Course Catalog - 2005-2006

     

SOCI 203 - INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Restrictions:
Must be enrolled in one of the following Class(es):
Sophomore
Freshman
Description: Introduction to the principal concepts, theories, and methods of sociology. Required (normally) for sociology majors.
 

SOCI 301 - SOCIAL INEQUALITY

Long Title: SOCIAL INEQUALITY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: A survey of US inequalities of wealth, status, and power. The situation of various minority groups and social classes. What kinds of inequality are unjustifiable? Can they be abolished? If so, how? The trade-off between equality and such valued goods as freedom and efficiency.
 

SOCI 306 - SOCIOLOGY OF GENDER

Long Title: SOCIOLOGY OF GENDER
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Relationship between gender and social role. Development of the contemporary sexual division of labor and process of socialization with reference to family, education, media, and occupations. Cross-list: WGST 324.
 

SOCI 308 - HOUSTON: SOCIOLOGY OF A CITY

Long Title: HOUSTON: THE SOCIOLOGY OF A CITY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Houston as an exemplar of contemporary urban change. The "golden buckle of the sunbelt"; recovery from the oil boom collapse of the 1980s into a restructional economy and a demographic revolution; the changing politics of education, quality-of-life issues, and interethnic relations, as they interact to shape the urban future. Guest lectures, field trips.
 

SOCI 309 - RACE & ETHNIC RELATIONS

Long Title: RACE AND ETHNIC RELATIONS
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Historical and contemporary issues and theories of race and ethnic relations in the United States. The key groups covered will be European Americans, African Americans, Native Americans, Asian Americans, and Mexican Americans. Group patterns of assimilation and conflict inform a basic tenet that race and ethnicity are organizing features of society.
 

SOCI 310 - URBAN SOCIOLOGY

Long Title: URBAN SOCIOLOGY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Study of urban development, form, and heterogeneity; and the conditions of life associated with living in cities. Examines the rise of cities, their growth and purposes in the U.S. and internationally. Examines behavioral adaptations required by city life, and considers urban subcultures.
 

SOCI 313 - DEMOGRAPHY

Long Title: DEMOGRAPHY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Introduction to the study of the dynamics of population change. Includes demographic data sources, components of population change, mortality patterns, family planning, the measurement of migration flows, and population-economic models.
 

SOCI 317 - CONTEMPORARY THEORY

Long Title: CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Discussion course on major recent trends in sociological theory, especially in the writings of Goffman, Habermas, Bourdieu, Foucault, and Smith. Includes symbolic interactionism, critical theory, cultural studies, text/discourse/semiotic analyses, feminist theory, and postmodern sociology.
 

SOCI 321 - CRIMINOLOGY

Long Title: CRIMINOLOGY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisite(s): SOCI 203 or placement test
Description: Study of criminal behavior. Includes social construction of crime, elementary forms of crime, empirical patterns of crime, and theories of crime. Field work required.
 

SOCI 325 - SOCIOLOGY OF LAW

Long Title: SOCIOLOGY OF LAW
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Introduction to Sociological theories of law. Examines central question in the field: Do the social characteristics of legal actors influence legal outcomes? Focuses on the role of race, sex, and social status. Field work required.
 

SOCI 334 - SOCIOLOGY OF THE FAMILY

Long Title: SOCIOLOGY OF THE FAMILY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will teach students the important influences and consequences of American family life. We will consider issues as dating, marriage and cohabitation, divorce, family structure, gay marriage, domestic violence, and household labor. We will also examine the role of society in shaping family norms and constraints on family behaviors. Cross-list: WGST 325.
 

SOCI 340 - CONTEMPORARY MEXICAN SOCIETY

Long Title: CONTEMPORARY MEXICAN SOCIETY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: In this course, we seek a sociological understanding of contemporary Mexican society. After reviewing the historical roots of the modern Mexican state, we will examine how economic, political, and social institutions operate in Mexico, their formal and informal structures, and then consider their consequences.
 

SOCI 345 - INTRO TO MEDICAL SOCIOLOGY

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO MEDICAL SOCIOLOGY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will explore the relationship between social factors and health, illness, and mortality. Topics include the stratification of health by race/ethnicity, gender, and social class; environmental context and illness; lifestyle and behavioral risks (smoking, drinking, drugs, and sexual behavior); STD's and cross-national comparisons of health and patterns of disease.
 

SOCI 355 - SOCIOLOGY OF DRUGS AND ALCOHOL

Long Title: SOCIOLOGY OF DRUGS AND ALCOHOL
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will focus on the use of drugs in the United States, and will discuss issues relating to tobacco (e.g, regulation and marketing), alcohol (e.g., binge drinking), legal drugs (e.g., regulation, pricing, and marketing), and illicit drup use (e.g., The War on Drugs, legalization vs. prohibition debates, medical marijuana).
 

SOCI 361 - TELEVISION IN AMERICAN CULTURE

Long Title: TELEVISION IN AMERICAN CULTURE
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Analysis of the development and current structure of the television industry in this country, and of the ways in which television is shaped by American culture, class interests, relevant professions, production and broadcast organizations, technological innovation, audience ratings, economic considerations, interest groups, and governmental actions. Recent criticism and theory will be presented as well.
 

SOCI 362 - MEDIA, CULTURE, AND SOCIETY

Long Title: MEDIA, CULTURE, AND SOCIETY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Examines the structure of the media industry and the effects of its products on culture and society. Students develop the analytical tools required for critical understanding of the relationship between media, culture, and society in America.
 

SOCI 367 - ENVIRONMENTAL SOCIOLOGY

Long Title: ENVIRONMENTAL SOCIOLOGY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Applications of research and theory in the social sciences to an understanding of the attitudes and behaviors that contribute both to environmental problems and to their remediation; examination of the interactions between population pressures and human appetites, technological developments and ecological constraints as they combine to shape the human prospect.
 

SOCI 375 - BECOMING AMERICANS: SOC OF IMM

Long Title: BECOMING AMERICANS?: THE SOCIOLOGY OF IMMIGRATION
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: We will compare the earlier wave of European immigration to the U.S. with the more recent wave of immigration from Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean. We will answer questions related to the transnational identities of immigrants, ethnic and racial discrimination, and the immigrants on the labor market as well as civic and religious institutions. Recommended prerequisite(s): successful completion of a Sociology course.
 

SOCI 386 - AFRICAN AMERICANS IN SOCIETY

Long Title: AFRICAN AMERICANS IN SOCIETY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Contemporary life of Blacks (African-Americans) in society. The meaning and significance of race, prejudice and discrimination; social institutions such as the economy, education, and family; and potential strategies such as affirmative action and reparations.
 

SOCI 390 - RESEARCH METHODS

Long Title: RESEARCH METHODS
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: An introduction to the methods sociologists use to study human societies and their members. Hypothesis formulation and research design; qualitative studies through observation and interviews; historical and comparative approaches; sample surveys and the statistical analysis of quantitative data; political and ethical issues in social research.
 

SOCI 395 - FEMINIST SOCIAL THOUGHT

Long Title: FEMINIST SOCIAL THOUGHT
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Study of feminist theory as critique and reconstruction. Includes Wollstonecraft and de Beauvoir, as well as contemporary debates about equity, difference, knowledge, sexuality, and power. Instructor Permission Required.Cross-list: WGST 460.
 

SOCI 398 - SOCIAL STATISTICS

Long Title: SOCIAL STATISTICS
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Emphasizes the practical uses of statistics to answer the types of questions sociologists ask. We learn sample description, sampling and probability, sampling theory, and how to make inferences from samples to populations. We study and apply common univariate, bivariate, and multivariate statistics. Because most statistical analysis is done with the aid of computers, we also learn how to use a common statistical package.
 

SOCI 399 - IMMIGRATION AND PUBLIC HEALTH

Long Title: IMMIGRATION AND PUBLIC HEALTH
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course explores the relationship between international migration and public health both historically and in the contemporary period. We will discuss the substantive and methodological complexities of the health-migration relationship and their implications for public policy debates worldwide. This course is taught at the UT School of Public Health and cross-listed as PHYS 3998.
 

SOCI 403 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Directed reading and written papers on subjects not regularly offered; advanced study of subjects on which courses are offered. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

SOCI 404 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 4
Description: Directed readings and essay writing on special subjects. Includes advanced study in subjects from other courses, if desired. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

SOCI 405 - ETHNOGRAPHIC RESEARCH

Long Title: ETHNOGRAPHIC RESEARCH
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Research
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Beginning with the theoretical frameworks for ethnographic and other qualitative research methods, the course will cover ethics, entry, observation, field notes, interviewing, data analysis, and writing reports. It will offer a hands-on approach combining lectures, research through lectures, readings, and fieldwork. Field projects can be conducted in group, classroom, campus, or community settings.
 

SOCI 410 - TRANS RESEARCH INTO POLICY

Long Title: TRANSLATING RESEARCH INTO POLICY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 2
Description: Research efforts seldom take into account the practical consequences of findings, particularly, how they might best be put to use by whom. Consequently results may never find their way into practice, either because of their technical complexities or because they never reach the people who need them the most. Translation deals with getting the results into a form that meets users' needs in language they can understand. Dissemination deals with the issue of getting those results to the right users. Reaching the diverse users of prevention and population health research with results in a form that they can use presents new challenges. The purpose of this course is to examine these challenges and consider strategies for bridging the gap between research and practice. Course taught at the UT School of Public Health.
 

SOCI 411 - SOCIAL CHANGE

Long Title: SOCIAL CHANGE
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Analysis of accelerating trends that have transformed human societies during the past thirty years, with particular reference to ongoing transformations in the economic foundations and ethnic composition of the United States, and in threats to the global environment and capitalist world system; individual and collective responses to the challenges of our time.
 

SOCI 421 - THE CRAFT OF SOCIOLOGY

Long Title: THE CRAFT OF SOCIOLOGY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Exploration of work of sociology. Includes its historical and social origins and development, and its shifting philosophical foundations, methodological refinements, and ethical and political implications, as well as discussion of classic and controversial sociological studies.
 

SOCI 425 - POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY

Long Title: POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Can democracy survive its enemies: tyranny of ruling elites and classes, tyranny of the majority, ethnic and religious conflict, individualism, government secrecy, citizen apathy? Cross-list: POLI 425.
 

SOCI 430 - SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION

Long Title: SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Study of religious beliefs, symbols, actions, organizations, roles, and various interrelationships between religion and society. Includes new religious movements, secularization, and fundamentalism. Field work required.
 

SOCI 431 - THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM

Long Title: THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Examination of the major components of the criminal justice system: 1) Police role and culture, contemporary approaches; 2) Courts (judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, plea bargaining, juries, appeals, pre-sentence investigation, and sentencing); and 3) Corrections, with attention to responsibility and punishment, prisons, probation, parole, and alternatives.
 

SOCI 433 - SOCIOLOGY OF THE LIFE CYCLE

Long Title: SOCIOLOGY OF THE LIFE CYCLE: DEATH AND DYING
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Analysis of various cultures' "death systems" (beliefs, values, conceptions). Religious, legal, medical and other approaches to death; analysis of funerary practices and various trajectories of the dying self; "near death experiences", social management of dying in various organizational settings (homes, hospitals, nursing homes, hospices, prisons, battlefields, streets, etc.); changing causes and modes of death (accident, natural disaster, illness, "old age", suicide, homicide, genocide, and war). A field trip to Houston's Glenwood Cemetery, and special consideration of terrorism and the recent tsunami in Southeast Asia.
 

SOCI 436 - RSRCH SEM: HOUSTON SURVY

Long Title: ADVANCED RESEARCH SEMINAR: THE 2004 HOUSTON AREA SURVEY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Research
Credit Hours: 4
Description: Continuation of the series of annual surveys on how Houston residents are reacting to changes in American society. Includes sampling procedures, questionnaire construction, interviewing, data analysis, and the logic and skills of survey research. Culminates in a research report that develops empirical hypotheses and tests their validity with survey findings.
 

SOCI 440 - FAMILY INEQUALITY

Long Title: FAMILY INEQUALITY
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisite(s): SOCI 334
Description: This is an intense, upper-level seminar focused on aspects of inequality concerning American families. We will discuss how well-known modes of inequality, such as race/ethnicity, gender, and social class, affect individual families, as well as how families serve as agents of inequality along these lines. Cross-list: WGST 444.
 

SOCI 445 - SOCIOLOGY OF CULTURE

Long Title: SOCIOLOGY OF CULTURE
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course surveys the different sociological approaches to studying culture. Part I focuses on the relationships between culture and social structure, including various theoretical approaches. Part II examines different perspectives on modern culture.
 

SOCI 460 - INEQUALITY&HLTH ACROSS LIFE

Long Title: INEQUALITY AND HEALTH ACROSS THE LIFE COURSE
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisite(s): SOCI 345
Description: This course focuses on the relationship between health and social inequality at multiple points across the life course--in utero, early childhood, adolescence, adulthood, and old age. Three forms of inequality, and their importance for health, are examined in depth; socioeconomic, racial/ethnic, and gender. This will be taught at UT SPH and cross-listed with PH 1498L. Instructor Permission Required.
 

SOCI 465 - GENDER AND HEALTH

Long Title: GENDER AND HEALTH
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will examine the relationship between gender and health, both physical and mental. We will begin the semester by examining issues related to gender and health in the U.S. We will spend the second half of the semester examining gender and health in an international context. Instructor Permission Required.Cross-list: WGST 465.
 

SOCI 492 - DIRECTED HONORS RESEARCH

Long Title: DIRECTED HONORS RESEARCH
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Sociological research under faculty supervision. Includes first-semester review of relevant literature and the preparation of an outline for planned research, followed by second-semester research and the writing of an honors thesis. Open only to students in sociology honors program. Instructor Permission Required.
 

SOCI 493 - DIRECTED HONORS RESEARCH

Long Title: DIRECTED HONORS RESEARCH
Department: Sociology
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Research
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Sociological research under faculty supervision. Includes first-semester review of relevant literature and preparation of outline for planned research, followed by second-semester research and the writing of an honors thesis. Open only to students in sociology honors program. Instructor Permission Required.