2016. MISSED WORK: You are expected to submit work by the deadlines outlined in the syllabus. Exceptions will only be honored with proper documentation. If you know ahead of time that you are going to be unable to make an exam for a valid reason, please let me know as soon as possible. VCU REGULATIONS: Email Policy Electronic mail or "email" is considered an official method for communication at VCU because it delivers information in a convenient, timely, cost effective and environmentally aware manner. Students are expected to check their official VCU email on a frequent and consistent basis in order to remain informed of university-related communications. The university recommends checking email daily. Students are responsible for the consequences of not reading, in a timely fashion, university-related communications sent to their official VCU student email account. This policy ensures that all students have access to this important form of communication. It ensures students can be reached through a standardized channel by faculty and other staff of the university as needed. Mail sent to the VCU email address may include notification of university-related actions, including disciplinary action. Please read the policy in its entirety: http://www.ts.vcu.edu/kb/3407.html VCU Honor System: Upholding Academic Integrity The VCU Honor System policy describes the responsibilities of students, faculty and administration in upholding academic integrity, while at the same time respecting the rights of individuals to the due process offered by administrative hearings and appeals. According to this policy, "Members of the academic community are required to conduct themselves in accordance with the highest standards of academic honesty and integrity." In addition, "All members of the VCU community are presumed to have an understanding of the VCU Honor System and are required to: Agree to be bound by the Honor System policy and its procedures; Report suspicion or knowledge of possible violations of the Honor System; Support an environment that reflects a commitment to academic integrity; Answer truthfully when called upon to do so regarding Honor System cases, and, Maintain confidentiality regarding specific information in Honor System cases.” The Honor System in its entirety can be reviewed on the Web at http://www.assurance.vcu.edu/Policy%20Library/VCU%20Honor%20System.pdf. More information can also be found on the Division of Student Affairs website at http://www.students.vcu.edu/studentconduct/students/student_honor_system.html. 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