Module Code
SOC1005
This module will introduce students to major sociological approaches for researching social developments surrounding digital and online technologies.
The lectures and the classes will introduce students to key theories, theorists, and concepts for understanding contemporary developments such as online communication technologies, social media, artificial intelligence, online surveillance, and automation of labour. Through these discussions, this module interrogates whether digital technologies have fundamentally altered the nature of ‘modernity’, and what features of contemporary society have changed or stayed the same.
This course will explore both theoretical and normative questions about whether digital technologies ameliorate or reproduce social inequalities and whether people have the capacity to change the world through engagement with – or rejection of – digital technologies.
Students will be encouraged to reflect critically on their own everyday use of technology and how their behaviour in turn shapes contemporary society. This will include questions surrounding the ‘information revolution’ and its effects on social relations at personal and institutional levels. Students will also be encouraged to examine evidence both supporting and challenging commonplace conceptions about the role of digital technologies on modern life.
Students on this module will have the opportunity to develop knowledge and understanding of:
1. Key concepts and theories in sociology and social theory relating to the impacts of digital technologies in contemporary societies.
2. The potential positive and negative effects of digital technologies on the quality of life.
3. The consequences of digital technologies on online and in-person interactions and identities.
4. The social impacts of the so-called ‘digital divide’ in national and global contexts.
Students will have the opportunity to develop skills in the following areas:
• Find and select relevant information from print and electronic sources.
• Interpret theoretical arguments grounded in sociology of the internet and new media.
• Interpret and use existing reliable data to back up theoretical arguments.
• Develop and demonstrate critical and independent thinking skills.
• Develop oral skills through participation in lectures, tutorials and group discussions
• Develop an ability to write in a clear, structured and critical manner.
To pass the module, students must attempt all assignments and receive a combined mark over the pass threshold (40%).
Coursework
70%
Examination
30%
Practical
0%
20
SOC1005
Spring Semester
12 Weeks