Page 196 - SYU Prospectus
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Shue Yan University Prospectus 2018-19

          major themes. Meanwhile, students will learn how to evaluate culture in its own terms and free
          themselves from bias and prejudice rooted in longstanding ethnocentrism.

          SOC 106    The Art of Reasoning
                                                                            1 Term; 3 Credits
              This  course  introduces  students  to  fundamental  principles  of  reasoning.  It  cultivates
          students’  intellectual  ability  to  develop  and  evaluate  arguments  in  ordinary  language.  To
          achieve this goal, this course includes a basic understanding of the skills of linguistic analysis,
          the nature and techniques of reasoning,  as well as the essential methods in scientific and
          ethical reasoning. Attention is also drawn to the core part of elementary symbolic logic. Upon
          completing  this  course,  students  will  strengthen  their  skills  of  critical  thinking  which  is
          necessary to excel in various academic fields and career paths.

          SOC 108    Introduction to Statistics
                                                                            1 Term; 3 Credits
              This course provides sociology students with training in the principles and application of
          statistics  to  the  social  sciences.  Topics  covered  include:  basic  concepts  of  statistics;  the
          measures  of  central  tendency  and  dispersion;  probability  and  sampling  theories;  bivariate
          measures  of  association  and  hypothesis  testing.  The  meanings  of  statistics  and  statistical
          conclusions are stressed.

          SOC 160    Food and Society
                                                                            1 Term; 3 Credits
              This  course  aims  to  explore  food  issues  and  foodways  in  various  societies  from  the
          perspectives of sociology and anthropology. The course will empower students to conceive of
          food as social and cultural construction and to explain food-related issues with reference to
          on-going social relations. Also, this course will showcase how to apply various theoretical and
          conceptual approaches, such as cultural interpretations, symbolism, identity, gender analysis,
          social  exchange,  religious  taboo  and  ritual,  and  globalization,  to  the  analysis  of  food  and
          eating.

          SOC 204    Cultures in the Contemporary World
                                                                            1 Term; 3 Credits
              This course investigates social life from a comparative perspective, enabling students to
          gain an understanding of the world around them. It illustrates cultural variations within Hong
          Kong,  within  Asia,  and  around  the  world  in  the  context  of  rapid  globalization.  The  course
          covers a variety of topics, such as ways of living, forms of exchange, social inequalities, social
          construction of gender, politics of gender, and globalization of culture. How did the process of
          globalization  begin?  Is  cultural  variation  about  to  be  annihilated  in  the  face  of  cultural
          homogenization  and  “McDonaldization”?  Or  can  we  expect  the  contrary  that  local  cultural
          differences will intensify?


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