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Sociology Standards Domain 4: Stratification and Inequality A Welcome from the ASA Team

Sociology Standards Domain 4: Stratification and Inequality A Welcome from the ASA Team Lessons and Teaching Resources Hurricane Katrina Discussion NCSS Annual Conference Friday, November 13, 2015 New Orleans, LA. ASA National Standards for High School Sociology.

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Sociology Standards Domain 4: Stratification and Inequality A Welcome from the ASA Team

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  1. Sociology Standards Domain 4: Stratification and Inequality A Welcome from the ASA Team Lessons and Teaching Resources Hurricane Katrina Discussion NCSS Annual Conference Friday, November 13, 2015 New Orleans, LA

  2. ASA National Standards for High School Sociology First Part of the Document: Background and Content • Introduction • Why Sociology is Important • Development of the Standards • Using the National Standards • Learning Domains

  3. ASA National Standards for High School Sociology Second Part of the Document: How to Use Them • How the Standards Address Larger Curricular Goals • Future Considerations • Conclusions • Appendix: Enrichment Concepts • Contributors

  4. Domain 4: Stratification and Inequality

  5. Stratification and InequalityDomain 44.1.3- Racial and ethnic inequality 4.4.1- Individual responses to inequality

  6. What do you see here?

  7. Sometimes what we see are our attitudes, not the facts

  8. Implicit Racism • 4.1.3- Racial and ethnic inequality • 4.4.1- Individual responses to inequality • Benefits of teaching implicit racism

  9. LeBron James

  10. Katrina Coverage

  11. Harvard’s IAT Background info on IAT in my handout. Vedantam, Shankar “See No Bias”. Washington Post. January 23, 2005.

  12. IAT Results

  13. Implicit Bias in the news • Stevenson High School basketball article that is full of implicit biasThen checkout this post showing that Jewish players were dominant in basketball in the first half of the 20th century. • B)And another example of implicit bias is how people react in a split second when they confront someone with a weapon.  See here for that.C)Here is an article showing that traffic stops in Illinois have an implicit racial bias:D)This study shows a racial bias in NBA foul calling.E)Here is a study showing that immigrants are treated differently based on skin color.F)Having an African American sounding namewill result in biased treatment as well.

  14. Debriefing Implicit Bias

  15. Introduction to TRAILS Hayley Lotspeich, Wheaton North High School, hayley.lotspeich@cusd200.org

  16. Lesson Plan Ideas for Domain 4 Stratification and Inequality https://trails.asanet.org/Pages/default.aspx Assessable Competencies 4.1 - Students will identify common patterns of social inequality. (4.1.5- Gender inequality) From TRAILS “Intersectionality in the Toy Store” (Author – Jeffery P. Dennis, SUNY Oneonta) Hayley Lotspeich, Wheaton North High School, hayley.lotspeich@cusd200.org

  17. Lesson Plan Ideas for Domain 4 Stratification and Inequality Assessable Competencies 4.1 - Students will identify common patterns of social inequality. (4.1.4- Class inequality) (4.2.1- Life Chances) Trails Resource “Poverty and Life Chances” Hayley Lotspeich, Wheaton North High School, hayley.lotspeich@cusd200.org

  18. Lesson Plan Ideas for Domain 4 Stratification and Inequality Assessable Competencies 4.1 - Students will identify common patterns of social inequality. (4.1.4- Class inequality) (4.2.1- Life Chances) Trails Resource “Poverty and Life Chances” Hayley Lotspeich, Wheaton North High School, hayley.lotspeich@cusd200.org

  19. Lesson Plan Ideas for Domain 4 Stratification and Inequality Assessable Competencies 4.1 - Students will identify common patterns of social inequality. (4.1.4- Class inequality) (4.2.1- Life Chances) Trails Resource “Poverty and Life Chances” Hayley Lotspeich, Wheaton North High School, hayley.lotspeich@cusd200.org

  20. Domain 4 – Stratification and Inequality • “The sociological imagination enables us to grasp history and biography and the relations between the two within society.” • C. Wright Mills, The Sociological Imagination Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  21. Hurricane Katrina Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  22. After the Levees Failed: Flooding in New Orleans Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  23. Ernest M. Morial Convention Center – New Orleans Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  24. 1372 Madrid Street, New Orleans, LA. Presented by Dennis R. McSeveney – dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  25. Who Could Evacuate? Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  26. Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  27. Who Did Not Evacuate? Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  28. Social Class Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  29. Remembering Katrina “Devastation. Awe. Pure and utter raw emotion pulled on the heartstrings of native New Orleanians as we watched our city drown, forced to figure out next steps for stabilizing our lives and families. Amid government disruption, downed communication, mass citizen displacement, and crumbles infrastructure, New Orleans was a city in shambles with its future in question.” – Erika McConduit-Diggs, The State of Black New Orleans: 10 Years Post Katrina Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  30. Devastation Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  31. Differential Recovery Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  32. Differential Recovery Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  33. Differential Recovery Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  34. Differential Recovery Dennis R. McSeveney , Ph.D. University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu

  35. How to Contact Us • Jean Shin, ASA, shin@asanet.org • Beth Floyd, ASA, bfloyd@asanet.org • Margaret Weigers Vitullo, ASA, mvitullo@asanet.org • Chris Salituro, Stevenson High School, csalituro@d125.org • Hayley Lotspeich, Wheaton North High School, hayley.lotspeich@cusd200.org • Dennis R. McSeveney, University of New Orleans, dennis.mcseveney@uno.edu • ASA Website: www.asanet.org • Email us at: highschool@asanet.org

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