Contemporary Social Issues:
Conceptualizing Youth/Conceptualizing Gangs
Email: garotrh@email.uc.edu
Phone: (513) 556-4708
Office: 1008 Crosley Tower (Tenth Floor)
Course Overview
What are some of the ways in which inner-city youth have been conceptualized? What are the rationales, and the consequences for such depictions? This course will take a critical look at literature which frames children as youth and literature which frames children as gang members, and then consider other options for analysis.
Required Readings
Text: Miller, Jody, Cheryl L. Maxson and Malcolm W. Klein. 2001. The Modern Gang Reader. Los Angeles: Roxbury Publishing Company.
Reader: Available for pick-up at Du Bois Bookstore, 321 Calhoun Street.
Be sure to complete each weekıs readings PRIOR TO coming to class. Additional background readings are available for students who wish to read further on the weekıs topic. Also, be sure to check the class website frequently for announcements.
Attendance/In-Class Presentations
Attendance and participation in lecture is integral to this course. Because there will be discussion of materials not included in the readings, it is essential that you make every class meeting. Lecture notes will not be available– so come prepared.
Paper Assignment
Written assignments for the class consist of one roughly 3-5 page commentary on the readings and one 7-10 page term paper. The reading commentary involves comparing and contrasting depictions of youth in week one's articles by Males and Trump. Refer to specific examples from the texts to explore the similarities and differences in ways in which they present "youth." What are the consequences of such modes of presentation?
For
the term paper, you will be asked to bring a critical perspective as developed
in class, to bear on an analysis of presentations of youth in the media. Based on an exploration of newspaper
articles, advertisements, and other sources of your choice, explore the ways
you see that youth are framed, and how they might framed in a different
way. Further guidelines on papers
will be presented in class. I
do not accept papers by email.
Further information will be provided in class.
Exams
There will be two exams for this course, one midterm and one final, which will be composed of a variety of question types (multiple choice, true false, short answer, etc.). Exams will be based on lectures and readings. No make-up exams will be given – so you must conform to the times as scheduled for the midterm and final. Further details about the midterm and final exams will be discussed in class.
Grading Policy
You will not be graded on a competitive basis, so in theory everyone can do well in the class. However, in order to gets a top grade, students will be expected to achieve standards of excellence in their work. If you are dissatisfied with any grade you receive, you must submit a written request for a review of the grade, including a defense, no later than one week after the work is handed back to the class. By requesting a review of the grade you receive, you invite the possibility that the new grade will be lower than the original grade, as well as the possibility that it will be higher. Points will be distributed as follows:
Participation: 10%
Commentary on the Readings: 20%
Term Paper: 30% A+ 98-100 B+ 88-89 C+ 78-79 D+ 65-69
Mid-Term: 20% A 93-97 B 83-87 C 73-77 D 55-64
Final Exam: 20% A- 90-92 B- 80-82 C- 70-72 D- 50-54
Any cases of cheating or plagiarism will be referred to the Office of the Dean of Students. For guidelines on avoiding these offenses, please see the University Of Cincinnati Student Code of Conduct at: http://www.psc.uc.edu/pp/PP_Code_Of_Conduct.htm
Weekly Topics and Readings
Please note that the following schedule, including project and exam dates, is tentative, and may change based on how quickly we cover the material.
Week 1:
Introduction:
Conceptualizing Youth/Conceptualizing Gangs
Reader: Trump, Kenneth S. 1996. ³Gangs and School Safety.² Pp. 45-60 in Allan M. Hoffman Ed. Schools, Violence and Society. Westport, Conn.: Praeger.
Males, Mike. 1999. Framing Youth. Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press. Pp. 1-29.
Part I: Studies of ³Youth²
Week 2: Introduciton
Reader: Williams, Terry and William Kornblum. 1985. Growing Up Poor. New York: Lexington Books. Pp. ix-14.
McLaughlin,
Milbrey W. 1993. ³Embedded Identities: Enabling Balance in Urban Contexts.² Chapter 2 in Identity and Inner-City
Youth, Shirley Brice Heath and Milbrey W. McLaughlin (Eds.). New York: Teachers College Press.
Week 3: Youth In Situ
Reader: Ashmalla, Rosemarie Ann. 1999. Lost in the System. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. Pp. x-23.
Sharff, Jagna Wojcicka. 1998. King Kong on 4th Street. Boulder: Westview Press. Pp. 1-7.
Week 4: Youth in School
Fordham, Signithia. 1988. "Racelessness as a Factor in Black Students' School Success: Pragmatic Strategy or Pyrrhic Victory?" Harvard Educational Review. 58(1)54-84.
Fine, Michelle. 1988. "Sexuality, Schooling, and Adolescent Females: The Missing Discourse of Desire." Harvard Educational Review. 58(1):29-5.
Mid-Term
Commentary Due
Part II: Studies of ³Gangs²
Week 5: An Introduction to Gang Research
Text: ³The History of
Gang Research,² pp. 15-21.
³Barrio
Gangs,² pp. 22-32.
³The
Working Gang,² pp. 144-156.
Week 6:
Typologies of Gangs
Text: ³Defining and Understanding Gangs,² Pp. 2-14.
Reader: Garot, Robert. 2002a. ³Varieties of Studentsı Accounts
of Gang Affiliation.²
Week 7:
Community Ambivalence Towards Gangs
Reader: Venkatesh, Sudhir Alladi. 1997. ³The Social Organization of Street Gang Activity in an Urban Ghetto.² American Journal of Sociology. 1031:82-111.
Garot, Robert. 2002b. ³Staffıs Ways of Coming to Terms with Gangs: Relational Practices²
Week 8: Constructions of Gangs, Part 1: Media and Police Constructions
Reader: Meehan, Albert J. 2000. ³The Organizational Career of Gang Statistics.² The Sociological Quarterly. 41(3):337-370.
McCorckle,
Richard C. and Terance D. Miethe.
1998. ³The Political and
Organizational Response to Gangs:
An Examination of the Moral Panicı in Nevada.² Justice Quarterly. 15(1):41-64.
Week 9: Constructions of Gangs, Part 2: Academic Constructions
Reader: Katz, Jack and Curtis
Jackson-Jacobs. 2002. ³The Criminologistsı Gang² UCLA: Unpublished Manuscript.
Part III: Conceptualizing ³Helping²
Week 10:
Reader: Pp. 275-288;
289-302; 320-329; 330-344
Final Exam
Term Paper Due
Do not skip lines between paragraphs (like Iım doing here). Use an easily legible font, 12-point size works in most types. Papers should be typewritten, double-spaced with approximately 1" margins. Number all pages. Papers should be stapled. This means no plastic binders, no folding the edges together and no paper clips. The following information should appear in the upper right-hand corner of the first page: name, student ID#, date, paper topic number, and title. A bibliography is a necessary part of a research paper (see Citation, below), and should be attached at the end.
You should make sure that you read the paper assignment instructions and follow them closely. The most important feature of your paper is that you have answered the question you have chosen. No matter how good your ideas are, if canıt demonstrate your understanding of the question, and give an answer to it in your paper, then you will not do very well.
Academic papers have introductions, bodies, and conclusions. An introduction should be simple and explicit, and describe what you are going to do, and in what order. It should provide a complete "road map" for the rest of the paper. Tell your reader something about the study you are conducting, what you will focus on in the paper, what points you will be making, what you will argue, and what you will conclude. It is perfectly acceptable to use the first person voice and say, "I will focus on ...", after all who is writing this paper, anyway?
The body of the paper must be well organized. You must use paragraphs to divide your thoughts. A paragraph is a set of sentences with one common idea. Each paragraph should have a topic sentence and make one main point. Your argument should flow logically from one paragraph to the next. Please use subheadings if they are appropriate or help the reader navigate through different sections of the paper. I should be able to make sense of your paper, in a general way, by reading the introduction, the first sentence of each paragraph, and the conclusion.
In your analysis, you will need to make explicit links between your "data" and the relevant course material. You will need to organize your paper around a description of the data you are analyzing and a review of the course material that helps to make your points. You should address all of the analytical issues I have proposed in the question. You may find that these do not exhaust the points you need to make, and answering your own additional questions may help further your analysis. Donıt overlook a review of the course material (even though you know that I already know it). That way I can determine how fluent you are with the concepts, and how well you are able to apply them to your subject matter. There are various strategies for integrating the course material with an analysis of your data, but these are indispensable.
For your conclusion, restate the paperıs highlights and take the opportunity to tie things up neatly. You may restate ideas from your opening paragraph. Repeat your thesis and briefly summarize the main evidence you have included. After reviewing your main points, you may speculate, include personal reactions, pose additional questions or suggest avenues for future research, and the like. If you have some doubts about whether your format will work effectively for the assignment, please feel free to consult with me about it first.
This is sometimes tricky, but by this point in your academic career, it is essential that you do it correctly. It is expected that you will use material from the texts and lecture to analyze your subject. Thus, whether you use direct quotes or paraphrases, you must give credit to the authors of those words, when they are not your own.
If you cite a lecture, do it this way: (Lecture, 9/9/02). However, relying solely on lecture citations for material that is also in the readings reveals to me that your familiarity with the readings is inadequate. So you should be sure to prioritize. Where appropriate, always cite the original source and not my delivery of it in lecture.
Directly quoted course materials from the reader should be cited in one of the following ways.
"Self-absorption is consistent with the emphasis on self-satisfaction fostered by capitalism in general and advertising in particular² (Karp, 1996:176).
Or alternately:
David A. Karp (1996:176) suggests that, "self-absorption is consistent with the emphasis on self-satisfaction fostered by capitalism in general and advertising in particular.²
Also, be sure to cite any ideas that you borrow, not just quoted text. For instance:
Many analysts have noted how self-absorption may be fostered by capitalism (Karp, 1996:176).
Any direct quotation that is longer than three lines needs to be set off from the body of the paper by indenting and single-spacing. Since your papers will be double-spaced and indented only to begin paragraphs, you will see the contrast. Be careful to differentiate between what the textbook authors are saying themselves, and the other authors that they may in turn quote. Cite accordingly. Do not string quotes together without putting them in context with your own prose. When you use a direct quote, place it in the context of a sentence that includes an explanation of what the quote means and why it is useful in service of the point you are making.
A full reference, including the authorıs name, book or article title, publishing information and page numbers will appear in a separate, alphabetically organized bibliography at the end of the paper, under the heading, ³References.² Refer to your syllabus and/or the reference sections of our articles as examples.
In general, write as simply as possible. Never use a big word, when a little one will do. Big words donıt necessarily convey intellectual prowess – especially when they are awkwardly used. Your word choice should be appropriate to formal writing: no slang, and no contractions ("canıt", "donıt"), unless you are quoting others or it somehow better helps you to make your point. You must use words that actually exist, and words must be used correctly. Look up definitions and spellings if you are unsure. Spell check often misses words.
Never refer to notions such as ³truth² or
³reality.² Your reader will
decide, based on your evidence and arguments, on the veracity of your
claims. Hence, avoid statements
such as, ³It is true that² or that a certain claim or finding is more ³real²
or ³realistic.²
Avoid using the indefinite "you". You will notice that I am addressing these instructions to you; that is, I am using the second person. That is because I am giving these instructions to a definite person or set of persons. In your papers, unless you mean to address the reader directly, do not use "you" when you mean to use "one" or ³we.² Refer to yourself as "I" instead of the royal "we." It is perfectly acceptable to use the first person singular in papers – it is not too informal. Use "we" for the author and the reader together: "We have seen how breaching experiments disturb our taken-for-granted notions about reality." Never refer to ³society² as an active agent (thatıs my pet peeve), as in, ³Society requires that people follow norms.²
Avoid "a lot" (and by the way itıs not spelled "alot"), and "very". Hemingway and Morrison do not need them, and neither do you. Donıt confuse "their/there/theyıre" or "itıs/its", or "to/two/too", or were/weıre/where", etc. Also please differentiate between "suppose" and "supposed" – these are not interchangeable, and are almost always improperly applied. These are sets of words that give students trouble, so please be careful.
Try to avoid using "he", "his", or "mankind" to mean anyone or all in general. If for some reason you have a strong ideological commitment to using "he" as the generic, you may do so, but it is not accurate, and there are other options available.
Make sure that nouns and verbs agree in number. Avoid sentence fragments. Make sure that the sentences you write have subjects and predicates. Verbs are also necessary. Do not leave a clause hanging without these necessary components. Avoid run-on sentences. Make sure that if you link things together in a sentence that you do so by using the proper connective words or punctuation marks. These kinds of mistakes can often be caught by reading your paper aloud. If it sounds wrong, it probably is.
Always follow the parsimony principle. That is, use as few words as possible to make your point.
One way to start is by saying your ideas out loud, and writing them down. Just get the words out of your head and onto the page where you will be able to work with them more easily. I strongly suggest that you write more than one draft of your paper. Most successful papers are begun well in advance of the night before the assignment is due. The best way to start is to just spew out a messy first draft, getting all of your ideas and facts down on paper (if you write long-hand) or your computer screen (if you prefer to word process). Then, a second draft will help you to organize the sections, focus your argument, and refine the content and style.
You must be at this point before you come to see me about your paper. Although we will be unable to read entire drafts, we may be able to discuss with you specific parts of your thesis or analysis, and/or help you with difficulties in transitions between ideas or sections of your argument. A final draft is useful for correcting spelling and grammatical errors, and for formatting the paper. You must proofread your own paper. It is not acceptable to turn in a paper with typographical errors, misspellings, nouns and verbs that do not agree, misused words, run-on sentences, sentence fragments, etc. You may want to rewrite the beginning or end of your paper in the last draft. Often in composing your paper, you will have changed your focus or ideas somewhat by the time you finish. You will want to make sure that these changes are reflected in a new version of your introduction or conclusion.
Finally, re-read your own paper and imagine that someone else wrote it. Does it make sense? Fix it, if it doesnıt. You may also want to get someone else to read your paper and give you comments. It is often hard to be objective when you are so close in the writing process. If you have trouble with your writing, get help. For further suggestions on writing, I suggest:
Richlin-Klonsky, Judith and Ellen Strenski (Eds.). 1994. A Guide to Writing Sociology Papers. New York: St. Martinıs Press.
Becker, Howard
S. 1986. Writing for Social Scientists: How to Start and Finish
Your Thesis, Book, or Article.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Also, please feel free to visit during office hours for personal assistance.
Good luck, and start writing now!
*This document adapted with thanks from Dr. Kerry Ferris' Case Study Essay Guidelines.