Family in the United States

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Transition and Problems
Advertisements

Before You Begin Look at the picture on page 39 and write as many words and ideas as you can in note form in the table below. When you finish tell each.
Chapter 3 Americans at Work.
The Age of Majority Listening I: Sample Listening.
CONTENT Warm - upPre-listeningWhile-listeningPost-listening.
Family Macionis, Sociology, Chapter Eighteen.
Introduction to the Sociology of the Family
The Eight Parts of Speech
WEEK 6 WRITING AN ESSAY -Thesis Statements-
Crime and Violence in the United States
Textbook Analysis UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DE MINAS GERAIS FACULDADE DE LETRAS COURSE: The Communicative Approach PROFESSOR: Deise Prina Dutra STUDENTS: Augusto.
Chapter 7 Multiculturalism.
Language, Gender and Culture
The Changing Family Michael Itagaki Sociology 102, Social Problems.
The Population. Pre-listening Warm-up Questions  What’s your idea of the makeup of the U.S. population?  If you were a photographer, how would you reflect.
9 Families and Children Laura MacIntyre.
Celebrity Adoption Nayoung kim LLT 895, section 2 December 2, 2009.
The Human Rights and our responsibilities. Checking the homework. Work in pairs. Read and ask your partner if he/she agrees or disagrees with it. Decide.
Useful tips © Gerlinde Darlington MEd.Mag.phil..  Introduction  Main part – consisting of a few paragraphs  Conclusion  Remember: poorly structured.
ORAL EXAMINATION INDIVIDUAL PRESENTATION What you should know about Part one? What is an individual presentation? What is an individual presentation?
LISTENING SKILLS April 9, Today Listening for lectures (continued). - Listening strategies: Transitions between ideas - Note taking: Using symbols.
Unit 1 - Family Do now! Describe ways that families have changed since the 1950s. Hint: structures, divorce, fertility, contraception, feminism…
Immigration: Past and Present
NSEC (unit 1) and teaching the four skills Dr Dodie Brooks.
LECTURE COMPREHENSION & NOTE-TAKING. 1 PRE-COURSEWORK EVALUATION.
LISTENING SKILLS March 28, Today Listening for lectures.
Chapter 3 Building Strong Families
Chapter 15 Families. Chapter Outline Defining the Family Comparing Kinship Systems Sociological Theory and Families Diversity Among Contemporary American.
The Enlightenment in Europe Chapter 6 Section 2. Main Ideas  A revolution in intellectual activity changed Europeans’ view of government and society.
Singlehood, Hanging out, hooking up, and Cohabitation Chapter 4.
Unit 18 Future trends. Objectives Focus Warm up 18.1 Making predictions 18.2 Talking about the future 18.3 Changing the way we work Sum-up Assignments.
STAGE 1: Understanding the prompt and brainstorming Step 1: Warm-up:
Prepositions and Prepositional Phrases
By: Mrs. Abdallah. The way we taught students in the past simply does not prepare them for the higher demands of college and careers today and in the.
Page58 Page 57 Warm Up: Ancient China Pre-Assessment (on notebook paper) WIO: Part 1: Do you think the gender roles in Mulan.
How many parts of speech can you list?
Romantic love- attraction and idealizing one another (found in most societies) – Role of love differs from one society to another – Western life seen as.
MARRIAGES, INTIMATE RELATIONSHIPS & SOCIETY Unit 3 – Chapter 6.
Objectives To build up an area of vocabulary associated with Christmas and Spring Festival To read a narrative text and understand the story. To develop.
Social policy & the family A policy is a proposed or adopted course or principle of action Schools have policies; for example whether or not there should.
Chapter 10 Postsecondary Education: Admission. Pre-listening Warm-up Questions –What is postsecondary education? –Look at the picture. What are they doing?
© 2011 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved. Family Stress Chapter 17.
Chapter 12 The Role of Government in the Economy.
IELTS Intensive Writing part two. IELTS Writing Two parts of ielts writing Part one writing about a Graph, chart, diagram Part two is an essay.
Problems of the Family. Critical Constructionism and Family Problems What are some social problems attributed to the “breakdown” of the family? ? Is the.
The Building Blocks of Good Writing
VOCABULARY BUILDING ONE. WORDS ARE A GROUP OF LETTERS WHICH FORM A MEANING.
Reading Textbooks and Taking Notes. Today’s Agenda  Learn the SQR4 Strategy.  Practice taking notes from the textbook together.
_7TA. The Family in History Chapter 2 Why does a concept of family even exist?
All information taken from: The Marriage and Family Experience: Intimate Relationships in a Changing Society By Bryan Strong and Theodore F. Cohen 2014.
EXPLORING MARRIAGES AND FAMILY, 2 ND EDITION Karen Seccombe © 2015, 2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 Marriage.
Singlehood and Cohabitation Chapter 3. Singlehood Individuals are staying single longer. – Yet 95% of Americans eventually marry.
GRAMMAR AND PUNCTUATION REVISE AND REVIEW WORD CLASSES.
Chapter 11 Distance Education. Pre-listening Warm-up Questions 1.What is distance learning? 2.Look at the second picture. Where do you think the lady.
1. Objective (READ) SWBAT identify the effects of colonization. 2. Question of the Day. (WRITE) 3. Warm-up (ANSWER) 1. What is one economic effect of colonization?
Chapter 14 Common Law and the Jury System. Pre-listening Warm-up Questions 1)Do you know anything about the U.S. jury system? 2)Say something about the.
Copyright © Allyn and Bacon 2009 Chapter Ten Families.
Unit 4 Today’s Trends. Unit 4 Topic: Modern trends and fashions Functions: Agreeing and disagreeing; giving advice Vocabulary: Family statistics—multiples.
Chapter 11 The Family George Ritzer Presented by Rolande D. Dathis.
温州市实验中学 陈玫月. Give opinions in different ways. I think students should be allowed to …. I don’t think students should …. I agree / disagree that … I think.
Chapter 9 and 10 Questions to Consider. Activity Today we are going to look at questions relating to love and marriage. As a group you will discuss them.
The Family. Activity  Report what type of family is portrayed on your favorite TV show.  Give the characteristics.  How realistic are the portrayals.
Chapter 15, Families Defining the Family Comparing Kinship Systems Sociological Theory and Families Diversity Among Contemporary American Families Marriage.
Unit 5 The Economic Transformation of the World From Europe to China.
Feminism Perspective.
Reading Strategies English Language English 220
LECTURE COMPREHENSION & NOTE-TAKING
SEXUAL BEHAVIORS (Day 3)
PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES
Parts of Speech.
Presentation transcript:

Family in the United States Chapter 4 Family in the United States

Pre-listening Warm-up Questions What do you know about families in the United States? There has been high rate of divorce in the U.S., what are some of the reasons? In what way are children affected when their parents are divorced? What should the children of a single parent’s do shake off the unhappy memory? Do you agree or disagree that a person’s happiness is determined by the close relationship between his or her parents? Why?

Pre-listening Vocabulary and Key Concepts Read through the sentences and figure out what words would fit in the blanks. Then check your answers by listening to a dictation of the full sentences. (See the sentences in the textbook on page 35---36 )

Pre-listening Predictions Using the pictures in your textbook and the vocabulary exercises as a starting point, write 3 questions that you think you can get answers in the lecture. (Answers vary)

Pre-listening Note-taking Preparation Key Words: Content Words A good notetaker listens for relevant information and then uses key words to take down only the essential information. A good way to pick key words is to concentrate on content words you hear: nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs. These words are usually stressed when spoken. Auxiliary verbs, pronouns, and prepositions are structure words and they receive less stress when spoken. Practice reducing information by taking down key words (see exercises on page 37---38)

Rhetorical Cues Introducing a topic / subtopic Which order will you probably hear them in today’s lecture? Well, let’s proceed in chronological order and start with the traditional familism. The third period, the new familism, is harder to see because we are living in this period now. The second period, the period of individualism, saw three important social and political movements. To make this point clearer, we’ll take a look at how the American family has changed in the last fifty years by looking at three different time periods. Because individualism is so often mentioned in our discussion of U.S. culture and people, I should make a little detour before we discuss it. Answer: d---a---c---e---b

Listening A. In the first listening, you get down the main subtopics of the lecture. The lecturer looks at changes in the family over the last fifty years and divides the changes into three different periods. For each period, the lecturer looks at cultural, economic, and demographic aspects of the family. ST1: traditional familism: mid-1940s to mid-1960s. ST2: period of individualism: mid-1960s to mid-1980s ST3: the new familism: mid-1980s to present B. In the second listening, write down necessary relevant details. Remember to use key words to save time.

Post-listening Answer the following questions. Are agricultural, economic, and demographic conditions the same now as they were 100 years ago in the U.S.? (no) What proof of family disintegration is given for both the past and the present? (declining birth rates, rising devoice rates, discontent of women with domestic role) What was the predominant configuration of the family during the first period of traditional families? (a married couple with children) In the lecturer’s mind, is the meaning of individualism closer to self-reliance or closer to selfishness? (the latter) What three social and political movements occurred during the second period of individualism? (sexual revolution, women’s liberation, and the movement against the Vietnam War)

Post-listening What two cultural changes occurred during this second period? (the idealization of career and the drive for self-expression and self-fulfillment) By what number did single-parent families and cohabiting couples increase during the second period? (single-parent families tripled; cohabiting couples quadrupled) In which of the three periods discussed do parents put themselves before their children? (the second) Which cultural elements from the first two periods do people want to keep today? (commitment to family, equality of men and women) In what three ways could the government promote, or help, the new familism? (quality day-care, parental leave, family allowances)

Oral Activities A. Rehearsal of the Lecture With the help of the above questions and your notes, retell the contents of the lecture to your classmate who might miss the lecture.

Oral Activities B. Group Discussion Discuss with your classmates the following questions and decide what information to include. Write the answers to each question in complete sentences in paragraph form in about 125 words. What do you know about the family configuration in China? Has it changed in the last 50 years? What effects have economic, demographic, and cultural changes had on families in China? Some western country criticizes the Chinese Government for the family planning policy, saying that it is violence to human rights. However, westerners claim that not wanting to have children is a kind of human right that they should enjoy. What’s your opinion? Nowadays, gays and lesbians are very common. They demand their relationship legal? What do you think about the matter?

Homework Review the main idea of the lecture and make it a complete article. Log on the website: www.hippy.com ; www.CNN.com for information. Listen to the world news program about the new Gulf War between US and Iran.