SOC 2053 - Sociology of Disability Credits: 3 Hours/Week: Lecture None Lab None Course Description: Starting with a brief history of disability in the United States, this course examines how disability is socially constructed and forms an axis of inequality in society. Topics include disability culture and identity, disability policy, the intersection of disability and gender, portrayals of disability in the media, and disability rights movements in the US and abroad. This course meets the requirements for Elective B: Social Inequality and Stratification for the MN State Sociology Transfer Pathway AA. MnTC Goals 5 History/Social/Behavioral Science, 7 Human Diversity
Prerequisite(s): ENGL 1020 with a grade of C or higher OR ENGL 1021 with a grade of C or higher. Corequisite(s): None Recommendation: None
Major Content
- Current issues (e.g. emergency preparedness for people with disabilities)
- Disability culture and identity
- Disability policy (e.g. ADA, IDEA)
- Disability rights movements in the US and abroad
- Diversity of disability experience; hidden disabilities
- History of disability in the United States
- Intersection of gender, race, class, age and sexuality with disability
- Measuring disability, statistics and demographics
- Representations of disability in the media and popular culture
- Societal models of disability (e.g. medical, interactional, structural, constructionist)
Learning Outcomes At the end of this course students will be able to:
- Outline the disability rights movement in the United States and at least one other country
- Analyze media and popular culture representations in terms of the assumptions they embody about disability
- List significant pieces of disability legislation, their intended effects, and their shortcomings
- Articulate the significance of disability culture and identity
- Describe how disability forms an axis of inequality in US society
- Outline the history of disability in the United States
- Identify sources of commonality and difference in experience among the larger disability community
- Critique the medical model of disability
- Describe how gender, race, class, and sexuality intersect with individuals experiences of disability
- Explain the significance of a social constructionist approach to studying disability
- Sociological Perspective:
- articulate the process by which stratification affects individuals.
- apply founding theoretical traditions and concepts in Sociology to specific processes of stratification.
- Stratification:
- articulate how processes of stratification create and reproduce social hierarchies and inequalities in human society.
- identify empirical patterns and effects of social inequality.
- Social Change:
- describe how cultural, social, political and economic changes affect social inequality.
- articulate how social movements contribute to social change.
Minnesota Transfer Curriculum (MnTC): Goals and Competencies Competency Goals (MnTC Goals 1-6) 05. 02. Examine social institutions and processes across a range of historical periods and cultures.
05. 03. Use and critique alternative explanatory systems or theories.
05. 04. Develop and communicate alternative explanations or solutions for contemporary social issues. Theme Goals (MnTC Goals 7-10) 07. 01. Understand the development of and the changing meanings of group identities in the United States’ history and culture.
07. 02. Demonstrate an awareness of the individual and institutional dynamics of unequal power relations between groups in contemporary society.
07. 03. Analyze their own attitudes, behaviors, concepts and beliefs regarding diversity, racism, and bigotry.
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