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Chapter 14

Chapter 14. Education and Medicine. Education vs. Schooling. Education The social institution through which society provides its members with important knowledge, including basic facts, job skills, and cultural norms and values Schooling

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Chapter 14

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  1. Chapter 14 Education and Medicine

  2. Education vs. Schooling • Education • The social institution through which society provides its members with important knowledge, including basic facts, job skills, and cultural norms and values • Schooling • Formal instruction under the direction of specially trained teachers

  3. Functions of Schooling • Socialization • Primary schooling • Basic language and mathematical skills • Secondary schooling • Expansion of basic skills to include the transmission of cultural values and norms • Cultural innovation • Educational systems create as well as transmit culture • Social integration • Brings a diverse nation together • Social placement • The enhancement of meritocracy

  4. Functionalism: Latent Functions of Schools • Latent functions are hidden, unintended, unstated goals or consequences • Latent functions of schools include: • Schools as child-care providers • Schools consume considerable time & energy- activity thus fostering conformity • Engages young people at a time in their lives when jobs are not plentiful • Sets the stage for establishing relationships & networks • Link between particular schools and career opportunities

  5. Critical Analysis • Functionalism overlooks that the quality of schooling is far greater for some than for others • U. S. Educational system reproduces the class structure in each generation • System transforms privilege into personal worthiness and social disadvantage into personal deficiency

  6. Conflict Analysis:Schooling and Social Inequality • Social control • Mandatory education laws encouraged compliance, following directions, and discipline • Hidden curriculum: Subtle presentations of political or cultural ideas in the classroom • Learning the importance of race and gender • Standardized testing • Is it biased based on race, ethnicity, or class • Tracking • Assigning students to different types of education programs • Does it segregate students into winners and losers? • Inequality between schools • Public vs. Private schools • Parochial schools – operated by Roman Catholic Church • Suburban vs. Urban districts

  7. Critical Analysis • Social conflict approach minimizes the extent to which schooling upward social mobility for talented men and women from all backgrounds • Today’s college curricula (including sociology courses) challenges social inequity on many fronts

  8. Access to Higher Education • Money is largest stumbling block to higher education • Even for state-sponsored schools • Family income is still best predictor for college attendance • Families making at least $75,000 send 64% of their children to college • Families making under $10,000 send 21.1% of their children to college • On average, a person with a college degree will add almost $500,000 to his or her earnings over a lifetime • A woman with a bachelor’s degree will earn two-and-a-half times as much as a woman with eight or fewer years of schooling

  9. Credentialism • Evaluating a person on the basis of educational degrees • Diplomas and degrees are viewed as evidence of ability • Over-education is often the case when people are overqualified for the job at hand

  10. Problems in Schools • Many believe that a so called “State of Emergency” best characterizes our system of education today • School discipline • Many believe schools need to teach discipline because it isn’t addressed within the home setting • Violence in schools • Students and teachers are assaulted • Weapons are brought to school • Society’s problems spill into schools • What is the answer? • Adjust attitudes so learning is the focus • Skillful and committed teaching • Firm disciplinary standards enforced • Administrative and parental support

  11. “Cooling Out” the Poor • Transforming Disadvantages Into Deficiency • Just as schools can transform social privilege into personal merit, they can transform social disadvantages into personal deficiency • Cooling out • The self-fulfilling prophecy by which poor students end up settling for no more than society offered them when they were first born • Some believe that community colleges play an important part in the cooling out process • Allowing students to fail in community college allows society to point the finger at them and ask them to accept personal responsibility for “blowing their opportunities” • Are the students at fault here, or is the educationalsystem guilty of not caring enough?

  12. Theodore Sizer’s Ways in Which Bureaucratic Schools Undermine Education • Rigid uniformity • Insensitive to cultural character of community • Numerical ratings • Success defined in terms of numbers on test scores • Rigid expectations • Age and grade level expectations • Specialization • Many courses, many teachers • No one teacher knows a student • Little individual responsibility • Little empowerment to learn on one’s own • Don’t upset or accelerate learning for fear of disrupting system

  13. The “Silent” Classroom • The norm is to not talk in class, and students can get upset at others who talk “too much” • No matter what the class size only a handful of students speak • Passivity is the norm and it is seen as deviant to speak up in class • What makes a difference • Female instructors tend to call on men and women equally, whereas male instructors tend to call on men • Reasons • Students are conditioned to listen • Instructors come to class with lectures prepared and students do not wish to get sidetracked

  14. Apathy in Education • Many students expect learning to be delivered and don’t realize they are part of the process • Apathy is high among students • Reasons: • Television • Parents • Schools • Other students • High tech may hold one key for sparking interest • Bringing multimedia into the classroom

  15. Academic Standards • A Nation at Risk - 1983 governmental commission • Troublesome findings concerning what students are and are not learning in school • 40% of those screened could not draw inferences from written materials • 33% of those screened could complete multi-step mathematical problems • Other insights: • Functional illiteracy – a lack of reading and writing skills needed for everyday living • Lack of interest in the importance of education apathetic attitudes toward classes, course materials, doing assignments, and attendance • Belief that good grades need not be “earned,” but rather just rewarded (as if they had a right to them)

  16. Academic Standards • Global performance • U.S. Eighth graders still placed 17th in the world in science and 28th in mathematics • Recommendations from A Nation at Risk • All schools should require several years of English, math, social studies, general science & computer science • No more “social promotion” of failing students from grade to grade • Teacher training and salaries should improve

  17. School Choice • Introduction of competition to public schools and giving parents options might force all schools to do a better job • Critics charge that these programs erode our nation’s commitment to public education especially in inner city schools • Magnet schools – schools that offer special facilities and programs to promote educational excellence in a particular area, i.e. Arts, computers,foreign language, etc • Charter schools – public schools that are given more freedom to try out new policies and programs • Schooling for profit – school systems operated by private profit-making companies (including public schools)

  18. Mainstreaming • Integrating Students With Special Needs Into the Overall Educational Program • Five million students are classified as mentally or physically disabled • Many of the five million receive marginal classroom experiences • Inclusive education maintains that it is good to integrate all children • Mainstreaming needs to be approached with a measure of common sense • In cases where one has to serve the severe and profound populations, a segregated classroom may be best

  19. 21st Century Schooling • Computers and other high-tech tools will become increasingly important • The amount and quality of high-tech equipment may become one of the new marketing tools for schools to out-perform one another • Computers, however, only hold part of the answer. We need humans to put into place a program that aims at providing high quality education • Will the education system play a role in dividing people into two groups in the future • Those literate and illiterate in computer skills • Will we become a country of “haves” and “have nots” divided along lines of high-tech competencies

  20. Medicine and Health

  21. Health A state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being (World Health Organization) • Health is as much a social as a biological issue for sociologists • Illness have their roots in the organization of society

  22. How Society Shapes the Health of People • Cultural patterns define health • What is considered “healthy” is what people hold to be morally good • Cultural standards of health change over time • A society’s technology affects people’s health • Social inequality relates to health

  23. Health: a Global Survey • Health in history • Industrialization changed the patterns of health, medical care • Health in low-income countries • One billion people (globally) have serious illness due to severe poverty • Poor sanitation, malnutrition and minimal medical care • Health in high-income countries • Infectious disease is less of a threat, concentrate on chronic illnesses

  24. 1900 Influenza and pneumonia Tuberculosis Stomach/intestinal diseases Heart disease Cerebral hemorrhage Kidney disease Accidents Cancer Disease of infancy Diphtheria 2000 Heart disease Cancer Stroke Lung disease (non-cancerous) Accidents Diabetes Pneumonia and influenza Alzheimer’s disease Kidney disease Blood disease Leading Causes ofDeath in the US

  25. Who Is Healthy? • Epidemiology – The study of how health and disease are distributed throughout a society’s population • Factors include • Age • Gender • Social class • Race

  26. Age & Gender • Death is now rare among young people • Accidents and AIDS are two exceptions • Across the life course, women fare better than men • Men have higher death rates for accidents, suicide and violence • Our cultural conception of masculinity pressures men • “Coronary prone behavior”

  27. Class and Race • Infant mortality rates are twice as high for poor as for wealthy • The poorest in America can die from diseases that strike children in countries like the Vietnam and Lebanon • African Americans are three times more likely to be poor compared to whites • Poverty condemns people to live in crowed unsanitary conditions that breed infectious disease • Life expectance for white children born in 2000 is six years greater than for African Americans • Poverty also breeds stress and violence • In 1999, 2,674 African American males were killed by others of their own race

  28. Cigarette Smoking • Most preventable hazard to health • As of 1999, 24% of Americans smoke • Generally speaking, smokers tend to be divorced, separated, unemployed, in the military and have less education • 430,000 men & women die prematurely each year as a direct result of smoking • That number exceeds the combined death toll from alcohol, cocaine, heroin, homicide, suicide, auto accidents & aids

  29. Eating Disorders • An intense form of dieting or other unhealthy methods of weight control driven by the desire to be very thin • Obesity is also an eating disorder • 95% of those suffering from anorexia and bulimia are women, white and affluent • The beauty myth tells women to exaggerate the importance of physical attractiveness to the point of risking their health • Pressures come from society, parents, the media, as well as women themselves

  30. Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) • The 1960’s saw a rise in STD rates • Led to the sexual revolution • Gonorrhea & syphilis • Easily treated with antibiotics • Genital herpes • Treatable but incurable • AIDS – Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome • Caused by human immunodeficiency virus – HIV • Incurable, almost always fatal • Specific behaviors increase risk: anal sex, sharing needles and drug use

  31. Ethics & Death • When is a person dead? • When an irreversible state involving no response to stimulation, no movement or breathing, no reflexes, and no indication of brain activity • Do people have the right to die? • 10,000 people in the US are in a permanent “vegetative state” • What about mercy killing? • Thousands face terminal illnesses that will cause horrible suffering • Right to die: When a person with an incurable disease has a right to forgo treatment which may prolong their life • “Active” euthanasia a person may enlist the services of a physician to bring on a quick death

  32. The Medical Establishment • The medical establishment focuses on combating disease and improving health • The rise of scientific medicine • AMA – American Medical Association founded in 1847 • By early 1900’s state boards agreed to certify only AMA approved • M.D.s & D.O. (Osteopaths) on one level • Other healers kept tradition but occupy lesser role • Chiropractors, herbalists, midwives, etc.

  33. Holistic Medicine • Holistic medicine is an approach to health care that emphasizes prevention of illness and takes into account a person’s entire physical and social environment • Concerned with the following: • Patients are people: Concern for the environment in which the person lives and their lifestyle • Responsibility, not dependency: Favors an active approach to health encouraging patients take health-promoting behaviors • Personal treatment: Favoring a more personal relaxed environment, such as the person’s home

  34. Medicine in Socialist Societies • China • Government controls most health care operations • “Barefoot doctors” in rural areas, traditional healing arts, acupuncture, medicinal herbs and holistic concern • Russian Federation • Medical care is in transition, but it is held the all citizens have a right to basic medical care • Tax funds are used to provide care • Disparities in medical care increase among segments of the population

  35. Medicine in Capitalist Societies • Sweden (1891) • Socialized medicine: Compulsory, comprehensive government medical care system offered to all • Great Britain (1948) • Duel system of medicine: National Health Service for all citizens and may they also may purchase private services • Canada (1972) • Also a duel system: A single-payer model for all citizens government program (insurance company), Like Britain, may purchase private services • Japan • Physicians have private practice • Paid like much of Europe, combination of government programs (80% of costs) and private insurance

  36. Medicine in the US • Direct fee system • The patient pays directly for services provided by doctor and hospitals • Comprised of: • Private Insurance • Public Assistance • Medicare • Medicaid • Health Maintenance Organizations (HMO)

  37. Medicine in the US • Private insurance • 63% of Americans have access to medical care benefits through their work or union • 8% purchase private coverage on their own • Few programs pay all medical costs • Public insurance programs • Medicare for those over 65, Medicaid for those in poverty and for veterans • 24% of Americans receive medical attention via some form of government program, though many also have some private insurance • Health Maintenance Organizations (HMO) • An organization that provides comprehensive medical care to subscribers for a fixed fee • Preventive approach to health; Makes a profit if subscribers stay healthy

  38. Functional Analysis: Talcott Parsons • Talcott Parsons’ the “sick role” • Illness suspends routine duties • A sick person must want to get well • A sick person must seek competent help • The doctor patient relationship as hierarchical • Critical Analysis: Parsons’ work links illness and medicine to the broader organization of society, but it also supports the idea that doctors, rather than patients, bear primary responsibility for health.

  39. Interactionist Analysis • Health and medical care are socially constructed by people in everyday interactions • Socially constructing illness • How people define a medical situation may actually affect how they feel • Socially constructing treatment • Understanding how people construct reality in the examination room is as important as mastering the medical skills required for treatment • Critical Analysis: This paradigm reveals the relativity of sickness and health, but seems to deny that there are any objective standards of well being.

  40. Conflict Analysis • Points out the connection between health and social inequality. • Access to care • The access problem is more serious in the US than in other industrialized societies because our country has no universal medical care system. • The profit motive • Some conflict analysts argue that the real problem is the character of capitalist medicine itself. • Medicine as politics • Scientific medicine frequently takes sides on significant social issues. • Critical Analysis: Conflict theory minimizes the improvements in health brought about by the present system.

  41. Looking Ahead: Health in the 21st Century • The health of Americans overall will continue to improve into the next century, but certain health problems will continue to plague US society. • The US falls short in addressing the health of marginalized members of our society. • Problems of health are far greater in the poor societies of the world than they are in the US

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