ATAR Notes: Forum

HSC Stuff => HSC Humanities Stuff => HSC Subjects + Help => HSC Society and Culture => Topic started by: beatroot on September 28, 2017, 02:16:12 pm

Title: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on September 28, 2017, 02:16:12 pm
Before you can ask a question, you'll have to make an ATAR Notes account here. Once you've done that, a little 'reply' button will come up when you're viewing threads, and you'll be able to post whatever you want! :)

Welcome to the HSC Society & Culture Question thread, where you can ask questions regarding your upcoming HSC SAC exam, research methodologies, social theories, your PIP or what the subject entails (if you're about to enter Year 12 next term).

Please keep in mind that I have only done these topics: Social Continuity and Change (China), Conformity and Non-Conformity (Christiania) and Belief Systems and Ideologies (Buddhism).

Forum member 'paigek3' has done Social Continuity and Change, Social Inclusion and Exclusion (African Americans) and also Belief Systems and Ideologies (Islam). If anyone happens to do 'Popular Culture' and wants to contribute to the thread, that would be fab!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: paigek3 on September 28, 2017, 02:22:16 pm
Before you can ask a question, you'll have to make an ATAR Notes account here. Once you've done that, a little 'reply' button will come up when you're viewing threads, and you'll be able to post whatever you want! :)

Welcome to the HSC Society & Culture Question thread, where you can ask questions regarding your upcoming HSC SAC exam, research methodologies, social theories, your PIP or what the subject entails (if you're about to enter Year 12 next term).

Please keep in mind that I have only done these topics: Social Continuity and Change (core topic), Conformity and Non-Conformity and Belief Systems and Ideologies. If you ask a question about Pop Culture or Social Inclusion and Exclusion, I will try my best to answer your question as much as possible  8)  8)  8)

Hey there!

I do the HSC compacted so I sat my Society and Culture exam last year and got an 86! My PIP is what I believed brought it down from a 90 so I would say the exam is my strong point  ;D

I did social inclusion and exclusion (African Americans) so I am more than happy to answer questions if any arise! :)
Also did belief systems and ideologies (Islam) so can assist there too if I am around ;D
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Korrasami on September 28, 2017, 02:29:41 pm
Hey guys, I'm doing Social Inclusion and Exclusion and Popular Culture (specifically rock n roll music).
However here's something that I'm struggling with in regards to PC. When it talks about a question regarding the role the media plays in the demand for popular culture, most people tend to talk about television/the radio and whatnot. However, my teacher said to address the question in a different way and silly me forgot exactly what he said. I know you guys don't do popular culture, but how would you address a question like that?
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on September 28, 2017, 06:46:45 pm
Hey guys, I'm doing Social Inclusion and Exclusion and Popular Culture (specifically rock n roll music).
However here's something that I'm struggling with in regards to PC. When it talks about a question regarding the role the media plays in the demand for popular culture, most people tend to talk about television/the radio and whatnot. However, my teacher said to address the question in a different way and silly me forgot exactly what he said. I know you guys don't do popular culture, but how would you address a question like that?

You can probably relate the question to these concepts~
Persons: The media and people work together in order to form the basis of pop culture. Without the people, the media has no audience to accomodate for.
Society: Pop culture is very prominent in our society. We see it everywhere, hence of it being 'popular'. It's evident in all MMM levels because of the media. Popular culture brings in groups of people together and creates a collective identity. Therefore society's identity is influenced by the pop culture that is prevalent in every aspect of our society
Time: the media and pop culture have worked consistently throughout time
Technologies: straight forward (though you did mention your teacher didn't want you to address the question in this direction. but i think it's worth mentioning)

Due to the prevalence of pop culture in society (driven by the media), the media tries to promote pop culture to accomodate for the huge demand (because it is the norm in society). Of course, technology is a definite factor to how pop culture is delivered to individuals in society, as it is accessible to everyone. But pop culture also become apart of the overall consumer culture of our society, as some parts of society depend on pop culture for their identity.

^^ That's just my personal take on the question. I don't see how you can't mention television/radio/etc. in your response as the media IS what makes up pop culture imo. Hope this helps in some way ...
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: jamonwindeyer on September 28, 2017, 10:22:37 pm
So keen - Stickied the thread! ;D
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Korrasami on September 29, 2017, 01:03:04 pm
You can probably relate the question to these concepts~
Persons: The media and people work together in order to form the basis of pop culture. Without the people, the media has no audience to accomodate for.
Society: Pop culture is very prominent in our society. We see it everywhere, hence of it being 'popular'. It's evident in all MMM levels because of the media. Popular culture brings in groups of people together and creates a collective identity. Therefore society's identity is influenced by the pop culture that is prevalent in every aspect of our society
Time: the media and pop culture have worked consistently throughout time
Technologies: straight forward (though you did mention your teacher didn't want you to address the question in this direction. but i think it's worth mentioning)

Due to the prevalence of pop culture in society (driven by the media), the media tries to promote pop culture to accomodate for the huge demand (because it is the norm in society). Of course, technology is a definite factor to how pop culture is delivered to individuals in society, as it is accessible to everyone. But pop culture also become apart of the overall consumer culture of our society, as some parts of society depend on pop culture for their identity.

^^ That's just my personal take on the question. I don't see how you can't mention television/radio/etc. in your response as the media IS what makes up pop culture imo. Hope this helps in some way ...

Thank you, it makes more sense looking at in that way!
I think what my teacher meant by television/radio is that people tend to make it the bulk of their response, when it should be relating to course concepts and how people use the media for demand of pop culture. That's just his way of thinking though
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: av-angie-er on October 10, 2017, 09:30:43 pm
Since a some people are speculating that a 'near future' might be used in the exam, does anyone have any tips for approaching these types of questions? In terms of structure and evidence? Thanks :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on October 11, 2017, 05:41:26 pm
Since a some people are speculating that a 'near future' might be used in the exam, does anyone have any tips for approaching these types of questions? In terms of structure and evidence? Thanks :)

(Seeing that I have never encountered a 'near future' question before, I will try my best to answer your question)

I think the best approach (in terms of structure) is doing it by short, medium and long term. So have your usual intro, then have a paragraph for all likely changes and another one for probable continuities, then a conclusion.

So kind of like this:

Likely changes: short term, medium term and long term
Probably continuities: short term, medium term and long term.

As for evidence, (depending on what topic you do) include a social theory and make a deduction for what will happen in the future. For example, for China you could use the conflict theory to predict that the OCP/TCP policy clashes with the filial piety belief (micro world). This creates the 4-2-1/4-2-2 ratio which places immense pressure on the only/two children to provide for their grandparents and parents as there isn't a pension scheme in place and stigma surrounding retirement homes. In the meso world, since there is less emphasis on family, more women will be in the workforce and are likely to marry at an older age. Though this results in antisocial behaviour found in Chinese men. Although for the macro world, the OCP/TCP policies helps China's economy because they don't have accomodate for a huge population.

Hope this helps :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: av-angie-er on October 11, 2017, 06:20:55 pm
(Seeing that I have never encountered a 'near future' question before, I will try my best to answer your question)

I think the best approach (in terms of structure) is doing it by short, medium and long term. So have your usual intro, then have a paragraph for all likely changes and another one for probable continuities, then a conclusion.

So kind of like this:

Likely changes: short term, medium term and long term
Probably continuities: short term, medium term and long term.

As for evidence, (depending on what topic you do) include a social theory and make a deduction for what will happen in the future. For example, for China you could use the conflict theory to predict that the OCP/TCP policy clashes with the filial piety belief (micro world). This creates the 4-2-1/4-2-2 ratio which places immense pressure on the only/two children to provide for their grandparents and parents as there isn't a pension scheme in place and stigma surrounding retirement homes. In the meso world, since there is less emphasis on family, more women will be in the workforce and are likely to marry at an older age. Though this results in antisocial behaviour found in Chinese men. Although for the macro world, the OCP/TCP policies helps China's economy because they don't have accomodate for a huge population.

Hope this helps :)
Ohh okay, that makes total sense. Thanks so much! :) Would you also use a social theory for 'near future' questions in the other case studies like Belief Systems and Popular Culture? I'm thinking it might be appropriate to use trends as evidence for how things might change, like assessing how the number of Hindus in the Western world is increasing to suggest that Hinduism will continue to spread globally in the future. What are your thoughts?
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on October 11, 2017, 10:57:26 pm
Ohh okay, that makes total sense. Thanks so much! :) Would you also use a social theory for 'near future' questions in the other case studies like Belief Systems and Popular Culture? I'm thinking it might be appropriate to use trends as evidence for how things might change, like assessing how the number of Hindus in the Western world is increasing to suggest that Hinduism will continue to spread globally in the future. What are your thoughts?

Yes yes definitely have a social theory for your other topics. It definitely adds that extra layer of ~pizzazz~ and shows the markers that you can talk about your topic beyond the concepts and bringing in theories to back up your statements and make your own deductions :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: mmir on October 28, 2017, 11:19:43 am
Is anyone doing Indigenous Spirituality as their case study for Belief Systems and Ideologies?
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: sageziman on October 28, 2017, 01:08:50 pm
where can i find past papers besides for nesa
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: lisahunt on November 01, 2017, 10:28:51 am
hi, I was just wondering if someone could explain 'dissent' for me please? I'm doing belief systems, focus study being democracy, and I can't quite wrap my head around it.

Thank you.  :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: paigek3 on November 01, 2017, 10:47:12 am
hi, I was just wondering if someone could explain 'dissent' for me please? I'm doing belief systems, focus study being democracy, and I can't quite wrap my head around it.

Thank you.  :)

Hey! Dissent refers to having opposing opinions to those common ideas. I didn’t do democracy, but it would be any beliefs someone has that goes against the foundations or key values of democracy
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: annajpeterson on November 01, 2017, 02:24:33 pm
for the futures part of the belief systems and ideologies syllabus what would be the best things to talk about in regards to likely changes and probable continuities? (for Islam)  thank you!!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: fitemebigbois on November 02, 2017, 07:16:54 pm
What were the answers to mc HAHAHA
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on November 02, 2017, 07:29:55 pm
What were the answers to mc HAHAHA

We currently don't have a copy to this year's exam, so we can't give out the answers for it :(
Although, I have to admit the questions were pretty brutal...
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: fitemebigbois on November 02, 2017, 09:17:35 pm
Ahhh I see!! And YEAH!! That was such a curveball test, definitely not expected those 5 markers in the depth study  :'(
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Raji123 on November 03, 2017, 10:33:11 am
Can someone pls post answers for MC society and culture exam???
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: rasha25 on November 21, 2017, 10:07:46 pm
Hi, I just started year 12 and I'm doing Society and Culture. My proposal is due this week, can someone please check my proposal, all feed is welcome  :D I have attached it bellow. Have a lovely evening.



Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on November 21, 2017, 10:40:33 pm
Hi, I just started year 12 and I'm doing Society and Culture. My proposal is due this week, can someone please check my proposal, all feed is welcome  :D I have attached it bellow. Have a lovely evening.


I'm just going to make some points as I read through your PIP proposal:

- Title could probably be shortened down to 'My Australia is our Australia', but overall I like the tone and its introduction to your PIP's idea
- Like how you amalgamated your own personal experiences and Garvey's research in your mini intro
- I can see that your PIP is heavily influenced by your background, but keep in mind to keep an unbiased opinion on the matter to demonstrate full social and cultural literacy (This is a matter of my first impression from reading the 'Outline your general...' paragraph. My opinion may change the more I read your proposal)
- I feel like the question is a bit/too specific, unless that is what you are going for. How will you categorise each chapter? What will each chapter talk about? (Again this is just my first impression. Opinion may change as soon as I read more). Your question has to be flexible enough to have a 5000 research paper, but not too broad that you are just viewing society from its first layer.
- What's your hypothesis? This is really crucial as you will have an idea what direction you want your PIP to head in.
- Other concepts you may want to mention: society, power, authority (?), identity
- I like what you have planned for your cross cultural comparison! :)
- I see that you have mentioned what you will be talking about in each chapter, so disregard my previous comment.
- Other primary research methodologies you can possibly use: content analysis (analyse the media), personal reflection (already evident, but use your own personal opinions as a starter rather than using it to prove your case. if you just use personal reflection on its own, without any secondary research, it'll just become biased and you will lose marks), case study (again the media would be good for this!)
- Do you have a log book where you've been logging your progress?
- Will you be using a social theory somewhere in your PIP?

If you need anymore help, you can check out this guide for more tips for your PIP or come back to this question thread.
Good luck!

**(Please do keep in mind that the comments I just made are just my own personal opinions/suggestions. So you don't have to follow my comments whatsoever, as SAC is a very abstract subject.)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: rasha25 on November 22, 2017, 04:50:06 am
Thank you so much that was very helpful and with my question my teacher was concerned about it before because it was too broad and told me to make it more clear thats kind of why its very specific.
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: huss1235 on November 23, 2017, 03:22:26 pm
i am willing to contribute towards popular culture
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: lifeismagica1 on December 31, 2017, 06:00:53 pm
Hey there!
In regards to my PIP that I yet to do, I have been concerned and unsure of one aspect of it. The topic I have chosen to research has many secondary resources about it, being statistics or articles, although they are all based in America or Britain, not much at all in Australia. So I was just wondering, does my PIP research have to be based in Australia, or just in general.
Thank you  :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on December 31, 2017, 07:01:27 pm
Hey there!
In regards to my PIP that I yet to do, I have been concerned and unsure of one aspect of it. The topic I have chosen to research has many secondary resources about it, being statistics or articles, although they are all based in America or Britain, not much at all in Australia. So I was just wondering, does my PIP research have to be based in Australia, or just in general.
Thank you  :)

Hey! Welcome to the forums :)

On the NESA website, it doesn’t explicity say that your research has to come from Australian sources. Your PIP topic is a matter of preference and shouldn’t be based on how much secondary research you’ve got. Personally I think it’s better if there’s some Australian sources somewhere in your PIP as this can help you with your cross cultural comparison. If your secondary research is mainly American/British and your primary research is mainly Australian (unless you’re able to contact someone overseas regarding your topic), this might confuse the markers as your secondary research is meant to back up your primary research. Just try have a mix of sources  in your PIP to ensure maximum marks and less confusion with the markers.

Hope this helps! :) (if you don’t mind me asking, what topic are you doing? There might be Australian secondary sources for it.)

Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: lifeismagica1 on December 31, 2017, 07:16:43 pm
Sorry, I'm new to this site so i don't know how to reply to your specific message  :-[
I really appreciate your reply, and I think I'm going stick with any Australian secondary sources I can find to avoid confusing the markers, but also myself. My topic is: "Impacts of media coverage on Islam before and after the events of 9/11", with my cross- cultural component being time.
Thank you once again for your help
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on December 31, 2017, 07:36:17 pm
Sorry, I'm new to this site so i don't know how to reply to your specific message  :-[
I really appreciate your reply, and I think I'm going stick with any Australian secondary sources I can find to avoid confusing the markers, but also myself. My topic is: "Impacts of media coverage on Islam before and after the events of 9/11", with my cross- cultural component being time.
Thank you once again for your help

No need to apologise! We were all once new to this site ;). If you want to reply directly to me, all you have to do is click on ‘quote’ on the top right corner and the /said/ quote should appear in your reply box :)

Good luck with your PIP journey !! (I definitely think there’s alot of Australian sources for your topic)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Mada438 on January 01, 2018, 12:15:00 pm
Sorry, I'm new to this site so i don't know how to reply to your specific message  :-[
I really appreciate your reply, and I think I'm going stick with any Australian secondary sources I can find to avoid confusing the markers, but also myself. My topic is: "Impacts of media coverage on Islam before and after the events of 9/11", with my cross- cultural component being time.
Thank you once again for your help
Beatroot seems to have answered your question pretty well, so i have nothing much to add
But dropped by here to wish you luck with your PIP as well!  :)
I'm going to be completing mine right alongside you this year!!
Also be sure to check out this guide that beatroot and i have written regarding research methodologies in your PIP!
If you have anymore questions, be sure to drop them on this thread for us to answer!
Good luck!!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: lifeismagica1 on January 01, 2018, 08:24:19 pm
Beatroot seems to have answered your question pretty well, so i have nothing much to add
But dropped by here to wish you luck with your PIP as well!  :)
I'm going to be completing mine right alongside you this year!!
Also be sure to check out this guide that beatroot and i have written regarding research methodologies in your PIP!
If you have anymore questions, be sure to drop them on this thread for us to answer!
Good luck!!

yess, I'll be sure to check out the resources. Thank you so much. Good luck for your PIP  xx
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: OverUnderachiever on January 13, 2018, 07:10:04 pm
For my pip, can i do my topic on asian countries in general (i will pinpoint specific asian countries in my pip) or do i have to refer to one asian country? like when i want to talk about the perspectives of asians in australia. can i do that or one specific country?
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Mada438 on January 13, 2018, 08:13:17 pm
For my pip, can i do my topic on asian countries in general (i will pinpoint specific asian countries in my pip) or do i have to refer to one asian country? like when i want to talk about the perspectives of asians in australia. can i do that or one specific country?
That topic sounds rather broad, it would be better to talk about a specific country as you have a better idea of what you're focusing on.
Also, just saying "im doing my pip on asian countries in general" really isn't much to go on. You should do some more research to refine your topic. For example, something slightly more refined might be "various stereotypes of asians in australia" but that topic in itself is not very well defined.

If you have any more questions, please drop them here, im more than happy to provide answers!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on January 14, 2018, 03:02:26 am
For my pip, can i do my topic on asian countries in general (i will pinpoint specific asian countries in my pip) or do i have to refer to one asian country? like when i want to talk about the perspectives of asians in australia. can i do that or one specific country?

It all depends: which Asian countries do you wish to do your PIP on specifically and which perspectives will you talk about? Asia is such a BROAD continent filled with different cultures, it will be so hard writing about all of the different countries in general.

You can possibly do one specific country for each chapter, totaling in 3-4 specific Asian countries. Since you will be talking about perspectives of Asians in Australia, it’s probably best to talk about Chinese and Vietnamese people. I did a very similar topic to you during my HSC (casual racism towards Asians in Australia) and talked mostly about Chinese and Vietnamese people (in terms of the Australian Gold Rush and the Vietnam War respectively). It’s probably a good option to include Muslim people from Asian countries as well. People seem to forget that Central Asia actually exists! Just a suggestion though ;). This would be great for the cross cultural comparison ;).

Good luck!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: OverUnderachiever on January 20, 2018, 12:32:53 pm
thanks for the advice. so can i pinpoint east asia? i want to talk about the implementation of tiger parenting from migrants from east asian countries (vietnam, china, japan and korea?) as their principles and values are similar as well as the effect of acculturation on tiger parenting in australia. so can my topic just be "Acculturation of eastern asian migrant parenting in australia"? to be honest, im not really sure if im heading in the right direction.
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on January 20, 2018, 01:34:56 pm
thanks for the advice. so can i pinpoint east asia? i want to talk about the implementation of tiger parenting from migrants from east asian countries (vietnam, china, japan and korea?) as their principles and values are similar as well as the effect of acculturation on tiger parenting in australia. so can my topic just be "Acculturation of eastern asian migrant parenting in australia"? to be honest, im not really sure if im heading in the right direction.

Yep you can definitely do East Asian countries. You can also do that topic if you want! There’s a similar PIP at the State Library of NSW if you want to check it out. My questions for you are, what is your aim, hypothesis and your topics for each chapter. That’s the foolproof method to know if you’re going in the right direction :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Mada438 on January 20, 2018, 10:58:35 pm
thanks for the advice. so can i pinpoint east asia? i want to talk about the implementation of tiger parenting from migrants from east asian countries (vietnam, china, japan and korea?) as their principles and values are similar as well as the effect of acculturation on tiger parenting in australia. so can my topic just be "Acculturation of eastern asian migrant parenting in australia"? to be honest, im not really sure if im heading in the right direction.
Thats definitely a nice sounding topic, i wish you luck with that!
Yep you can definitely do East Asian countries. You can also do that topic if you want! There’s a similar PIP at the State Library of NSW if you want to check it out. My questions for you are, what is your aim, hypothesis and your topics for each chapter. That’s the foolproof method to know if you’re going in the right direction :)
I've seen the pip that beatroot has mentioned. It would be very good to check out to have a look at someone else's ideas as a springboard for your own.

I really do recconmend working out the aim, hypothesis and chapter topics before anything else as beatroot said (she's pretty good with her advice isnt she? 😂 ;) )
After you've got an idea, post them and then we can give you some feedback regarding them!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on January 26, 2018, 01:54:01 pm
Hey!
So I'm currently refining my questions for my PIP questionnaire and my teacher suggested me to ask other people to check my questions to see whether other people can understand it. Is it possible for you guys to see if my questions make sense?

Spoiler
Note on some terminology:
Racial identity: Belonging in a specific racial group, usually based on physical or genetic traits.
Interracial marriage: A marriage between two people of different socially-defined races.

What is your sex? Male/ Female
Which generation do you fall under? Baby Boomers/ Gen X/ Gen Y/ Gen Z
Do you find it difficult to establish a set racial identity? Yes/ No
Australia is becoming increasingly multicultural. In your opinion, do you find your racial identity increasingly complex? Justify your opinion.
Do you find that there is a change in attitudes towards interracial marriages? Yes/ No
How common is it for you to see an interracial couple in current society? 1- rare/ 5- very common
In your opinion, why are interracial marriages becoming more prominent?
In regards to the increasing popularity of interracial marriage, how helpful are interracial marriages in helping alleviate racial issues? 1- not helpful/ 5-
very helpful
Pertaining to the current trend of the increasing popularity of interracial marriages, do you think this popularity will continue in the future?
Do you see yourself being involved in an interracial relationship? Why or why not?

Thanks in advance!

Hey owidjaja!

I just looked over your questionnaire's questions. My feedback can be found in 'The PIP Thread' :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: angewina_naguen on March 24, 2018, 10:02:17 am
Hey, guys,

Probably a minor detail but I just wanted to gather some thoughts about this. I was looking at a bunch of resources for Buddhism and all of them have different times of when Buddhism began  :'( :'( Some said 5th century and the others said 6th century. I know it's probably safe to just say it started a verryyyyy long time ago but wanted to see if any ex students know which one they went with?

Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on March 24, 2018, 11:28:02 am
Hey, guys,

Probably a minor detail but I just wanted to gather some thoughts about this. I was looking at a bunch of resources for Buddhism and all of them have different times of when Buddhism began  :'( :'( Some said 5th century and the others said 6th century. I know it's probably safe to just say it started a verryyyyy long time ago but wanted to see if any ex students know which one they went with?



Hey there Angelina!

In my notes for ‘Belief Systems and Ideologies’, I put down that Buddhism started 2,500 years ago which is around ~480 BC. So that would be 5th century BC. I got my notes for Buddhism from the SAC Preliminary and HSC textbook so I believe that its a reliable source as it is the main textbook for SAC :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: angewina_naguen on March 24, 2018, 12:10:59 pm
Hey there Angelina!

In my notes for ‘Belief Systems and Ideologies’, I put down that Buddhism started 2,500 years ago which is around ~480 BC. So that would be 5th century BC. I got my notes for Buddhism from the SAC Preliminary and HSC textbook so I believe that its a reliable source as it is the main textbook for SAC :)

Hey, Bea!

That's what I thought as well  :) Alright, I'll stick to the 5th century then since my information corroborates with yours. Thank you  ;D

Angelina
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: angewina_naguen on April 04, 2018, 10:56:32 am
No question here!

Just wanted to say good luck for anyone who has exams on or are finishing up this week  :) I have Society and Modern on this Friday  :'( Both of them have so much content for me to go over but at least after it's over, it'll finish these last two weeks off with a bang  ;D ;D Have a good one!

Angelina
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Ophelia_ on April 12, 2018, 12:22:20 pm
Hey guys!
I was just wondering if anyone did the focus study on Social Media for Popular Culture? If you did, do you have any notes that I can refer to when making my own? Thank you  ;D
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Mada438 on April 12, 2018, 01:48:08 pm
Hey guys!
I was just wondering if anyone did the focus study on Social Media for Popular Culture? If you did, do you have any notes that I can refer to when making my own? Thank you  ;D
Hey!
I don't have any notes on that sorry  :(
But i'm sure a few quick google searches will render some results. I did a quick one myself and found This resource which may be of some use to you!
Also do different sorts of search terms in google to try and find some notes, i'm sure they'll be some out there
Good luck!  :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Tristan1 on May 29, 2018, 04:40:44 pm
Hey! I hope everyone’s having a good day :) my question is in regards to my assessment question I received for conformity and non-conformity: ‘assess the impact of deindividuated people on society’.
How would you answer this question? It’s namely the society part that I’m unsure how to weave into my response.
Thanks :))
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Mada438 on May 29, 2018, 06:09:14 pm
Hey! I hope everyone’s having a good day :) my question is in regards to my assessment question I received for conformity and non-conformity: ‘assess the impact of deindividuated people on society’.
How would you answer this question? It’s namely the society part that I’m unsure how to weave into my response.
Thanks :))
Hey!
So I'm not doing conformity and non-conformity as a depth study (although i wish i was :( )but I'm gonna attempt to help you with this.
Okay, first of all, to understand the question better, first break it down a bit.
1: "Assess" What does it want you to do when it says to assess? "Weigh up to what extent something is true. Persuade the reader of your argument by citing relevant research but also remember to point out any flaws and counter-arguments as well. Conclude by stating clearly how far you are in agreement with the original proposition."Kinda similar to 'to what extent'
2: What is Deindividuation and what are deindividuated people? Deindividuation is the loss of identity or self-awareness, usually in a group setting. People who experience this, are sort of caught up in a mob mentality. If you have ever read 1984, that's a good example of Deindividuation, especially in the two minutes hate. Other examples include: The Zimbardo Experiments
and riots. Ever notice how when a crowd of people are asked to do something, they are very awkward at first, but as more and more people do that thing, the more people join in.
3: "In society" So another big example of Deindividuation is the internet. There is a good quote to explain this: "give a man a mask and he will show his true self" within a group, an individual feels anonymous and less accountable for their actions. It's not their fault, its the group's fault. The internet is a perfect example of this, as people hide themselves while doing stuff. It's much easier for you to post something negative on someone's post then say that directly to their face. Just a quick google search of deindividuation applied to the internet can bring up a lot of discussion around that.

To continue on the "on society" part, it would be good to research more examples of societal Deindividuation and really look at the impact that these situations have on the broader society.

Good luck!
Hope this helps!  ;D
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on May 29, 2018, 08:21:10 pm
Hey! I hope everyone’s having a good day :) my question is in regards to my assessment question I received for conformity and non-conformity: ‘assess the impact of deindividuated people on society’.
How would you answer this question? It’s namely the society part that I’m unsure how to weave into my response.
Thanks :))


Hey there! I did conformity and non-conformity as one of my depth studies during my HSC :)
Just adding onto Mada348's awesome response above, there are tons of effects that deindividuation has on individuals (in all micro, meso and macro worlds). Some of these include:

- Aggression and crime (caused by environmental factors such as noise and physicality)
- Heightened emotions
- Uninhibited impulsive and irrational behaviours
- Lack of responsibility for actions
- Absense of self awareness
- Cyberbullying and online harrassment
- and more!

But essentially since individuals are placed within a crowd context, they lose their sense of self and blend in perfectly well with other people. They don't care about the consequences because they know it will be blamed on the crowd rather than the individual (if that makes sense?).

Deindividuation can lead to the dehumnaisation of victims (ie; extreme cases of frat initiations or cyberbullying)

The cost of deindividuation/deviance can include:
- could hurt people/specific people in society
- can be against the law
- doesn't benefit anyone at all
- go against moral values and religious beliefs
- may come at a cost (ie; jail time)
- can be expensive (ie; removing graffiti)
- stimulates more deviance
- erodes trust
- if deindividuation is not corrected/punished, can result in the non conformity of others.

Now leading back to the question 'assess the impact of deindividuated people on society', you can refer to all micro, meso and macro worlds or talk about specific groups within those worlds ie; friendship groups (micro), the workplace (meso) or pretty much anything related to the law/government (macro). What is the impact of deindividuated people within a friendship group? Their impact within the workplace? Their impact in regards to the government/law? Or whatever subculture group/s you pick, just ask yourself 'what impact do they have within their respective micro/meso/macro world?' Make sure to include examples and concepts within your response :)

Hope this helps :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: owidjaja on June 11, 2018, 07:00:37 pm
Hey guys,
Just a question on 5-mark questions, how much do you usually write for these types of questions? When I check the HSC marking and feedback, it's only one paragraph, but I've been doing two paragraphs for my 5-mark responses so I'm not sure if I'm spending way too much time in the exams on 5-mark questions.
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on June 11, 2018, 07:49:59 pm
Hey guys,
Just a question on 5-mark questions, how much do you usually write for these types of questions? When I check the HSC marking and feedback, it's only one paragraph, but I've been doing two paragraphs for my 5-mark responses so I'm not sure if I'm spending way too much time in the exams on 5-mark questions.

Hey Olivia!

I think it all depends what section the five marker is in. If you were answering a 4/5/6 marker in Section 1 (Core topic- Social and Cultural Continuity and Change), you would typically spend about 5-10 minutes on them, just filling out the provided space. Nothing more, nothing less. If you just happen to go over the provided space, don't do it too much to the point where you're cutting time into Section 2. Though if you're answering the 5 marker in Section 2, remember this rule; whatever how much the question is worth, double it and that's should be the time you should spend when answering the question. So 5 marker = 10 minutes and 15 marker = 30 minutes, thus adding up to the allocated 40 minutes per section. 5 markers in section 2 should just be one big MASSIVE paragraph anyways (same goes with 4/5/6 markers in Section 1).

Hope this helps :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: owidjaja on June 11, 2018, 08:05:11 pm
Hey Olivia!

I think it all depends what section the five marker is in. If you were answering a 4/5/6 marker in Section 1 (Core topic- Social and Cultural Continuity and Change), you would typically spend about 5-10 minutes on them, just filling out the provided space. Nothing more, nothing less. If you just happen to go over the provided space, don't do it too much to the point where you're cutting time into Section 2. Though if you're answering the 5 marker in Section 2, remember this rule; whatever how much the question is worth, double it and that's should be the time you should spend when answering the question. So 5 marker = 10 minutes and 15 marker = 30 minutes, thus adding up to the allocated 40 minutes per section. 5 markers in section 2 should just be one big MASSIVE paragraph anyways (same goes with 4/5/6 markers in Section 1).

Hope this helps :)
When you say 'one big massive paragraph' in Section 2- how much exactly?

I have two sighted questions on Social Inclusion/Exclusion (completed under exam conditions) and at the moment I have ~250 words for a 5-mark question but I'm not sure if I should do another paragraph (HSC marking feedback only showed one paragraph and my teacher didn't specify so I'm in a dilemma whether to write more or not).
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on June 11, 2018, 08:28:37 pm
When you say 'one big massive paragraph' in Section 2- how much exactly?

I have two sighted questions on Social Inclusion/Exclusion (completed under exam conditions) and at the moment I have ~250 words for a 5-mark question but I'm not sure if I should do another paragraph (HSC marking feedback only showed one paragraph and my teacher didn't specify so I'm in a dilemma whether to write more or not).

Depending on how big your handwriting is, the 'one big massive paragraph' I was talking about should be around 3/4 to 1.25 pages. But typically the average is around 1 page. My suggestion is to really integrate your ideas into one another so that they flow smoothly to avoid having another paragraph :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: owidjaja on June 11, 2018, 09:40:48 pm
Hey guys,
My 15-mark question is on community/government organisations and its role in contributing social inclusion of a group (women) in a country (Australia). At the moment, my plan is to do one paragraph on government initiatives and the second paragraph on community initiatives, but I'm struggling to come up with an idea for my third paragraph. I was thinking of doing UN Women but it's classified as an intergovernmental organisation- does this still count as a government initiative?
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Mada438 on June 12, 2018, 03:38:03 pm
Hey guys,
My 15-mark question is on community/government organisations and its role in contributing social inclusion of a group (women) in a country (Australia). At the moment, my plan is to do one paragraph on government initiatives and the second paragraph on community initiatives, but I'm struggling to come up with an idea for my third paragraph. I was thinking of doing UN Women but it's classified as an intergovernmental organisation- does this still count as a government initiative?
I'd say the UN is more of a "global initiative" then a single government one.
Whats the specific wording of the question? Based on what you've said, i'm not sure it requires a third paragraph, just two super long ones? But thats just me

I have two sighted questions on Social Inclusion/Exclusion
I wish i did Social Inclusion/Exclusion  :'( :'(
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: owidjaja on June 17, 2018, 05:14:08 pm
I'd say the UN is more of a "global initiative" then a single government one.
Hey there,
I asked my teacher about this and she said it should be fine as long as I use the specific UN branch, being the UN Women National Committee Australia to tie together community and government organisations.

Anyway, it would be great if you guys were to take a look at my plans and comment on them:

Explain how individuals and groups may experience stereotyping, prejudice and/or discrimination within Australia at the macro level.
Stereotyping through media
E.g. Advertisements portraying women with unrealistic beauty standards and submissive and males prioritising athleticism --> hegemonic masculinity
Stereotype --> prejudice against women
Prejudice --> discriminate women in real-life situations
E.g. Employment where 31% women believe there is gender equality in workplace; 50% men believe there is gender equality in workplace
10% of surveyed women reported sexual harassment in workplace
Violation of the Sex Discrimination act but statistics may be inaccurate
Macro institutions can influence a woman's role in society

Analyse the roles of government and community organisations in contributing to the social inclusion of one group.
Thesis: Government/community organisations play a significant role in socially including women in Australia.

Paragraph 1: Government initiatives are important because they can influence other macro institutions
'Our Watch'- provides support to various socially excluded groups (e.g. disabled, ATSI, LGBT+)
Provide access to SVRs (e.g. technology, housing, employment, health, legal services, education)
Important in helping the 4.6% women that experience physical violence and 1.2% that experience sexual violence each year
Beneficial initiative since it helps increase awareness (e.g. increased engagement of 4.1% on social media like Facebook)

Paragraph 2: Community organisations help implement initiatives at a meso level
Community influence attitudes towards gender inequality
ATSI women are more likely to be hospitalised that general female population
Relationships Australia Victoria help provide SRVs to ATSI and migrant families (employment, education, health)
Migrant women are 7% less likely to be employed that Australian-born women
RAV doesn't focus on other SRVs like housing but 77% clients reported to have learned knowledge and new strategies in various situations --> community organisations provide benefit at meso level

Paragraph 3: Collaboration of government and community organisation help increase awareness of gender inequality through community support of government initiatives
UN Women National Committee Australia use influence as intergovernmental organisation to encourage community support
UN is able to partner with stakeholders (e.g. Vodafone campaign CodeLikeaAGirl promotes women in STEM through partnership with UN)
35% women further their studies in STEM subjects so the campaign provides free coding lessons --> access to education
UN promotes community involvement (e.g. International Women's Day --> provide media resources for communities to organise their own rally)
Former Prime Minister Julia Gillard: 'I as Prime Minister referred to as a witch, a commentator said I should be put in a chaff bag and drowned at sea.' --> reflects how giving women the opportunity to lead a community can help address the issue of lack of women in leadership positions
UN doesn't focus on providing SRVs but combination of government/community contributes to social inclusion of women through increasing awareness
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on June 17, 2018, 09:14:00 pm
Anyway, it would be great if you guys were to take a look at my plans and comment on them:

Explain how individuals and groups may experience stereotyping, prejudice and/or discrimination within Australia at the macro level.
Stereotyping through media
E.g. Advertisements portraying women with unrealistic beauty standards and submissive and males prioritising athleticism --> hegemonic masculinity
Stereotype --> prejudice against women
Prejudice --> discriminate women in real-life situations
E.g. Employment where 31% women believe there is gender equality in workplace; 50% men believe there is gender equality in workplace
10% of surveyed women reported sexual harassment in workplace
Violation of the Sex Discrimination act but statistics may be inaccurate
Macro institutions can influence a woman's role in society

Analyse the roles of government and community organisations in contributing to the social inclusion of one group.
Thesis: Government/community organisations play a significant role in socially including women in Australia.

Paragraph 1: Government initiatives are important because they can influence other macro institutions
'Our Watch'- provides support to various socially excluded groups (e.g. disabled, ATSI, LGBT+)
Provide access to SVRs (e.g. technology, housing, employment, health, legal services, education)
Important in helping the 4.6% women that experience physical violence and 1.2% that experience sexual violence each year
Beneficial initiative since it helps increase awareness (e.g. increased engagement of 4.1% on social media like Facebook)

Paragraph 2: Community organisations help implement initiatives at a meso level
Community influence attitudes towards gender inequality
ATSI women are more likely to be hospitalised that general female population
Relationships Australia Victoria help provide SRVs to ATSI and migrant families (employment, education, health)
Migrant women are 7% less likely to be employed that Australian-born women
RAV doesn't focus on other SRVs like housing but 77% clients reported to have learned knowledge and new strategies in various situations --> community organisations provide benefit at meso level

Paragraph 3: Collaboration of government and community organisation help increase awareness of gender inequality through community support of government initiatives
UN Women National Committee Australia use influence as intergovernmental organisation to encourage community support
UN is able to partner with stakeholders (e.g. Vodafone campaign CodeLikeaAGirl promotes women in STEM through partnership with UN)
35% women further their studies in STEM subjects so the campaign provides free coding lessons --> access to education
UN promotes community involvement (e.g. International Women's Day --> provide media resources for communities to organise their own rally)
Former Prime Minister Julia Gillard: 'I as Prime Minister referred to as a witch, a commentator said I should be put in a chaff bag and drowned at sea.' --> reflects how giving women the opportunity to lead a community can help address the issue of lack of women in leadership positions
UN doesn't focus on providing SRVs but combination of government/community contributes to social inclusion of women through increasing awareness


Hey there Olivia! I didn't do Social Inclusion/Exclusion last year but your plans look good! Great evidence as well :) Seems that you're on the right track.
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: denisetrann on June 22, 2018, 12:50:01 am
I'm currently on 10 units which is risky for me and I was wondering if I don't do well in my PIP, would it greatly drag down my ATAR? I'm so over this PIP and no longer interested in it but have to get it done sooner or later, but again I only have 10 units :(
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on June 22, 2018, 01:35:38 pm
I'm currently on 10 units which is risky for me and I was wondering if I don't do well in my PIP, would it greatly drag down my ATAR? I'm so over this PIP and no longer interested in it but have to get it done sooner or later, but again I only have 10 units :(

Hey there! And welcome to the forums :)

As someone who also did Society & Culture on EXACTLY 10 units during my HSC last year, I must say that the PIP is actually a great way to increase your mark for Society & Culture. If you see your PIP this way- (this is probably going to be badly explained so feel free to reply to this thread if you need me to clarify stuff)

Your HSC mark for Society & Culture depends on your internal and external marks. As we know it, the PIP is 40% of your external mark, whilst your exam is worth 60%. You don't do your exam until the HSC exam period obviously. It's only you and that exam paper during that time. You will get marked on your performance during the exam alone. Once the 2 hours are done- that's it. No more. Goodbye exam. Goodbye stress. However- your PIP on the other hand, you get to work on this project during Year 12. You get to work on it at home, in class and any spare time you've got. You literally have access to gazillion of resources- including your textbook, your teacher, class discussions and more. You can ALWAYS get your PIP marked by your teacher and keep improving your project. Just really take advantage of the many resources you have access to during the remaining terms.

TL;DR: Your HSC exam is just a normal exam. Your PIP is like an open book exam- but much more flexible!

Once your PIP has been submitted, you have all the time in the world to study and practice for your SAC exam. Since you've constantly submitted your PIP for feedback beforehand and studied heaps for your SAC exam- you're bound to get a fantastic mark for SAC! I completely understand loosing interest in your PIP (this happened to me during my second term of Year 12). Though once I started to get more stuff done (get responses for my questionnaire or complete a chapter), I realised how ~pretty~ my PIP was. It was so aesthetically pleasing to look at a completed area so I knew I had to get the entire thing done. Up to this day, I like to look back at my (printed) PIP and see how ~professional~ and ~pleasing~ it was to look at.

Though I highly doubt if your PIP scores significantly lower than your SAC exam, it will affect your ATAR. Obviously you have to take into account your internal marks (not as much compared to your external marks though) and your HSC exam for SAC (definitely a defining factor). You can check out the ATAR/Scaling question thread if you need any clarification in regards to how ATARs and scaling work.

Hope this helps :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Maddyschultz on July 25, 2018, 10:33:10 am
Hey guys, I'm doing rock n roll for my popular culture and am struggling with how id write an essay with enough content for any of the potential questions. Has anyone done rock r roll and have tips on how to prepare for the essays/any practise essays i could have a look at? thanks :))) x
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: roob on August 22, 2018, 04:57:49 pm
hey this might seem like a dumb question but how essential are quotes to sac? for most subjects quotes are definitely needed but from reading about it doesnt seem like thats necessarily the case for sac and examples suffice
whats the go?
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Mada438 on August 22, 2018, 05:45:44 pm
hey this might seem like a dumb question but how essential are quotes to sac? for most subjects quotes are definitely needed but from reading about it doesnt seem like thats necessarily the case for sac and examples suffice
whats the go?
Personally, i've never used quotes and its fine. I use heaps of examples to back stuff up and it works wonders for me
A few examples explained well=Band 6 (IMO) That's how my teacher marks it. I'm usually getting  B-A range responses when i use examples.
So personally i'd say quotes aren't necessary
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: jenae.madden on September 10, 2018, 02:51:53 pm
Hi everyone, I am currently doing the belief and ideologies unit with a focus on feminism. However I am struggling with relating it back to the syllabus, I was wondering if anyone had any notes or if they could help me specifically with the "symbols custom, and rituals" dot point. I have my symbols as Rosie the riveter and the woman power symbol, ect. I was unsure about the other two..

Thanks ! :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on September 10, 2018, 10:29:15 pm
Hi everyone, I am currently doing the belief and ideologies unit with a focus on feminism. However I am struggling with relating it back to the syllabus, I was wondering if anyone had any notes or if they could help me specifically with the "symbols custom, and rituals" dot point. I have my symbols as Rosie the riveter and the woman power symbol, ect. I was unsure about the other two..

Thanks ! :)

Hey there!

I didn't do feminism for belief systems and ideologies depth study but there might be some notes on feminism in the notes section of the site!

Though if you were to talk about feminism in terms of symbols, customs and rituals, there could be different pathways you may want to use. This could possibly include the 'Slut Walk' as a custom and/or ritual as it was a way for women to protest against victim blaming and slut shaming but was also an event that empowered women to embrace the skin that they're in. There's Women's History Month that occurs every March and celebrates the contributions of women throughout history.

I'm afraid these are the only things that popped from the top of my head as I didn't study this topic but I hope this helps in some way :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: melonsinwater on September 30, 2018, 11:53:14 pm
hi beatroot. Ive done all the same topics, focus studies and countries you have and I just wanted to ask a question about this dotpoint within belief systems and idealogies because I dont rly understand how to answer it.
    examine a contemporary issue in a belief system or ideology using the research method of interview.


also, I havent done well in all of my society and culture exams and I'm a little scared for my HSC exam because I dont think I'll do well. Im trying to study but Ive been really lazy later and Im really scared for my english exam. :(

thank you.
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on October 01, 2018, 08:10:02 pm
hi beatroot. Ive done all the same topics, focus studies and countries you have and I just wanted to ask a question about this dotpoint within belief systems and idealogies because I dont rly understand how to answer it.
    examine a contemporary issue in a belief system or ideology using the research method of interview.



Hey there! Welcome to the forums :)

I'm pretty sure that I did this exact question for my HSC exam (correct me if I'm wrong but that question is from the 2017 paper right?). I'm trying to remember what I did for that question aha. I'm afraid I did not do Buddhism for that question. I referred to Christianity instead (my backup belief system) since I went to a Catholic school and studied religion since Year 7. Just because Buddhism is your prescribed belief system, does not necessarily mean that you have to use it for your exam.

It's important to acknowledge the pros and cons of the method of interview in your response and how it may affect examining a contemporary issue.

In terms of Christianity, the contemporary issue I explored was gay marriage. By using the research method of interview, you can talk to church officials, adherents of the Christian faith, as well as gay people and LGBTQI+ allies on their opinion of gay marriage under the church. Pretty much- the research method of interview allowed for further insight on their opinion. Though, since interviews are one on one there were chances of the interviewee changing their answer to fit what they think you want them to answer (if that makes sense aha).

If you really wanted to refer to Buddhism, one contemporary issue you may explore is gender equality within the religion and the world (in terms of adherents, monks etc) Again the research method of interview will allow for further insight on people's opinions of the promotion of gender equality.

also, I havent done well in all of my society and culture exams and I'm a little scared for my HSC exam because I dont think I'll do well. Im trying to study but Ive been really lazy later and Im really scared for my english exam. :(

thank you.

At the point, it's all about studying smart and practicing all those practice exam papers!!! Ranks don't really matter now and your performance in your external exam (and your PIP as well) will the thing that will determine your final mark for SAC. I honestly struggled with SAC throughout my HSC and was my worst performing subject. However, I learnt to have the mindset "I must try my best because once this exam is done- it's done for good". So what I'm basically trying to say- give it your all and your best shot! I remember getting 72% for my trial exam but ended up getting a HSC mark of 88. It's all about developing good study habits and finding ways to trick your brain into absorbing information into your head. The beauty of SAC is that- you don't necessarily have to read your textbook to ace the exam. This subject was made for 21st century students and you're able to study within the world. Check out the latest news online. See what politicians have to say. What scholars are discussing. This subject is so bloody flexible, it'll be easy to study. And it's perfectly normal to feel scared for your english exam! Definitely prioritise that first since they're the first ones up. But once you get over that fear, the rest of your HSC will smoothly flow.

Hope this help in some way :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on October 04, 2018, 01:01:24 pm
Hi,

For the beliefs and ideologies topic my class is looking at Christianity.
One of the dot poitns asks for acceptance and rejection on a micro and macro level, and I'm struggling a bit.
Wondering if anyone has anyone ideas, please?



Hey it's possible that you can refer to contemporary issues relating to Christianity- such as gay marriage, abortion, divorce, IVF etc. These issues have been highly debatable both in the micro and macro level. What do you think? :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on October 27, 2018, 04:32:18 pm
Hello Class of 2018'ers !

Be sure to hit up this question thread before the upcoming Society & Culture exam this Monday !!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: liladh on October 28, 2018, 10:30:57 am
Hey!

Does anyone have any tips for approaching the exam? My teacher didn't teach us all of the syllabus dot points and hardly gave us any resources, so I am trying soooo hard to get everything prepared for Monday!

My topics are Egypt/the Arab Spring for continuity and change, Buddhism for belief systems and Barbie for popular culture. If anyone had any advice it would be much appreciated!!

Thanks so much !!  :D
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Mada438 on October 28, 2018, 11:22:15 am
Hey!

Does anyone have any tips for approaching the exam? My teacher didn't teach us all of the syllabus dot points and hardly gave us any resources, so I am trying soooo hard to get everything prepared for Monday!

My topics are Egypt/the Arab Spring for continuity and change, Buddhism for belief systems and Barbie for popular culture. If anyone had any advice it would be much appreciated!!

Thanks so much !!  :D
Hey!
I think your best bet now is to make sure you remember all your concepts and the social research methods, as they tend to pop up a lot and you can weave them into your essays!
I would also look at the past papers and plan how you would relate your focus areas to the questions and what examples and explanations you would use.
Next, i would look at all the MC questions to familiarise yourself with the unusual way some questions can be asked.
If you're struggling for resources use google! Look up your focus areas in conjunction with different parts of the syllabus.
Lastly, i think you should get your syllabus and try linking your focus areas to the dot points to gain more of an understanding of them.

In summary:
-Make sure you know concepts and social research methods
-Plan responses based on past paper questions
-Answer MCs
-Use google to find resources and info
-relate focus areas to syllabus points

Hope this helps and good luck with the exam tomorrow!  ;D
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: edumax on October 29, 2018, 07:43:32 am
What should i be doing today, the morning of the exam?
I want to study effectively and maximise the time i have, any tips?
Seems as though the only study resources are past papers, do i just rely on those?
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: headsup on October 29, 2018, 07:54:02 am
Heyy!!!

Although I dont do Society and Culture i think this stands for all..

You don't want to be stressing about what you don't know or paining your hand before the exam....

I would just recommend going over your notes (if you don't have head to the notes section :) )..... Make sure you have a good breakfast and lunch and get there in plenty of time... You have so got this!!

All the very best with it and all the rest of your exams.

If you feel most comfortable with the past papers I won't recommend doing full papers but essay plans are a good way to go....
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on October 29, 2018, 10:21:46 am
What should i be doing today, the morning of the exam?
I want to study effectively and maximise the time i have, any tips?
Seems as though the only study resources are past papers, do i just rely on those?

Hello!

At this point in the hours leading up to the exam— just briefly read over your notes and just relax! It is a possibility to do past papers— but only stick to questions you feel that you need to work on. Doing an entire past paper will just overwhelm you so I think it’s better to not overwork yourself right before the exam. Make sure you eat properly before heading into your exam.

Good luck with the SAC exam today !!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: changeuponchange on January 31, 2019, 07:53:06 pm
Hi!
I'm currently in Year 12 right now and I am struggling immensely in choosing a question for my pip. I have a few ideas that focus on:
 1. Women in Islamic countries (Bangladesh & Australia which for the central material, I would talk about the Bangladeshi Civil War, reshaping of the subcontinent, gender before and after, gradual change after modernisation, post 1975 and women politicians in an Islamic countries)
2. How Christianity and Islam have similarities (dont really know what I would do here yet)
3. Islamic customs or Islamic traditions

I'm just really stressed out and I feel lost in what to do :( I'm also trying to find topics related to Islam/ Bangladesh that are interesting! Thanks in advance
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: alole201 on February 02, 2019, 06:54:06 pm
Hi everyone!

I am also stuck on being able to produce a content analysis table for a newspaper I am analyzing. I have the resources of the newspaper ready, but my teacher said that we should be able to put that information into a table. Please help coz I am struggling!!  :'( :'(
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: angewina_naguen on February 02, 2019, 07:38:14 pm
Hi!
I'm currently in Year 12 right now and I am struggling immensely in choosing a question for my pip. I have a few ideas that focus on:
 1. Women in Islamic countries (Bangladesh & Australia which for the central material, I would talk about the Bangladeshi Civil War, reshaping of the subcontinent, gender before and after, gradual change after modernisation, post 1975 and women politicians in an Islamic countries)
2. How Christianity and Islam have similarities (dont really know what I would do here yet)
3. Islamic customs or Islamic traditions

I'm just really stressed out and I feel lost in what to do :( I'm also trying to find topics related to Islam/ Bangladesh that are interesting! Thanks in advance

Hey, changeuponchange!

Love your PIP topic ideas! You seem to have a strong direction for the first topic which I think is a sign that you should go with it. What I would suggest is perhaps refining the topic and investigating into how gender roles, more specifically women's, have been transformed due to major political and social upheaval. As of current, it's quite broad which may make it difficult for you to keep a clear focus. Definitely consult your teacher and see what they think about it and whether they would recommend narrowing it down even further  :)

Once you have picked a topic, you could always start researching and writing. Maybe you'll realise it's not for you and that you have a stronger interest elsewhere. As long as you are pursuing something, the right thing will come to you  8)

Hi everyone!

I am also stuck on being able to produce a content analysis table for a newspaper I am analyzing. I have the resources of the newspaper ready, but my teacher said that we should be able to put that information into a table. Please help coz I am struggling!!  :'( :'(

And hey, alole201!

For content analysis, you have a lot of freedom in how you may wish to organise your information. Since I don't know the context of what this newspaper entails, I would just suggest putting into columns "Direct Quote/Statistic from Content", "Relevance to SAC", "Analysis", "Implications/Suggestions." This way, you can analyse the content in a logical and cohesive manner.

"Direct Quote/Statistic from Content"- Write the selected piece of content you wish to analyse and incorporate as evidence in your PIP.
"Relevance to SAC"- Consider what the relevant SAC Fundamental and Additional concepts are for that piece of evidence. You could also write how it relates to your topic.
"Analysis"- Detail your interpretation and deconstruct the evidence provided.
"Implications/Suggestions"- Come to a conclusion on what the evidence means and what it suggests about concepts such as continuity and change.

Hopefully this can help you sort out your ideas  ;D Good luck to the both of you with your research!

Angelina  ;D
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Muir.mclennan on March 10, 2019, 02:17:17 pm
Hey so I have this practice exam for SAC but we get the questions in order to prepare beforehand. One of the questions is: For a country you have studied (Japan), apply a social change theory to explain in ONE of the following aspects. (6 marks) and I was wondering if someone would be able to look over my response and let me know if it applies the theory well enough/is explicit enough etc. Thanks a lot!

Structural functionalist theory accounts for social change through an institutional interaction and specialised macro interdependence, which promotes an ideal continual equilibrium. Functionalism asserts that societies are constantly aiming to meet the needs of society through the cooperation of macro institutions, such as the legal system and political processes. This theory can be used to explain Japan’s historically shifting equilibrium on the macro scale of legal political processes, being subjected to both internal and external influences which disrupt tradition and continuity but necessitate the introduction of new systems. Throughout the Tokogawa period, Japan was able to maintain an equilibrium or sense of social stability, seen through the traditional shogunate government. A functional change became apparent in the arrival of the USA in the 1800s, with Western influence ending traditional geographic, economic and political isolation, and the pervasive effects of globalisation introducing trade. This structural shift continued with the Meiji Restoration, prompting adjustments such as changed laws, generalised government under an emperor, increased power of the merchant class and dismantling of caste system. This adapted social balance was maintained, with the equilibrium settling as all spheres of society adapted. Change reoccurred when Japan lost WW2 and the US initiated the reconstruction of macro institutions, evident through the introduction of women voting, new constitutions, classless education and a shift in government causing democratic elections, establishing a new equilibrium up to 1980. Social restructuring has since reoccurred with globalisation and increased western values, in which the effects of these changes are still prevalent today, with the prominence of female influence in macro affairs, government providing care for the elderly, increase in individualism and the prominence of media as an political platform. This transition from a traditional conservative government, which aligned strictly with culture, to an advanced and inclusive government, shows adaption of equilibrium and social stability, detailing the ability of structural functionalism to explain social change.
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: owidjaja on March 10, 2019, 11:16:28 pm
Hey so I have this practice exam for SAC but we get the questions in order to prepare beforehand. One of the questions is: For a country you have studied (Japan), apply a social change theory to explain in ONE of the following aspects. (6 marks) and I was wondering if someone would be able to look over my response and let me know if it applies the theory well enough/is explicit enough etc. Thanks a lot!

Structural functionalist theory accounts for social change through an institutional interaction and specialised macro interdependence, which promotes an ideal continual equilibrium. Functionalism asserts that societies are constantly aiming to meet the needs of society through the cooperation of macro institutions, such as the legal system and political processes. This theory can be used to explain Japan’s historically shifting equilibrium on the macro scale of legal political processes, being subjected to both internal and external influences which disrupt tradition and continuity but necessitate the introduction of new systems. Throughout the Tokogawa period, Japan was able to maintain an equilibrium or sense of social stability, seen through the traditional shogunate government. A functional change became apparent in the arrival of the USA in the 1800s, with Western influence ending traditional geographic, economic and political isolation, and the pervasive effects of globalisation introducing trade. This structural shift continued with the Meiji Restoration, prompting adjustments such as changed laws, generalised government under an emperor, increased power of the merchant class and dismantling of caste system. This adapted social balance was maintained, with the equilibrium settling as all spheres of society adapted. Change reoccurred when Japan lost WW2 and the US initiated the reconstruction of macro institutions, evident through the introduction of women voting, new constitutions, classless education and a shift in government causing democratic elections, establishing a new equilibrium up to 1980. Social restructuring has since reoccurred with globalisation and increased western values, in which the effects of these changes are still prevalent today, with the prominence of female influence in macro affairs, government providing care for the elderly, increase in individualism and the prominence of media as an political platform. This transition from a traditional conservative government, which aligned strictly with culture, to an advanced and inclusive government, shows adaption of equilibrium and social stability, detailing the ability of structural functionalism to explain social change.
Hey there,

I didn't study Japan or functionalist theory in depth, but from what I've read, I like how you explain what functionalism is and your use of SAC concepts throughout the response. One thing I would probably critique is that you should use a contemporary example, especially when you're talking about how change has impacted society, perhaps a statistic? And with your point on female influence, I would actually argue that Japan is still heavily patriarchal and that there's still a lack of female representation in politics. Here are a few resources I found: (1 2 3). But apart from this, I do like your response.

If you'd like an example response to a question like this, you should check out this link.

Hope this helps!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: asha.beattie on March 15, 2019, 12:40:10 pm
Hi everyone, it would be amazing if I could get some responses for my PIP. Feel free to share

https://goo.gl/forms/yE0WbiU4tzzXyWT82
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: sania2014 on March 20, 2019, 08:56:06 pm
Hi! My year 11 exams are coming up and I can't seem to find any preliminary past paper exams to study for 'the social and cultural world'. Does anyone have any links to practice papers and solutions?


Thanks! :) 
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: angewina_naguen on April 28, 2019, 09:54:44 am
hey guys, just wondering if i've made a huge mistake.
so basically with the cross cultural i chose generations (1980s to now) i have over 20 responses for my survey and am worried about the fact that the max age bracket is 25+. since i have chosen a cross cultural of 1980s, can i refer to those of 25+ years as generation Y or have i made an irreversible mistake. i am so scared bc i am so far into my pip that i can't possibly choose another cross cultural. Please help.

thankyou xx

Hey, jelena_nina2001!

If you haven't received as many responses from people 25+, I would recommend changing that option to a more flexible one and just continue distributing the survey. You'll lose a few responses but at least the next answers you get will be more accurate. I don't think there's anything to worry about there. You could highlight that as something you realised was a flaw in your survey later on in the PIP which demonstrates that you have critically reflected on it and taken action on to ensure social and cultural literacy, as well as ethical research  :)

Angelina  ;D
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: angewina_naguen on April 28, 2019, 10:03:43 am
Thanks but i have recieved 50% of my responses as 25+ and am legit having a panic attack bc i think my pip has just went down the drain. so do i just say 25-30 and 35-40 as being generation Y (add that in to survey) or????

So firstly, there's no need to worry. Your PIP has definitely not gone down the drain and there is room and time to rectify this. Let's figure out an action plan :) Since you've received so many responses already from people in that demographic, I would suggest to just keep it. However, perhaps choose a different cross-cultural comparison so the age concern isn't so much at the forefront and is only something you can note as a slight flaw in your research in the annotated bibliography. What's your topic exactly so we can see if that's a possible option?
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: owidjaja on April 28, 2019, 10:07:38 am
Thanks but i have recieved 50% of my responses as 25+ and am legit having a panic attack bc i think my pip has just went down the drain. so do i just say 25-30 and 35-40 as being generation Y (add that in to survey) or????
Hey there,
Your PIP hasn't gone down the drain! Even if you stuff up your questionnaire, you can still talk about it in your annotated bibliography. When I sent out my questionnaire, a teacher told me that my questionnaire was very biased and I started freaking out whether my results were still valid (and by this time, I had 90 responses). I spoke to my teacher and she said these results are still valid even though my questions were biased. So no need to worry about your PIP going down the drain because those results can still help you with your PIP.

Hope this helps!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: jelena_nina2001 on April 28, 2019, 10:44:34 am
So firstly, there's no need to worry. Your PIP has definitely not gone down the drain and there is room and time to rectify this. Let's figure out an action plan :) Since you've received so many responses already from people in that demographic, I would suggest to just keep it. However, perhaps choose a different cross-cultural comparison so the age concern isn't so much at the forefront and is only something you can note as a slight flaw in your research in the annotated bibliography. What's your topic exactly so we can see if that's a possible option?

it's about disability potrayals in media and how they have evolved over time, and their impact on the sense of identity of someone wth a disability.
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: angewina_naguen on April 28, 2019, 12:38:38 pm
it's about disability potrayals in media and how they have evolved over time, and their impact on the sense of identity of someone wth a disability.

Awesome, so perhaps consider a cross-cultural comparison between age groups, as opposed to generations, and define anyone under 25, for the sake of your PIP, as "youth." Luckily, UNESCO has considered the youth age bracket to flexibly to be 15-24 years of age which works out really well for you! You can read about this here and reference it in your PIP as a decision you have made. Hope that helps and alleviates some stress off of you!

Angelina  ;D
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: jelena_nina2001 on April 28, 2019, 03:51:05 pm
Awesome, so perhaps consider a cross-cultural comparison between age groups, as opposed to generations, and define anyone under 25, for the sake of your PIP, as "youth." Luckily, UNESCO has considered the youth age bracket to flexibly to be 15-24 years of age which works out really well for you! You can read about this here and reference it in your PIP as a decision you have made. Hope that helps and alleviates some stress off of you!

Angelina  ;D

aww yes this is perfect thankyou so much, sorry to ramble :( you are a lifesaver - if u ever need anything feel free to pm me
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: jelena_nina2001 on May 12, 2019, 09:06:49 am
hey peeps,
how do you do a content analysis? what exactly do you look for and write?

my topic is media portrayals of disability from 80s till now and was thinking of analysing a movie from each gen, an episode of you cant ask that, and maybe a couple of articles.


any help is appreciated.

jelena_nina2001
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on May 17, 2019, 03:55:43 pm
hey peeps,
how do you do a content analysis? what exactly do you look for and write?

my topic is media portrayals of disability from 80s till now and was thinking of analysing a movie from each gen, an episode of you cant ask that, and maybe a couple of articles.


any help is appreciated.

jelena_nina2001

Hello !

We have a guide about research methodologies right here

The area specific for content analysis can be found down below:

Quote
Content Analysis: So this can be done in terms of both types of research. In terms of quantitative, it is done to detect and account. This data can then be collected in a way that can be quantified. For example, you could look at a particular topic e.g racism and see how it is portrayed in different pieces of media over a period of time.
In terms of a qualitative  method is used to analyse and interpret themes, and words and images from film, art, music and other media. After analysing these responses you (the researcher) make QUALITATIVE judgements about meanings of your selected content. For example, look at a specific event like say ANZAC day, and look at different media that addresses that event. Be aware that for content analysis, there can be a degree of bias as the articles you select to analyse (regardless of whether you’re doing quantitative or qualitative research) will always be influenced by your unique contextual situation and perspective (extension history students-you’d know what i’m talking about here). I did an assignment regarding content analysis in year 11, and i was one of the only ones who made mention of this potential bias due to context and perspective n their research (funnily enough all the people who included this potential bias “disclaimer” are the ones who got an A). So it should add a bit of snazzzzzzzz to your research and it does make your research sound more like some dude with a phd is doing it. (It sounds a bit more formal)

Hope this helps :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Bookdragon_202 on May 20, 2019, 09:34:17 am
I'm currently working on a Society and Culture Assessment task and was wondering if people would be able to give me feedback on my answer. It is a ad in essay and my teacher hasn't been very helpful. I have attached my response. Thanks in advance.
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: PeriPeri101 on May 24, 2019, 12:31:35 pm
hello. this is a year 11 question but still relevant- please can someone explain in simple terms what is personal and social identity? On it's own, without linking the agents of socialisation to it. Is there are difference between the personal and social identity, been researching and do not understand other internet resources
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: owidjaja on May 29, 2019, 10:13:30 pm
I'm currently working on a Society and Culture Assessment task and was wondering if people would be able to give me feedback on my answer. It is a ad in essay and my teacher hasn't been very helpful. I have attached my response. Thanks in advance.
Hey there,

So sorry this took a while but I've added some comments in your essay in the attached document.

Hope this helps!


hello. this is a year 11 question but still relevant- please can someone explain in simple terms what is personal and social identity? On it's own, without linking the agents of socialisation to it. Is there are difference between the personal and social identity, been researching and do not understand other internet resources
Hey there,

It's a bit difficult to define personal identity because it's very philosophical and philosophy gets very complicated really fast. Personal identity is essentially what defines you as an individual- it's the component that makes you unique. This can include your personality and memories (I'm pretty sure there's more to it but let's avoid spiralling). Social identity is the sense of who you are based on the groups you identify with. This includes your ethnicity, religion, family- it's kinda like the "us vs them" mentality. Think of social identity as the stereotypical cliques you see in those teen chick flicks.

The reason why the agents of socialisation is heavily linked to personal and social identity is because those factors shape both aspects of your identity.

Here are a few resources that might be helpful:
http://psychology.anu.edu.au/files/Abstracts-Presentations-1-Personal-and-Social-Identity-Self-and-Social-Context-Princeton-1992.pdf (if you find the whole paper confusing, stick to the abstract and see if it makes sense)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trqDnLNRuSc
https://www.simplypsychology.org/social-identity-theory.html

Hope this helps!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: phams on June 06, 2019, 12:19:37 pm
i am in DESPERATE need of help.
my pip topic is 'the effects of strict parenting on teenagers'
and i have no idea what to write for my central material or what my hypothesis should be
so far im leading towards that strict parenting affects teenagers mental health i honestly have no clue.
ive done my interview and questionaire so ive kinda got primary research down pact
but i reckon i might talk about how nature and nurture plays a role in how the parent raises their kids.

please help it would reall be appreciated thank you heaps!!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: jelena_nina2001 on June 18, 2019, 06:26:43 pm
Hey guys, does anyone have conformity and non-conformity notes. i need them asap. bra boys notes would help too
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: owidjaja on June 18, 2019, 06:46:49 pm
Hey guys, does anyone have conformity and non-conformity notes. i need them asap. bra boys notes would help too
Hey there,

I didn't do Conformity and Non-conformity but you may be able to find notes on them in the Notes section.

Hope this helps!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: jelena_nina2001 on June 18, 2019, 08:56:24 pm
Hey there,

I didn't do Conformity and Non-conformity but you may be able to find notes on them in the Notes section.

Hope this helps!

hey there! i'be looked in the section and cant find anything on bra boys, any suggestions of people on here who did them and may have notes? sorry to be a bruden,its just that my exam is next monday :( sorry again x
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: angelina.osis on November 19, 2019, 02:52:36 pm
what are the similarities and differences of belief systems, i understand the similarties not the difference :-\
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: owidjaja on November 20, 2019, 12:34:28 am
what are the similarities and differences of belief systems, i understand the similarties not the difference :-\
Hey there,

The main difference between belief systems and ideologies is that ideologies are more associated with a social movement that is often used to benefit a particular group. So for example with Marxism, the whole point of that is to benefit the proletariat. Another difference is that ideologies tend to focus more on social, political and economic ideas (which links back to the Marxism example). On the other hand, belief systems tend to be older and more religious.

Hope this helps!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: angewina_naguen on November 20, 2019, 11:33:56 pm
what are the similarities and differences of belief systems, i understand the similarties not the difference :-\

Hey, angelina.osis!

Adding to Olivia's amazing response above  :) I drew up this Venn diagram which I found was a helpful way to illustrate the similarities and differences. Hope this might help clarify too!

(https://i.imgur.com/lj0ZZUR.png)

Angelina  ;D
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: angelina.osis on December 25, 2019, 12:20:58 pm
Thank you that helps alot  :)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Alyssa_Biffin on April 01, 2020, 04:24:30 pm
Hey, guys was wondering if someone could possibly help me the question I have for Society and Culture. I am in year 12 and it's about one of my methodologies.

If you can't conduct an interview in person is it alright to do it over face time e.g ( skype). As some of the interview, I want to conduct I can't do in person due to the social isolation because of the coronavirus.
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: beatroot on April 22, 2020, 02:28:29 pm
Hey, guys was wondering if someone could possibly help me the question I have for Society and Culture. I am in year 12 and it's about one of my methodologies.

If you can't conduct an interview in person is it alright to do it over face time e.g ( skype). As some of the interview, I want to conduct I can't do in person due to the social isolation because of the coronavirus.

Hi! Apologies for the late reply!! Yes you may do an interview online- as long as you are able to get a transcript for the interview or record the interview, it should be fine. I highly doubt you'll get marked down because you conducted an interview over face (they'll understand anyways esp with what's happening right now!)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Miameh on April 28, 2020, 01:03:15 pm
hi if anyone has a spare 2-3 min pls do my PIP questionnaire thank you!!!!

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc4XndmQsB33pBeZw9KOtKcrt0L_iqwDLvbrqZdzb9o7mQbew/viewform?usp=sf_link
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: tparkerreynolds20 on August 18, 2020, 06:18:58 pm
Please can someone help me with some contemporary examples of impact of technologies, including communication technologies, on the environment!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: rose3 on February 02, 2021, 02:57:50 pm
Im planning to do my PIP topic on something along the lines of "colorism in south asia" but im struggling to find a cross cultural component component.
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: angewina_naguen on February 03, 2021, 01:31:04 pm
Im planning to do my PIP topic on something along the lines of "colorism in south asia" but im struggling to find a cross cultural component component.

Hey rose3!

Welcome to the forums  ;D The cross-cultural component for the PIP simply means that you are examining your topic across at least two different cultural groups. This could be different age groups/generations, races, religions, genders etc. For my PIP, I compared the treatment of interracial couples in Australia and the United States of America which are two different societies.

As for what cross-cultural component you should do, are you planning on exploring colorism with South Asia, within South Asian communities in Australia or towards South Asian communities from wider Australia? If you could clarify what your topic is going to investigate and how you plan on achieving that, I might be able to advise on possible cross-cultural components better. Otherwise, let me know if my explanation was helpful!

Angelina  ;D
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: sylvia547 on March 22, 2021, 12:55:28 pm
Hey guys, I have designed a survey for my Personal Interest Project and I would really appreciate it if you could spend a few minutes of your time to part take in it. The topic I have chosen is Societal pressures and expectations that impact young women in social media.

https://forms.gle/yc9RSoWr4WJ2TZnVA

Every contribution counts! Thank you so much.
Modify message
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: hana.kim743 on April 20, 2021, 08:02:30 pm
Hello there!
I am just about to start writing my PIP but I wanted to ask a few questions that I am struggling with right now in terms of the structure and ideas in my PIP.

So, my topic statement is: "A study on why people lie specifically examining Generation X and Z in Australia."

I've chosen Generation Z and X to be the cross-cultural component and I wanted to talk about why individuals choose to engage in dishonest behaviour and how that potentially may be affected by people of two different generations as a result of the different moral/ethical values prevalent during each generation, the responsibilities that contrast younger generations with older generations as with their age differences.
Also, please feel free to include any other ideas, it'll help a lot!

I mostly am stuck on how to separate my chapters, but this is what I've come up with for now:

Chapter 1 - Factors that influence individuals to lie
Chapter 2 - Deception, and its effect on individuals of different generations (Generation Z and X in Australia)
Chapter 3 - Implications of conformity and non-conformity within micro, meso and macro levels of society

If anyone could please help me out, I would really appreciate it.  ;D

Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: sam.granic on April 25, 2021, 06:12:32 pm
Hi there, I'm doing my HSC this year.  :o
I need some help with my PIP questionnaire. It's on Feminism.

Here's the google survey.....if anyones feeling super bored or wants to c how the structure their own questionnaire please fill it out.

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc3KakXzdGPW8oXeTXC5USG9QXwc4xk9GyFgIeCKCjLgfvVDA/viewform?usp=sf_link


Thank uuuuuu  ;)
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: carebears on September 23, 2021, 03:11:49 pm
Hey there!

I do the HSC compacted so I sat my Society and Culture exam last year and got an 86! My PIP is what I believed brought it down from a 90 so I would say the exam is my strong point  ;D

I did social inclusion and exclusion (African Americans) so I am more than happy to answer questions if any arise! :)
Also did belief systems and ideologies (Islam) so can assist there too if I am around ;D

Hey I was wondering what material you used to do the Islam aspect? I am aiming to do how Islam is portrayed in the media. If you have any additional tips that would be great! :D
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: vybui on October 08, 2021, 01:06:02 pm
hey guys!

my PIP topic is centered around how gender stereotypes speech (you throw like a girl) impacts people; not definite but something about it. any tips of ideas?
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: Nomsie on October 09, 2021, 08:35:57 am
hey guys!

my PIP topic is centered around how gender stereotypes speech (you throw like a girl) impacts people; not definite but something about it. any tips of ideas?

I am guessing you are from the class of 2022? If so, have fun on your PIP journey, it really good you're starting now. If gender interests you, go for it, I like the title of 'You throw like a girl. However, my only piece of advice is to be weary of how repetitive this topic has become, if you have a unique lens or spin you could take, it would improve your idea a lot. For instance, my PIP this year discussed toys, gender, and identity. Hope that helps!
Title: Re: Society and Culture Question Thread
Post by: emily56mc on April 12, 2022, 11:42:18 am
Hey everyone,

I’m doing my PIP on How the patriarchy continues to conditions us and Would really appreciate if you could fill out my questionnaire, pass it on to other’s you know, etc. If possible I need some more men to fill out these questionnaires.

Thank you so much!



Questionnaire 1 :
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1MUTEkJTu3QxEjG9ldKS1y4Vzbz_ga4qKlaeHEI21i6k/edit

Questionnaire 2 :
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1nBW3h6QowKIwc8biUkbEzem5LMzq-_GU1dhF7hnS4QI/edit