The Three Social Sciences Psychology, Sociology, Anthropology
Psychology The study of people’s feelings, thoughts, and personality development Focuses on the individual Goal is to discover the underlying triggers or causes of human behaviour such as past experiences or genes. E.g. Why does Henry appear sad or depressed much of the time? Branches: clinical, social, industrial, forensic, child
Sociology Focuses on the development and structure of human society and how it works Looks at how people behave/act in groups Examines social structures created by people such as family, government, schools, justice system, prisons, army, etc. E.g. What kinds of groups or cliques do students form in high school? Branches: criminology, social work, urban
Anthropology Examines the development of the human species and human cultures throughout the world A human culture consists of the ways of living of a group of people including their traditions, inventions, beliefs, values E.g. How is the culture of Canadians different from the culture of the Japanese? How are humans similar to chimps? Branches: cultural, physical, medical, forensic
These three social sciences are not conflicting disciplines They overlap in what they study and the methods they use Therefore, they largely support one another E.g. Both psychologists and sociologists study criminal behaviour
The Montreal Massacre Watch the video Read “How Do Social Scientists Study the Human Species?” in groups of four (4) Select one section to focus on as a group (psychology, sociology, anthropology) and fill in the relevant section of the chart Discuss as a class
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What Would You Do? Now it’s time to start thinking like a social scientist! Watch an episode of “What Would You Do?” Keep notes on questions that a psychologist, sociologist, and anthropologist might ask.
What Would You Do?