Opole, Poland

Sociology

Master's
Table of contents
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Sociology at UO

Language: EnglishStudies in English
Subject area: social
Kind of studies: full-time studies
University website: uni.opole.pl/en

Test: check whether Sociology is the right major for you!

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Answer all questions to see if Sociology (Master's) is the right fit for you!

1. Are you passionate about understanding social structures, inequalities, and group dynamics?

2. Do you want to develop strong skills in qualitative and quantitative research methods to study human behavior?

3. Are you interested in using sociological insights to influence public policy, community development, or social programs?

4. Are you willing to engage with sensitive social topics and navigate ethical issues in research and engagement?

5. Do you believe a two-year master’s degree will significantly deepen your ability to analyze and address social challenges?

6. Are you interested in intersectional perspectives, combining race, gender, class, and culture in analysis?

7. Do you want to develop skills in communicating complex social findings to diverse audiences clearly and persuasively?

8. Are you prepared to work collaboratively with policymakers, NGOs, educators, and other disciplines to address societal issues?

9. Are you interested in globalization, migration, urbanization, and their social consequences?

10. What motivates you most to pursue a master’s in Sociology?

Definitions and quotes

Sociology
Sociology is the scientific study of society, including patterns of social relationships, social interaction, and culture. It is a social science that uses various methods of empirical investigation and critical analysis to develop a body of knowledge about social order, acceptance, and change or social evolution. Many sociologists aim to conduct research that may be applied directly to social policy and welfare, while others focus primarily on refining the theoretical understanding of social processes. Subject matter ranges from the micro-sociology level of individual agency and interaction to the macro level of systems and the social structure.
Sociology
Whether sociology can ever become a full-fledged "science" (a description of a class of events predictable on the basis of deductions from a constant ra~onale) depends on whether the terms which sociologists employ to describe events can be analyzed into quantifiable observables.
Anatol Rapoport, "Outline of a probabilistic approach to animal sociology: I." The Bulletin of mathematical biophysics 11.3 (1949): p 183
Sociology
To have given clear and unified answers in familiar empirical terms to those theoretical questions which most occupied men's minds at the time, and to have deduced from them clear practical directives without creating obviously artificial links between the two, was the principle achievement of Marx's theory. The sociological treatment of historical and moral problems, which Comte and after him, Spencer and Taine, had discussed and mapped, became a precise and concrete study only when the attack of militant Marxism made its conclusions a burning issue, and so made the search for evidence more zealous and the attention to method more intense.
Isaiah Berlin Karl Marx: His Life and Environment. 3rd edition (1967). Time Inc Book Division, New York. pp. 13-14
Sociology
Within sociology there have been several system theories, differing from one another in the extent to which, for example, human agency, creativity, and entrepreneurship are assumed to play a role in system formation and reformation; conflict and struggle are taken into account; power and stratification are part and parcel of the theory; structural change and transformation – and more generally, historically developments – are taken into account and explained. What the various system theories have in common is a systematic concern with complex and varied interconnections and interdependencies of social life. Complexity has been a central concept for many working in the systems perspective. The tradition is characterized to a great extent by a burning ambition and hope to provide a unifying language and conceptual framework for all the social sciences.
Tom R. Burns (2006) "System Theories" in: George Ritzer ed. The Encyclopedia of Sociology, Blackwell Publishing.
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