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Welcome to Rural Sociology 11: Introduction to Rural Sociology

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Title: Welcome to Rural Sociology 11: Introduction to Rural Sociology


1
Welcome to Rural Sociology 11 Introduction to
Rural Sociology
  • Today
  • Introductions (us and you to each other)
  • Course Syllabus and Requirements
  • Brief introduction to Rural America
  • Pictures and names!!!

2
Welcome to Rural Sociology 11 Introduction to
Rural Sociology
  • Professors
  • Dr. Diane K. McLaughlin, Dr. Richard C. Stedman
  • Associate professor of rural Assistant professor
    of rural
  • sociology and demography sociology
  • 110C Armsby Building 111B Armsby Building
  • 863-8626 or dkk_at_psu.edu 863-8644 or
    rstedman_at_psu.edu
  • Tues 9-10 Wed 130-230 Mon 10-11 Thurs 10-11
  • Email or call if these times dont work with
    your schedule!!!

3
Welcome to Rural Sociology 11 Introduction to
Rural Sociology
  • P. Johnelle Smith
  • Graduate Teaching Asst.
  • 307 Armsby Building
  • pjs264_at_psu.edu
  • Hours by appointment
  • Course Website http//www.courses.psu/r_soc/r_soc0
    11_dkk/

4
Readings
  • Flora, Cornelia Butler, Jan L. Flora, with Susan
    Fey. 2004. Rural Communities Legacy and Change.
    Second Edition. Boulder, CO Westview Press.
    (Required)
  • Schaefer, Richard T. 2002. Sociology A Brief
    Introduction. Fifth Edition. New York
    McGraw-Hill. (Optional)
  • Other required readings are on the course web
    page
  • http//www.courses.psu.edu/r_soc/r_soc011_dkk/

5
Requirements and Grading
  • Reading assignments (Read by the class they are
    assigned)
  • Lectures and discussion
  • Exams
  • 2 mid-terms (October 7, November 4) (20 of
    grade, each)
  • Final exam during finals week (20 of grade)
  • Course project
  • Group component (Dec 2) (20 of grade)
  • Individual component (Dec 9) (10 of grade)
  • Attendance and participation (10 of grade)
  • Extra Credit options
  • Newspaper analysis (up to 3 extra credit
    percentage points)
  • Student survey completion (up to 2 extra credit
    percentage points)

6
Course project issues(see website for
instructions)
  • Circleville Farms (PSU) how should this land be
    used and how should the decision be made?
  • Gambling as a rural development strategy a good
    idea?
  • Bison / cattle ranching conflicts in the West
  • Revisions of Roadless Areas on Federal Lands
  • The costs and benefits of rural school
    consolidation
  • No Child Left Behind impacts on the quality of
    rural education

7
Grading elements summary(review)
  • Mid-term exam 1 20 Oct 7
  • Mid-term exam 2 20 Nov 4
  • Final exam 20 Finals
  • Group project 20 Dec 2
  • Individual part of group project 10 Dec 9
  • Attendance and participation 10 every class
  • Extra credit Newspaper assignment 3 Nov 18
  • Extra credit student survey 2 TBA

8
Other syllabus elements
  • Active learning elements
  • Academic honesty
  • Disability services
  • Nondiscrimination
  • Course schedule and assigned readings

9
Course schedule and assigned readings
  • Each date for every class is listed with the
    planned reading assignments and topics we will
    cover, these may be adjusted during the
    semesterchanges will be on the web
  • Be sure to complete the readings before the class
    for which they are assigned
  • All course information (including powerpoint
    summaries) is available at the course web site!!
  • http//www.courses.psu/r_soc/r_soc011_dkk/

10
Looking at rural America through the lens of
rural sociology
  • Use a sociological perspective to understand
    rural people, communities, industry, well-being
    and links to the environment
  • Examine institutions, organizations and beliefs
    and how they influence individual and family
    well-being in rural America.
  • Increase understanding of how and why things
    happen as they do.
  • Challenge some of our assumptions and stereotypes
    about rural people and places

11
Looking at rural America through the lens of
rural sociology (cont.)
  • Think critically, from a sociological
    perspective, about what we are told or read and
    what we see happening around us (you will
    specifically apply these ideas in the group
    project and the newspaper extra credit
    assignment)
  • A sociological perspective can help us to
    understand why / how nice, well-meaning people
    can have very different views on the same issue.
  • Why are things the way that they are? Should
    they be changed? How would we do that?
  • Who decides?

12
Basic Organization of the Course
  • What makes rural areas and people different from
    urban areas? Are they different?
  • Culture and socialization
  • Characteristics of the people
  • The nature of business and industry, reliance on
    natural resources
  • Stratification of society (local, regional and
    national)
  • The strengths/weaknesses of rural communities
  • The use, abuse and stewardship of natural
    resources and the environment
  • These key issues are covered individually, but we
    also try to show the interconnections.

13
Two important things to remember.
  • There is great variability within rural America
    on each of the aspects of society that we will be
    studying, we will try to provide you with a sense
    of that variability
  • Just because you know about your rural area,
    doesnt mean that you can make assumptions about
    all rural areas.

14
Why are you interested in rural America?OR why
are you taking RSOC 11 instead of Soc 1?
15
What is YOUR reliance on rural people and places?
  • What generation of your family last lived on a
    farm? In a rural area?
  • What did you have for lunch? Where did it come
    from?
  • What are the clothes you are wearing made of?
    Where did that material come from?
  • How about the building we are in?
  • Where does the waste/garbage you generate go?

16
Issues facing rural America
17
Quick Quiz on Rural America
  • Pennsylvania has the largest rural population of
    all states. True or false
  • About 90 of rural African Americans live in the
    South. True or false
  • Extractive industries (farming, forestry and
    mining) are the predominant source of earnings in
    nonmetro America. True or false

18
Quick Quiz (cont.)
  • More than half of Americas farms have sales
    under 10,000. True or false
  • Poverty among female headed households with
    children in nonmetro areas is higher than that of
    female-headed households with kids in metro
    areas. True or false
  • Poverty among African Americans is higher in
    nonmetro areas than in central cities of metro
    areas.
  • True or False

19
Answers
  • Pennsylvania has the largest rural population of
    all states.
  • FALSE
  • In 2000, Pa had the third largest rural
    population (2.8m), Texas was first (3.6m), then
    North Carolina (3.2m)
  • About 90 of rural African Americans live in the
    South.
  • TRUE
  • But, African Americans were 8.2 of the nonmetro
    population compared to 14.1 of the metro
    population in 2000. 23.5 of central city
    population is Black.

20
Answers
  • Extractive industries (farming, forestry and
    mining) are the predominant source of earnings in
    rural America.
  • FALSE
  • This is true in some counties, but overall in
    nonmetro counties, only 6.7 of earnings come
    from extractive industries.
  • Consumer services make up the largest share of
    earnings (22.8). Manufacturing and government
    contribute 21.4 and 20.4, respectively.

21
Answers
  • More than half of Americas 2,064,709 farms have
    sales under 10,000.
  • TRUE
  • Large family and nonfamily farms are 9.5 of
    farms, have 67.1 of production value, 31.7 of
    acreage.

22
Answers
  • Poverty among female headed households with
    children in nonmetro areas is higher than that of
    female-headed households with kids in metro
    areas.
  • TRUE
  • 40.9 of nonmetro vs. 32 of metro in 2000
  • In addition, fully one-fifth of nonmetro children
    live in poverty.

23
Answers (cont.)
  • Poverty among African Americans is higher in
    nonmetro areas than in central cities of metro
    areas.
  • True
  • 29.1 of African Americans in nonmetro areas are
    poor compared to 26 in central cities of metro
    areas.

24
Questions?
25
Please provide the following information on an
index card
  • Name
  • Major
  • Where you grew up (farm, rural, suburban, urban
    area)
  • Your hometown
  • Your home state

26
Next Class
  • What is rural America?
  • Read chapter 1. The rural landscape in the
    Flora Flora book.
  • Please be patient leaving class, we would like to
    get photos so that we can more easily learn your
    names.
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