Society in a Global Age
Session
Regular Academic Session
Class Number
3313
Career
Undergraduate
Units
3 units
Grading
Graded Alpha
Description
This foundational course in the social sciences introduces students to key sociological perspectives and methods to examine global issues. Students explore how institutions, culture, and systems of power and inequality shape people's lives across diverse communities and contexts.

Outcomes: Identify examples of the relationship between institutions and individuals; Explain the impact that culture has on group dynamics and social interactions within local, national, and global settings; Summarize how people's identities are formed through a complex interaction of biographical, societal, or cultural contexts; Describe the experiences of underrepresented, marginalized, or oppressed communities within various contexts, including inequality in outcomes and resistance to systems of oppression; Analyze how systems of power, privilege, and oppression (e.g., racism, sexism, heterosexism, ableism) operate to create and maintain inequality as well as how resistance to these systems is enacted.
Class Attributes
Foundational Societal Knowledge
African Studies and the African Diaspora
Class Actions
Look up course materials
Class Details
Instructor(s)
Elfriede Wedam
Meets
TuTh 1:00PM - 2:15PM
Dates
01/12/2026 - 04/25/2026
Room
Dumbach Hall - Room 227
Instruction Mode
In person
Campus
Lake Shore Campus
Location
Lake Shore Campus
Components
Lecture Required
Class Availability
Status
Open
Seats Taken
37
Seats Open
11
Class Capacity
48
Wait List Total
0
Wait List Capacity
0