Sociology 3200 Group Project and Wiki Help

You can access your group by going to the class MyGateway site: select, "Group Areas."  You'll find folders for each group with a list of the students assigned to each group.

Read and discuss the entire project within your group. You need to decide on a topic for your group project by Monday, January 28 at the beginning of class (3:00 PM). Plan a head--final group projects will be presented to the class during the last three weeks of the semester. Presentations will be "live," but can be done in-person or via the Wimba interface. Groups must insure that at least one member is available to present the groups work to the class on the day your topic is scheduled to be covered. Adjustments to the schedule can be made, but must be worked out prior to Spring Break.

Part 1: This assignment is due Monday, February 11 by the end of the day (11:59 PM) (60 points)

Part 2: This assignment is due Monday, March 10 by the end of the day (11:59 PM) (70 points)

Part 3: This assignment is due Monday, April 14, 2007 by the beginning of class (3:00 PM) (70 points) (April 7 depending on topic)

Wiki Help and Tips

Group Activity Grading Policy:

Hopefully, your participation and collaboration in these groups will be an important source of learning and support throughout the semester. Your group provides a forum for participation, discussion, and collaboration with other group members on class topics and group activities.

A few points:

Part 1: This assignment is due Monday. February 11 by the end of the day (11:59 PM). (60 points)

Scoring for this part of the project (60 points possible):

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Part 2: This assignment is due Monday, March 10 by the end of the day (11:59 PM) (70 points)

Each group member needs to develop an analysis that focuses on the ways positivistic theories of deviance (specific to your chosen topic) are inadequate or incomplete, according to the constructionist approaches. Address the ways in which constructionist approach more adequate or complete. In what ways are the positivist approaches stronger than the constructionist approaches?  Each member must highlight their analysis by comparing two different sociological theories that represent these approaches to investigating and understanding the social reality of deviance.  You will need to display an understanding of the basic assumptions of these theories, their central concepts, and an example of how they would analyze and explain a particular form of deviance. These individual analyses should be completed and made available to all group members no latter than Monday, March 3, 2008--though it might be useful to get them done even earlier. Post these individual analyses as pages in your group wiki.

Next, the group needs to review and discuss the various analyses, and come up with a synthesis of views and examples focusing on two of the sociological theories addressed (one positivistic and one constructionist).

Then, each group's coordinator should post the group synthesis of this activity in the group wiki (create a new page in your wiki, post the analysis, and then link to this new page from your group wiki's "Home page").  Group members should add additional pages, linked to this assignment's page, that provide commentary, their individual analysis, and other resources.  

Finally, using the material in chapter 5 of Goode's book, and the research you have done so far this semester, develop a research question concerning your topic and design an observational research project to seek answers to your question.

You will be evaluated on your final wiki presentation (images, links to other resources), the content of your presentation, as well as your activity in the group in the discussion forum.  If you have any questions, contact either the TA or Prof. Keel.   We expect about the equivalent of a three-page summary from the group and documentation of individual analyses.  Be sure to include the names of all group members that participated in this group project in the post of findings. 

Rely on reputable studies, articles, and books. Websites that meet the criteria for reputable work (or here ) can also be used.

Be sure to correctly cite all information used from research resources (in-text citations and a list of references for each page) using the ASA style guide (local copy with web citation guidelines or a full version).  Additional assistance with referencing online resources can be found here. Also, remember we are undertaking an academic activity, so please refrain from using opinion, unreliable or invalid resources, sensationalism, and other non-academic practices.

GA 2 Grading Rubric

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Part  3: This assignment is due Monday, April 14, 2007 by the beginning of class (3:00 PM) (70 points) (April 7 depending on topic)

Each group member must engage in "data collection" based on the research design developed in part 2. DIsplay your data in separate pages on your group wiki and detail a specific theoretical argument and explanation as they relate to this data.  Provide concrete examples from the readings, or other relevant sources.  Your analysis must contain examples/theories and social policy implications. These individual analyses should be completed and made available (post these individual analyses as pages in your group wiki) to all group members no latter than Monday, April 7, 2007--though it might be useful to get them done even earlier.

Next, the group needs to review and discuss the various analyses, and come up with a synthesis of views and examples focusing on your chosen substantive area. In effect, your group needs to develop a wiki site that presents a comprehensive sociological analyses of the substantive area you chose.

Then, each group's coordinator should post the group synthesis of this activity in the group wiki (create a new page in your wiki, post the analysis, and then link to this new page from your group wiki's "Home page").  Group members should add additional pages, linked to this assignment's page, that provide commentary, their individual analysis, and other resources.  

Groups must insure that at least one member is available to present the groups work to the class on the day your topic is scheduled to be covered. Adjustments to the schedule can be made, but must be worked out prior to Spring Break.

You will be evaluated on your final wiki presentation (images, links to other resources), the content of your presentation, as well as your activity in the group in the discussion forum.  If you have any questions, contact either Rachel Craft or Prof. Keel.   We expect about the equivalent of a three-page summary from the group and 2-3 pages from each individual.  Be sure to include the names of all group members that participated in this group project in the post of findings. 

Rely on reputable studies, articles, and books. Websites that meet the criteria for reputable work (or here ) can also be used.

Be sure to correctly cite all information used from research resources (in-text citations and a list of references for each page) using the ASA style guide (local copy with web citation guidelines or a full version).  Additional assistance with referencing online resources can be found here. Also, remember we are undertaking an academic activity, so please refrain from using opinion, unreliable or invalid resources, sensationalism, and other non-academic practices.

"Thinking Points" for Part 3 (by no means complete bor all inclusive)

GA 3 Grading Rubric

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Here are some guidelines for using the wikis:

Here's a link with detailed instructions for using the wiki: http://support.learningobjects.com/help/campus_pack/2.7.4/wiki/wiki.htm.  You can access this link from your group's wiki by clicking on the "?" button in the upper right-hand corner.

To Create (or edit) a page:

Contact Rachel or Mr. Keel if you have any questions.

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URL: http://www.umsl.edu/~keelr/200/GroupActivities/ga.html
Owner: Robert O. Keel:
rok@umsl.edu
Last Updated: Friday, October 17, 2008 8:36 AM

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