Community Engagement Module 1 Quarter 1 The Importance of Studying Community Dynamics and Community Action
Community Engagement Module 1 Quarter 1 The Importance of Studying Community Dynamics and Community Action
Community Engagement Module 1 Quarter 1 The Importance of Studying Community Dynamics and Community Action
Community Engagement,
Solidarity and
Citizenship
Module 1 – Quarter 1
The Importance of Studying Community
Dynamics and Community Action
Republic Act 8293, section 176 states that: No copyright shall subsist in any work
of the Government of the Philippines. However, prior approval of the government agency or
office wherein the work is created shall be necessary for exploitation of such work for profit.
Such agency or office may, among other things, impose as a condition the payment of
royalties.
Borrowed materials (i.e., songs, stories, poems, pictures, photos, brand names,
trademarks, etc.) included in this book are owned by their respective copyright holders.
Every effort has been exerted to locate and seek permission to use these materials from
their respective copyright owners. The publisher and authors do not represent nor claim
ownership over them.
D
RMS; Bienvenido U. Tagolimot, Jr., PhD, EPS-ADM; Erlinda G. Dael, PhD, CID Chief; Maria Teresa M. Absin, EPS (English); Celieto B. Magsayo, LRMS
Community Engagement,
We value your feedback and recommendations.
Solidarity and
Citizenship
Module 1 – Quarter 1
The Importance of Studying Community
Dynamics and Community Action
TABLE OF
ii CONTENTS
Page No.
Cover page i
iii
Copyright page ii
Table of Contents iv
iv
WHAT I NEED TO KNOW
To learn the benefits from this module, follow the steps below:
1. Read the module title and the module introduction to get an idea of what the
module covers. Specifically, read the first two sections of this module
carefully. The first section tells you what this module is all about while the
second section tells you of what you are expected to learn.
1
2. Never move on to the next page unless you have done what you are
expected to do in the previous page. Before you start each lesson, read first
the INSTRUCTIONS.
3. Work on the activities. Take note of the skills that each activity is helping you
to develop.
4. Take the Post-Test after you are done with all the lessons and activities in the
module.
5. Meet with your teacher. Ask him/her about any difficulty or confusion you
have encountered in this module.
6. Finally, prepare and gather all your outputs and submit them to your teacher.
7. Please write all your answers of the tests, activities, exercises, and others in
your separate activity notebook.
WHAT I KNOW
Instructions: Complete the statement below and answer the questions that follows:
(10 minutes)
V WHAT IS IT
What is community?
Types of Community
A formal group is formed when people come together to accomplish specific goals
an objectives.
An informal group is formed when two or more people come together to accomplish
a specific task which is mainly socially geared.
An urban area is the region surrounding a city. An area with high density of
population.
A rural area is an open swath of land that has few homes or other buildings, and not
very many people. A rural area’s population density is very low.
A global community are the people or nations of the world, considered as being
closely connected by modern telecommunications and as being economically,
socially, and politically interdependent.
The role the community includes community consultation, joint planning, joint
design, joint delivery and community-led activities.
Civil Service Career- The Civil Service delivers public services according to
government policies. There are a large number of different departments and so a
huge variety of different roles.
Charity Officer- here are a variety of different roles within charities including project
management, volunteer co-ordination and fund raising.
Equality and Diversity Officer- Equality Officers promote diversity and work to
ensure that people are treated fairly and not discriminated against for characteristics
including race, gender, age or disability.
Family Support Worker- Working with families facing a variety of difficulties and
helping them to solve problems and move forward.
Housing Officer- Housing Officers work for local authorities or housing associations
to manage rented accommodation including solving problems raised by tenants,
organizing maintenance, allocating properties and dealing with payment issues.
Housing Policy Officers develop policies for local authorities or housing associations.
Immigration, Customs and Border Roles- There are a variety of roles involving
monitoring people, banned substances and other goods leaving and entering the
country to ensure safety and security and to maintain the law.
Intelligence Analyst- Analyzing and assessing intelligence data largely for the
purposes of security and crime prevention.
Mediator- Working with people to help them solve conflicts and disagreements.
Police Officer- Police Officers work to make communities safer by maintaining the
law and preventing crime.
Prison Officer- Prison Officers are responsible for maintaining security in prisons
and supporting the rehabilitation of prisoners.
Probation Officer- Probation Officers work with offenders and aim to reduce rates
of re-offending and protect the public.
Psychologist- There are a range of different psychologist roles but broadly they
help clients to improve their psychological well being.
Social Worker- Social Workers work with people in the community who need
support, for example, the elderly, children who are at risk, people with disabilities or
mental health difficulties.
Victim Care Officer- Providing help to people who have been victims of crime,
including supporting them during court proceedings.
Youth Offending Officer- Working with young offenders with the aim of reducing
rates of re-offending and supporting young people to achieve positive outcomes.
Youth Worker- Working with young people to provide support, raise aspirations and
break down barriers to achieving. This is done in a variety of ways including through
recreational activities, organizing projects, mentoring and liaising with other
agencies.
WHAT’S IN
INSTRUCTIONS:
Thank you.
WHAT’S MORE
ACTIVITY 1
1.) Make a non-sequential blocks in your notebook focusing in the Social Science
Careers listed above, select the top five (5) priority career you want in the
future.
(Note: Limit 5 careers only and you can have your own graphical design)
To the teacher:
You can vary the instructions such as:
1. Vary the number of timeline-events, genres and their
structures.
2. Give your own graphical design or ask the students to have their
own.
3. Opt to have another activity as long as it has something to do with
tracing the literary evolution of the Philippines.
ASSESSMENT
Instructions: Match each statement in Column A with what it describes
in Column B. Write the letter of the answer in your notebook.
Column A Column B
1 A human settlement with a high population density.
Areas have a low and small settlements. Social Science
Known as the change and development involved in a community that includes all forms of Rural
living community
organisms.
A physical or virtual space such as a ,, or otherwhere people gather and interact. Community actio
Community dyna
A situation putting communities as the center of the services development and services delivery.
A group of people who share something in common. Social space
Community
Urban communit
Sociology
Learning Competency 1B: Define using various perspectives, e.g., social sciences,
institutions, civil society, and local/grassroots level HUMSS_CSC12-IIa-c-2
(2 hours).
WHAT I KNOW
Instruction: Write T if the statement is true and F if it is false. Write your
answer in your notebook.
1.Family is responsible for reproduction to replace members, provides protection,
socialize the young.
2.Politics produce and distribute goods and services.
3.Education is a way to pass on culture, knowledge, and values.
4.Religion helps people find purpose in their live, develops spiritual side of people,
provides guidelines for personal behavior and social interaction.
5.Social science is the branch of science devoted to the study of societies and
the relationships among individuals within those societies.
6.Sociology is the study of what makes us human.
7.Anthropology is the study of human social life.
8.Economic is the art or science of government.
9.Anthropological perspective focuses on the study of the full scope of human
diversity and the application of that knowledge to help people of different
backgrounds.
10. Institution is a society or organization founded for a religious, educational, social,
or similar purpose.
WHAT’S NEW
I. SOCIAL SCIENCE
Social science is the branch of science devoted to the study of societies and
the relationships among individuals within those societies. The term was formerly
used to refer to the field of sociology, the original "science of society", established in
the 19th century. In addition to sociology, it is now encompasses a wide array
of academic disciplines, including anthropology, archaeology, economics, human
geography, linguistics, management science, media studies, musicology, political
science, psychology, welfare and nursing studies[1] and social history.
Sociology is the study of human social life. Sociology is a branch of the social
sciences that uses systematic methods of empirical investigation and critical analysis
to develop and refine a body of knowledge about human social structure.
The Social Science Perspective is viewing life through the tinted spectacles of
the speculations passed off as “science” by bullying academics. In sad truth, they
cannot predict wars, social changes, elections, or anything else. And certainly they
are incapable of creating or manipulating anything significant.
They call themselves “scientists” because they explain the world in complex
language and invented words that they pretend to understand. In reality, they have
no science because science means to be able to predict without error and to
manipulate or create phenomena.
A lens maker can create a lens for a specific function because he knows the
materials, the math, and the laws of optics. An astronomer can predict eclipses and
the path of planets. A chemist can synthesize new chemicals, and predict reactions
and the energies involved. Always, without error.
However a social scientist can only generate large volumes of garbled prose,
too thick to be called a lie and without the work ability required of the truth.
ompare
it to the beliefs and practices
of other societies, past, and
present (Dudgeon). The
holistic,
cross-cultural and comparative
approach can help us think
more deeply about other
people and
cultures, and live more
consciously in our global
world. It also changes your
way of thinking
about the world with a wider
appreciation of the human
experience. It allows us to
understand
how the evolutionary package
inherited from our ancestors
work in today’s environment.
Sources:
Dudgeon, Roy C. “The
Anthropological Perspective:
What Makes it Unique.”
“Why is Anthropology
Important.”
https://classroom.synonym.co
m/why-is-anthropology-
important-12080725.html.
ompare
it to the beliefs and practices
of other societies, past, and
present (Dudgeon). The
holistic,
cross-cultural and comparative
approach can help us think
more deeply about other
people and
cultures, and live more
consciously in our global
world. It also changes your
way of thinking
about the world with a wider
appreciation of the human
experience. It allows us to
understand
how the evolutionary package
inherited from our ancestors
work in today’s environment.
Sources:
Dudgeon, Roy C. “The
Anthropological Perspective:
What Makes it Unique.”
“Why is Anthropology
Important.”
https://classroom.synonym.co
m/why-is-anthropology-
important-12080725.html.
ompare
it to the beliefs and practices
of other societies, past, and
present (Dudgeon). The
holistic,
cross-cultural and comparative
approach can help us think
more deeply about other
people and
cultures, and live more
consciously in our global
world. It also changes your
way of thinking
about the world with a wider
appreciation of the human
experience. It allows us to
understand
how the evolutionary package
inherited from our ancestors
work in today’s environment.
Sources:
Dudgeon, Roy C. “The
Anthropological Perspective:
What Makes it Unique.”
“Why is Anthropology
Important.”
https://classroom.synonym.co
m/why-is-anthropology-
important-12080725.html.
ompare
it to the beliefs and practices
of other societies, past, and
present (Dudgeon). The
holistic,
cross-cultural and comparative
approach can help us think
more deeply about other
people and
cultures, and live more
consciously in our global
world. It also changes your
way of thinking
about the world with a wider
appreciation of the human
experience. It allows us to
understand
how the evolutionary package
inherited from our ancestors
work in today’s environment.
Sources:
Dudgeon, Roy C. “The
Anthropological Perspective:
What Makes it Unique.”
“Why is Anthropology
Important.”
https://classroom.synonym.co
m/why-is-anthropology-
important-12080725.html.
What is the anthropological
perspective? Why is it
important?
1. ANTHROPOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
-focuses on the study of the full scope of human diversity and the application of
that knowledge to help people of different backgrounds. These are culture, cultural
relativism, fieldwork, human diversity, holism, bio-cultural focus.
2. SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
-involves the investigation of the problem on micro and macro levels. At micro
level, sociology studies how individuals behave in social situations—at work, at play,
at home, or in school, or in small and large groups. It deals with people’s everyday
interactions (social interactionist, ethno methodological and phenomenological
approaches of study).
At macro level, sociology focuses on patterns of behaviour and forms of
organisation that characterise entire societies (classical and grand theorist’s
approaches). At this level, sociology deals with large-scale structures (such as
bureaucracy), broad social categories, institutions, social systems, and social
problems such as war, unemployment, poverty, corruption, and solutions to these
problems are sought at the structural or organisational level. In their studies,
sociologists utilise both approaches of study, i.e., qualitative (introspective-
participant method) and quantitative (statistical, interview and survey techniques).
3. POLITICAL PERSPECTIVE
Politics (from Greek: Πολιτικά, politiká, 'affairs of the cities') is the set of activities
that are associated with making decisions in groups, or other forms of power
relations between individuals, such as the distribution of resources or status. The
academic study of politics is referred to as Political Science.
Perspectives on politics seeks to provide a space for broad and synthetic
discussion within the political science profession and between the profession and the
broader scholarly and reading publics. Such discussion necessarily draws on and
contributes to the scholarship published in the more specialized journals that
dominate our discipline. At the same time, Perspectives seeks to promote a
complementary form of broad public discussion and synergistic understanding within
the profession that is essential to advancing research and promoting scholarly
community. Perspectives seeks to nurture a political science public sphere,
publicizing important scholarly topics, ideas, and innovations, linking scholarly
authors and readers, and promoting broad reflexive discussion among political
scientists about the work that we do and why this work matters.
The five major social institutions and their functions are fairly universal, but
could vary depending one’s culture or geographic location. However, it is likely that
there be some common or overlapping social institutions, each with its relevant set
of functions, which vary somewhat depending on social values, moral standards, and
level of civilization.
Civil society refers to the space for collective action around shared interests,
purposes and values, generally distinct from government and commercial for profit
actors. Civil society includes charities, development NGO’s, community groups,
women organizations, faith-based organizations, professional associations, trade
unions, social movements, coalitions and advocacy groups. However, civil society is
not homogeneous and the boundaries between civil society and government or civil
society and commercial actors can be blurred. There is certainly no one 'civil society'
view, and civil society actors need to contend with similar issues of
representativeness and legitimacy as those of other representatives and advocates.
3. NON-GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATIONS
Some NGOs rely primarily on volunteers, while others support a paid staff.
membership dues
private donations
the sale of goods and services
grants
Despite their independence from government, some NGOs rely significantly on
government funding. Large NGOs may have budgets in the millions or billions of
dollars.
4. SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
5. INTEREST GROUPS
The term interest rather than interest group is often used to denote broad or
less-formalized political constituencies, such as the agricultural interest and the
environmental interest—segments of society that may include many formal interest
groups. Similarly, interest is often used when considering government entities
working to influence other governments (e.g., a local government seeking to secure
funding from the national government). In authoritarian and developing societies,
where formal interest groups are restricted or not as well developed, interest is often
used to designate broader groupings such as government elites and tribal leaders.
The common goals and sources of interest groups obscure, however, the fact
that they vary widely in their form and lobbying strategies both within and across
political systems. This article provides a broad overview that explains these
differences and the role that interest groups play in society.
Local International
A grassroots movement is one which uses the people in a given district, region,
or community as the basis for a political or economic movement. Grassroots
movements and organizations use collective action from the local level to effect
change at the local, regional, national, or international level. Grassroots movements
are associated with bottom-up, rather than top-down decision making, and are
sometimes considered more natural or spontaneous than more traditional power
structures.
Grassroots movements, using self-organization, encourage community members
to contribute by taking responsibility and action for their community. Grassroots
movements utilize a variety of strategies from fundraising and registering voters, to
simply encouraging political conversation. Goals of specific movements vary and
change, but the movements are consistent in their focus on increasing mass
participation in politics. These political movements may begin as small and at the
local level, but grassroots politics as Cornel West contends are necessary in shaping
progressive politics as they bring public attention to regional political concerns.
The idea of grassroots is often conflated with participatory democracy. The Port
Huron Statement, a manifesto seeking a more democratic society, says that to
create a more equitable society, "the grass roots of American Society" need to be
the basis of civil rights and economic reform movements. [6] The terms can be
distinguished in that grassroots often refers to a specific movement or organization,
whereas participatory democracy refers to the larger system of governance.
ASSESSMENT
43
Instructions: Choose a word in the box that corresponds to each of the
following statements below. Write the letter of your choice in your notebook.
44
ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES
1. Take five (5) minutes to think about your community and write down all the needs
and wants of your community in the first box.
2. After listing the needs and wants, list down on the second box list the actors in
the different institutions in your community and how these institution intervene or
help out in making your community a better place to live in.
Needs Wants
Family
References:
pouncedigital.com.au
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community)
David M. Chavis & Kien Lee May 12, 2015
https://www.feverbee.com/different-types-of-
communities/
Source: Brainly.ph - https://brainly.ph/question/1532455#readmore
en.citizendium.org › wiki › Definition
https://www.kent.ac.uk/ces/student/degree/social-sciences/index.html
https://www.americananthro.org/AdvanceYourCareer/Content.aspx?ItemNumber=2150
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_science
https://www.local.gov.uk/our-support/guidance-and-resources/community-action/community-
action-overview/what-community-action
https://www.lawinsider.com/dictionary/local-organization#
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organization
https://www.britannica.com/topic/interest-group
https://aidwatch.org.au/aidwatch-monitor-news/in-the-news/what-is-an-ngo/
https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/13/what-is-non-government-organization.asp
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-governmental_organization
https://r4d.org/resources/role-civil-society-organizations-supporting-fiscal-transparency-african-
countries/
https://tribune.com.pk/story/1637755/civil-society-good-governance
https://www.who.int/social_determinants/themes/civilsociety/en/
SlideShare
https://www.google.com/search
https://www.who.int/social_determinants/themes/civilsociety/en/
slideshare.net
https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/perspectives
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/politics
https://www.yourarticlelibrary.com/sociology/sociological-perspective-what-is-sociological-
perspective/35056
www.studocu.com
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