Chapter 1 - Reporting
Chapter 1 - Reporting
Chapter 1 - Reporting
2. Goal attainment
- a system must define and achieve its primary goals
3. Integration
- a system must regulate the interrelationship of its component parts. It must
also manage the relationship among the other three functional imperatives.
1. Interdependency
- One of the most important principles of functionalist theory is that
society is made up of interdependent parts.
2. Functions of Social Structure and Culture
- Closely related to interdependency is the idea that each part of the social system
exists because it serves some function.
4. Equilibrium
- A final principle of functionalist theories is that of equilibrium. This view holds that,
once a society has achieved the form that is best adapted to its situation, it has
reached a state of balance or equilibrium, and it will remain in that condition until it
is forced to change by some new condition.
Interactionist Theories
In general, interactionist theories about the relation of school and society are
critiques and extensions of the functionalist and conflict perspectives. The critiques
arises from the observation that functionalist and conflict theories are very abstract
and emphasize structure and processes at a societal level of analysis.
• Symbolic Interactionism
- Interactionist theory has its origin in the social psychology of early twentieth
century sociologists George Herbert Mead & Charles Horton Cooley.
- Mead & Cooley examined the ways in which the individual is related to society
through ongoing social interactions.
- This school of thought, known as symbolic interactionism, views the self as
socially constructed in relation to social forces and structures and the product of
ongoing negotiattions of meanings.
Principles of Symbolic Interactionism
1. Human beings unlike lower animals, are endowed with a capacity for thought.
2. The capacity for thought is shaped by social interaction.
3. In social interaction, people learn the meanings and the symbols that allow them to
exercise their distinctively human capacity for thought.
4. Meanings and symbols allow people to carry on distinctively human action and
interaction.
5. People are able to modify or alter meanings and symbols that they use in action
and interaction on the basis of their interpretation of the situation.
6. People are able to make these modifications and alterations because, in part, of
their ability to interact with themselves, which allows them to examine possible
courses of action, assess their relative advantages and disadvantages, and then
choose one.
7. The intertwined patterns of action and interaction make up groups and
societies.
• Non-Symbolic Interactionism
1. The first is that people act toward the things they encounter on the
basis of what those things mean to them.
2. Second, we learn what things are by observing how other people
respond to them, that is through social interaction.
3. Third, as a result of ongoing interaction, the sounds (or words),
gestures, facial expressions, and body postures we use in dealing
with others acquire symbolic meanings that are shared by people who
belong to the same culture. The meaning of symbolic gesture extends
beyond the act itself.
Blumer differentiates among three (3) types of objects:
1. Physical Objects
- such as a chair or a tree;
2. Social Objects
- such as a student or a mother; and
3. Abstract Objects
- such as an idea or a moral principle.
Looking-glass Self