13SOC

Year 13 Sociology (13SOC)

Course Description

Teacher in Charge: Mr M. Elling.

Level 3 Sociology uses a sociological approach to examine society today, providing a deeper understanding of humans. It is a qualifying course for University and other tertiary opportunities. It flows on particularly well to Sociology, Psychology and Philosophy. It focusses on social change caused by governments and organizations as well as the ideas which drive these changes. The course has a strong current issues focus with an emphasis on values systems in society. 

 This pathway provides students with knowledge and skills that are relevant for a wide range of occupations such as human resources, social research, social policy formation, law, social work, nursing, primary, secondary and tertiary teaching, medicine, police and social welfare, personnel management, resource management, journalism, town planning, architecture and more. The topics studied are: 

3.2          3.2 Conduct a Critical Social Inquiry:  Students will choose a modern-day policy-based issue in Aotearoa that is happening in our world right now, and, using four research questions, conduct an inquiry on this issue.   

3.3          How ideologies shape societies: A resource-based exam where students are required to respond to a context provided in the resource booklet that is based on how different ideologies have influenced an issue in society.

3.4          Completing a social action: Students work in small groups to influence a NZ-based policy where they aim to bring change.

3.5          Examining a social issue: NZ made significant changes to amend our legislation around marriage equality. Students examine the perspectives, issues, consequences and effectiveness of this marriage amendment and present their findings in a report.

The course addresses the Level 8 achievement objectives, processes and concepts of the Sociology curriculum. It offers 20 NCEA Level 3 Sociology credits which are University Approved. 

Pre-requisites

- Have passed Sociology in Year 12 (14+ credits). 

- Students who have not studied Sociology in Year 12 may take Year 13 Sociology if they achieved 14 or more credits in another Social Science (History or Geography) in Year 12. 

- TiC approval.

Contributions and Equipment/Stationery

None.

Career Pathways

Credit Information

You will be assessed in this course through all or a selection of the standards listed below.

Total Credits Available: 20
Internal Assessed Credits: 16
External Assessed Credits: 4
Assessment
Description
Level
Internal or
External
Credits
L1 Literacy Credits
UE Literacy Credits
Numeracy Credits
A.S. 91597 v2
NZQA Info

Social Studies 3.2 - Conduct a critical social inquiry


Level: 3
Internal or External: Internal
Credits: 6
Level 1 Literacy Credits: 0
University Entrance Literacy Credits: 6r *
Numeracy Credits: 0
A.S. 91598 v2
NZQA Info

Social Studies 3.3 - Demonstrate understanding of how ideologies shape society


Level: 3
Internal or External: External
Credits: 4
Level 1 Literacy Credits: 0
University Entrance Literacy Credits: 4r,4w *
Numeracy Credits: 0
A.S. 91599 v2
NZQA Info

Social Studies 3.4 - Examine personal involvement in a social action(s) that aims to influence policy change(s)


Level: 3
Internal or External: Internal
Credits: 6
Level 1 Literacy Credits: 0
University Entrance Literacy Credits: 6r *
Numeracy Credits: 0
A.S. 91600 v2
NZQA Info

Social Studies 3.5 - Examine a campaign of social action(s) to influence policy change(s)


Level: 3
Internal or External: Internal
Credits: 4
Level 1 Literacy Credits: 0
University Entrance Literacy Credits: 4r *
Numeracy Credits: 0
Credit Summary
Total Credits: 20
Total Level 1 Literacy Credits: 0
Total University Entrance Literacy Credits: 20
Total Numeracy Credits: 0

Approved subject for University Entrance

Number of credits that can be used for overall endorsement: 20

Only students engaged in learning and achievement derived from Te Marautanga o Aotearoa are eligible to be awarded these subjects as part of the requirement for 14 credits in each of three subjects.

Disclaimer

Owing to teachers responding to individual students' needs, courses and NCEA standards taught in a subject maybe different to those displayed.