Social Institution PDF
Social Institution PDF
Social Institution PDF
Introduction:
It is a group of social positions, connected by social relations,
performing a social role. It is social structure and social mechanism of
social order and cooperation that govern the behaviour of its
members.
Characteristics of an Institution:
Palispis (1998) :
Functions of an Institution:
1. Institutions simply social behaviour for the individual person.
4. Control Behaviour
Major Social Institutions:
1. Family
2. Education
3. Religion
4. Economy
7. Mass Communication
Family:
The smallest social institution with the unique function or producing
and rearing the young. It is the basic unit of Philippine society and the
educational system where the child begins to learn his ABC.
Kinds of family:
According to Structure:
1. Conjugal or Nuclear Family- the primary or elementary family
consisting of husband, wife and children.
According to Descent:
1. Patrilocal: When the newly married couple lives with the parents
of the husband.
2. Matrilocal: When the newly married couple lives with the parents
of the wife.
According to Authority:
1. Patriarchal: When the father is considered the head and plays a
dominant role.
Education:
It is form of learning in which the knowledge, skills, and habits of a
group of people are transferred from one generation to the next
through teaching, training or research.
According to Socrates:
“Education means the bring out of the ideas of universal validity
which are latent in the mind of every man.”
According to Horace Mann:
“Education must bring the practice as nearly as possible to theory.”
School is the place for the contemplation of reality, and our task as a
teacher, in simplest terms, is to show this reality to our students, who
are naturally eager about them.
Intellectual Purpose:
To teach basic cognitive skills such as reading, writing and
mathematics; to transmit specific knowledge.
Political Purposes:
To inculcate allegiance to the existing political order (Patriotism).
Social Purpose:
To socialize the children into the various roles, behavior, and values of
the society.
Economic Purpose:
To prepare students for their later occupational roles, and to select,
train, and allocate individuals into the division of labor.
5. Agent of Change
Religion:
It is a system of beliefs and rituals that serves to bind people together
through shared worship, thereby creating a social group.
According to Hick:
“Religion constitutes our varied human response to transcendent
reality.”
According to Jalal-Ul-Din Rumi:
“The lamps are different, but the light is the same.”
Characteristics of Religion:
Functions of Religion:
1. Serves as a means of social control.
2. legitimation of norms
3. Rituals
4. Religious Community
Economy:
It is a social science that seeks to analyze and describe the production,
distribution, and consumption of wealth. It is art of making most of
life. In the 19th century, economics was the hobby of gentlemen of
leisure and the vocation of a few academics; economists wrote about
the economy policy.
Microeconomics:
It is concerned with the specific economic units of parts that make an
economic system and the relationship between those parts.
Emphasis is placed on understanding the behavior of individual firms,
industries, households and ways in which such entities interact.
Macroeconomics:
It is concerned with the economy as a whole, or large segments of it.
Functionalist Theory:
Functions of economic institutions include: production and
distribution of goods, assignments of individuals to different social
roles such as occupations.
6. Provision of funds.
Authority
Politics
Essentially, politics is associated with the government, kings, queens,
coups, dictatorship, voting, etc. But the term actually has a much
broader meaning.
Micropolitics:
To refer to the exercise of power in everyday life.
Macropolitics:
Refers to the exercise of power or a large group.
Example:
The government; whether dictatorship or democracies, they are the
examples of macropolitics.
Power:
The use of power is the business of government.
How does government try to make itself seem legitimate in the eyes
of the people?
Authority:
It is the power that people perceive as legitimate rather than
coercive. This relation of power-authority is legitimate.
Types of Authority:
1. Traditional Authority
2. Rational Legal Authority
3. Charismatic Authority
Traditional Authority:
1. Preindustrial Societies
- Chinese emperors
Charismatic Authority:
(b) Make their own rules and challenge the status quo
Examples:
-In 19th century, Neumann & Rudolf Virchow initiated social medicine
in Germany.
What is health?
Health is state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and
not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.
What is Medicine?
Any substance or substances used in treating the disease or illness.
There are four sociological perspectives and they are given below;
-Functionalist Approach
-Conflict Approach
-Interactionist Approach
-Labeling Approach
Functionalist Approach:
Interactionist Approach:
Labeling Appraoch:
Except for the United States, industrial nations have national health
care systems and health care insurance. Their health care models help
their citizen to have relatively good health and affordable levels.
Problems of health in United States:
When we examine health and health care in the United States, there
is both good and bad news. The good news is considerable. Health has
improved steadily over the last century, thanks in large part to better
public sanitation and the discovery of antibiotics.
Unfortunately, the bad news is also considerable. Despite all the gains
just mentioned, the US lags behind most other wealthy democracies
in several health indicators, as we have seen, even in wealthiest
nation in the world.
More than 8 percent of all infants are born at low birth weight(under
5.5 pounds) putting them at risk of long-term health problems and
this figure has risen steadily since the late 1980s according to National
center for health statistics, 2011.
Health Disparities:
Social epidemiology refers to the study of how health and illness vary
by sociodemographic characteristics, with such variations called
health disparities.
Mass Communication:
Introduction:
Mass media is a medium and means of communication such as print,
radio, or television. Also defined as large-scale organizations which
use one or more of these technologies to communicate with large
numbers of people.
Positive Impacts:
Media provides news and information required by the people.
They inform the public and government policies and programs and
how these programs can be useful to them.
Negative Impacts:
The traditional culture of a country is adversely affected by mass
media.
This affects the primary objectives of media to inform and educate the
people.
Mass media promote the desire in people to buy and own products
that are advertised through the media but which may not be essential
for them.
Include writing and paper, the printing press, radio, television, and
the computer.
Types of Media:
Electronic Media:
99% people have radio at home. It attracts the people most. On TV,
we remain connected with news, talk shows, sports, showbiz,
weather reports etc.
Consumption:
On average, each American spends nearly 3600 hours using data a
year.