Rosemont Hills Montessori College: Lesson 1: Community
Rosemont Hills Montessori College: Lesson 1: Community
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Lesson 1: Community
“Alone, we can do so little. Together, we can do so much.” – Helen Keller
Community
The word “community” was derived from the Latin word communis, which means “common” or
“shared.” Thus, the general understanding of the word community is that it is a social unit compose of people
who have something in common.
1. Geographical. The members of a community share the same geographic vicinity, such as a village, province, and
our neighbourhood.
2. Non-Geographical. These communities are formed based on needs, ideas, interest, identity, practices, and rules
and social institutions such as at home, at work, and government, society, or the community at large.
It is also putting communities as the center of the services development and services delivery. This
initiative aims to cater the primary needs of the communities before implementing it. In such way, community
action will help the community dynamics or the degree of the improvement at the community.
ANTHROPOLOGY
This field examine the various aspects of humans, such as their biology, behaviour, culture and social
interactions.
It also studies how people adapt their ways of living to different environment.
Example is determining ways to help a community solve health related concerns. This can be
addressed by understanding the situation through interacting with the people in the community,
connecting its history with is present conditions, and eventually solving the community’s concerns.
ECONOMICS
This field studies the production, allocation and consumption of goods and services. In any
community, one finds various forms of wealth distribution.
The ultimate goal of economics is to improve the lives of people such as that their needs are satisfied.
POLITICAL SCIENCE
This field encompasses the various ways and means of allocating power, influence, and decision
making.
This includes the types of governments and management systems, and how people in a small bands or
informal groups make decisions when they do not have recognized leader.
All communities have some form of political system. The members of a community should understand
how its political system works, how power and influence are distributed and what change occur.
PSYCHOLOGY
This discipline studies the human mind, brain, and social behaviour. This extends to interactions
between people and interpersonal relationships. Psychology in general is most often associated with
the study, diagnosis, and treatment of mental illnesses.
SOCIOLOGY
This field is the study of society, social order, social interactions, and social behaviour. It introduces
the concepts of social capital and communitarianism.
Social capital is defined as the networks of relationships among people who live and work in a
particular society for the effective functioning of the community.
The concept of communitarianism’s explains the connection between the individual and the
community. Every person has a special role in one’s society, and it is part of human nature to relate
with other people in various conditions or situations.
2. INSTITUTIONAL PERSPECTIVE
The institutional perspective views the concept of community in three different dimensions.
First, it is an existing establishment or physical space where members of the community go for a
certain purpose. Examples of this are the companies, hospitals, or educational institutions.
The third dimension is that community is composed of the ways people act, interact with each other,
react, and expect each other to act and interact.
Examples include institutions such as marriage of friendship, roles such as mother or police officer,
status or class, and other patterns of human behaviour. This dimension presents how people act in
relation to each other. It includes their expectations, assumptions, judgments, predictions, responses,
and reactions.
It perceives patterns of relationships sometimes identified as roles and status, and the formation of
groups and institutions that derived from those patterns. For example, a “father” is both a role and an
institution. This explains that in a community, its social organization is the sum total of all those and
relationships and patterns.
Example:
Groups of people come together regardless of location and organize plans to render support and
assistance to society. Some examples of civic organizations in the Philippines are ABS-CBN
foundation, Ayala Red Cross Foundation, Boy and Girl Scouts of the Philippines and Caritas Manila.
The human rights movement, on the other hand is an example of a social movement.
Example:
Doctors and dentist in different communities come together to organize medical and dental missions,
especially for families affected by calamities. When typhoon Haiyan hit the country in 2013, children
and elderly became weak and sick, and a medical mission was implemented to improve their health
condition.