Introduction to Sociology Semester Course
$149.97
Teach your Intro to Sociology semester course with confidence and impact with this curriculum that will transform your students into thoughtful self-reflectors and change-makers.
Whether you’re brand new to the course or looking for a more meaningful and streamlined course than what you currently have, this course will save you time and sanity.
Description
This semester-long course comes fully supported with unit pacing guides, standards alignment, detailed daily lesson plans, “I can…” checklists, assessments, and student answer keys.
Best of all, every student activity comes in both print PDF and paperless Google files, making it perfect for any setting.
Who Is This Course For?
- You can only cover the foundations of Sociology due to time constraints or state/district mandates
- You are just starting out with Sociology and need more focus on what to teach rather than picking and choosing from a larger collection
- You have another class that covers current social issue topics like Ethnic Studies, Human Geography, Civics, or Contemporary Issues
Included in this Intro to Sociology semester course bundle
- First Day Stations introduce students to your class and the very basics of sociology with these fun station activities
- Foundations of Sociology Unit lay a solid base for the history and guiding ideas of this fuzzy science with this 3-4 week unit
- Culture & Subcultures Unit invite students to view their world with an outsider’s lens in this 4-5 week unit
- Socialization and Social Development Unit guide students to explore the influences that have shaped them to be who they are in this 5-6 week unit
- Social Groups & Interactions Unit help students explore their own social circles and the dangers of unhealthy interaction in this 4-5 week unit
- Deviance & Social Control Unit explore the other side of sociology–when people don’t do what society expects of them–in this 4-5 week unit
- Sociology Final Research Project capstone your class with this student-choice project where students become “10-minute experts” on any sociology and present to the class
- Sociology Word Wall Posters put major sociological concepts within eyesight with these 12 modern posters
Each unit comes with
- Detailed teaching overview with pacing guide, teaching tips, answer keys, and list of standards taught
- Lecture kit with 60-100+ slides decks, guided notes, & quizzes
- Print PDF and editable Google files of all student materials
- Multiple activities to cover each major topic, allowing you to pick and choose what’s best for your students
Plus BONUS binder covers and spines for each unit.
This bundle includes over 670 PDF pages, plus Google files, and over 450 lecture slides.
What grades is this intended for?
This was designed for high school, but some included resources could still work for upper middle school, especially if are willing to customize things as necessary.
What supports are included? How can I modify this?
Graphic organizers and guided notes, visual icon cues, readings with accompanying audio read-aloud included via a QR code, how-to skill sheets for specific social studies skills, and lecture slides with clear, focused content per slide.
Google versions of student materials and lecture slides are editable to tailor to your students’ needs.
Can I use this in a homeschooling setting?
Sure! Most things can still be used in a solo or a small-group setting.
Is this editable? What file types does this resource come in?
The main resource files are secured, non-editable PDF files intended to be printed.
Included are links to editable Google files, to customize to your classroom needs and assign digitally if you choose.
What standards does this address?
Several! Standards vary, but this resource supports these from various states:
- Analyze major intellectual influences in primary sources that contributed to the Declaration of Independence, the US Constitution, and the Bill of Rights
- Describe the influence of sources like the Magna Carta, Mayflower Compact, English Bill of Rights, and Common Sense on the US
- Identify individuals whose ideas influenced American government, like Hobbes, Locke, Montesquieu, Rousseau, and Paine
- Identify grievances in the Declaration in terms of various enlightened principles
- Identify the American beliefs and principles reflected in the US Constitution and analyze how they shaped the nation
- Explain how the Constitution upholds various core principles like checks and balances, popular sovereignty, federalism, individual rights, and limited government
- Make connections and differentiate among various founding documents like the Articles of Confederation, Constitution, and Federalist Papers determine their individual significance
- Analyze the Federalist and Anti-Federalist arguments concerning ratification of the US Constitution and inclusion of a bill of rights
- Identify key individuals who contributed to the founding documents including Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, James Madison, George Washington, and George Mason
- Differentiate among government systems like autocracy, democracy, monarchy, oligarchy, and theocracy
- Analyze the advantages and disadvantages of different forms of government
- Analyze sources for central idea; identify text evidence to support claims
- Make connections among texts and with real-world events
- Applies critical thinking skills (summarizing, drawing inferences, concluding) to assessing a variety of sources, organizing information acquired
- Analyzes/evaluates information, evidence, and counterarguments from primary and secondary sources
What are the terms of use for this resource?
This resource, including all ancillary files, may be used as needed for regular, non-commercial single-classroom use between a teacher and their students.
This includes printing copies and sharing digital files with students through a secure platform, like Google Classroom or Canvas, email, or a classroom-only shared drive.
The using and sharing of any part of this resource in any manner outside the above-mentioned capacity is strictly prohibited. Prohibited uses include, but are not limited to,
- posting files on the open internet or in a Facebook group
- emailing files to or sharing print copies with others (without purchasing additional licenses)
- uploading or storing files in a shared cloud drive accessible by anyone other than students
- including any part, or any derivative work, within any commercial endeavor like curriculum development, professional training, or for-profit teaching like Outschool, or selling this resource as your own in either print or digital formats
Doing so violates the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), copyright law, and these terms.
By downloading this resource from Let’s Cultivate Greatness, the original user has been granted one license for a single teacher (or number of teachers matching the number of licenses purchased) and their students at any one time.
Let’s Cultivate Greatness retains the full copyright of this resource.