100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

AQA A-level Sociology Theory FULL NOTE SUMMARY

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
21
Uploaded on
21-08-2025
Written in
2025/2026

AQA A-level Sociology Theory topic Notes: concise notes of all of the key topics in the 'theory' section, featuring key Sociologists. Written by an A* Sociology student and current Oxford Law student. Concise so perfect for revision! Topics included: * Sociology and science: 2 - 4 Objectivity and values: 5 Functionalism: 6 Marxism: 7 - 10 Feminist theories: 10 - 13 Action theories: 13 - 16 Globalisation, modernity and postmodernity: 16 - 19 Social policy: 20 - 21

Show more Read less










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Document information

Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
Unknown
Uploaded on
August 21, 2025
Number of pages
21
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Summary

Content preview

A-LEVEL
SOCIOLOGY: ​
THEORY
●​Sociology and science: 2 - 4
●​Objectivity and values: 5
●​Functionalism: 6
●​Marxism: 7 - 10
●​Feminist theories: 10 - 13
●​Action theories: 13 - 16
●​Globalisation, modernity and postmodernity: 16 -
19
●​Social policy: 20 - 21

, 2


Sociology and science
●​ Positivism
○​ Possible + desirable to apply the logic/methods of natural sciences to study of
society → true objective knowledge → basis for solving social problems
○​ Society = objective factual reality
○​ Reality = patterned + DURKHEIM: ‘real laws are discoverable’ that will explain
these patterns
■​ Inductive reasoning; accumulating data about the world through careful
observation and measurement →patterns → theory → verification → law
■​ Patterns can be explained by social facts
○​ Research:
■​ Experimental method; allows the investigator to test a hypothesis in the
most systematic + controlled way - examining each possible causal
factor to observe its effect while excluding all other factors
■​ Quantitative data - uncover + measure patterns of behaviour - produce
mathematically precise statements about the relationship between the
facts they are investigating → cause and effect laws
■​ Detached + objective methods
○​ Durkheims study of suicide
■​ Sociology was a science; highly individual act had social causes
■​ Quantitative data from official statistics - patterns - Protestants >
Catholics → social fact caused by other social fact (integration +
regulation)
■​ ‘Real law’ + sociology’s own unique subject matter of social facts +
explained scientifically
●​ Interpretivism
○​ Meaningful social action - can only understand be interpreting meanings
○​ Unobservable internal meanings not external causes → not a science - only deals
with laws of cause and effect
○​ Natural science studied matter which has no consciousness → straightforward
reaction to external stimulus vs sociology studies people who have
consciousness - make sense of world by attaching meanings internal to people’s
consciousness
■​ MEAD: human beings interpret the meaning of a stimulus and then
choose how to respond to it - free will
○​ WEBER: put ourselves in the place of the actor - verstehen - empathetic
understanding of actors meanings
○​ Interactionists: can have causal explanations
■​ GLASER + STRAUSS: grounded theory
○​ Phenomenologists / ethnomethodologists eg GARFINKEL: completely reject
causal explanations - radical anti-structuralist view: society is not a real thing ‘out

, 3


there’ shaping our actions - social reality = shared meanings of its members,
exists only in people’s consciousness
■​ Subject matter = interpretive procedures that people use to make sense
of the world - people’s actions are not governed by external causes → no
cause-and-effect
○​ DOUGLAS - interactionist: suicide
■​ Uncover its meanings for those involved - behaviour determined by free
will not social facts - qualitative data from case studies
■​ OS = not objective social facts but social constructions resulting from
coroners labelling certain deaths as suicide
○​ ATKINSON - ethnomethodologist: suicide
■​ Never know the ‘real rate’ of suicide even using qualitative methods -
never know for sure the meanings the deceased held
■​ Living make sense of the dead - interpretivist procedures coroners use to
classify deaths - everyone has a stock of taken-for-granted assumptions
to make sense of situations → uncover what this is + how coroners use it
●​ Postmodernism
○​ Natural science = meta-narrative - does not have special access to the truth
○​ Claims a monopoly of truth + exclude other points of view → scientific sociology
is a form of domination
●​ Poststructuralist feminists
○​ Quest for a single, scientific feminist theory = domination - covertly excludes
many groups of women
○​ Quantitative scientific methods = oppressive + cannot capture reality of women’s
experiences
●​ Undesirable - science → risk society not progress

●​ Popper: ​
○​ Fallacy of induction - never prove by verificationism
○​ Scientific statement = in principle is capable of being falsified
○​ All knowledge is provisional, temporary, capable of refutation at any moment -
never be absolute proof - good theory is just withstanding attempts to falsify it
○​ Science = public activity - thrives in open (free expression, challenge accepted
ideas) vs closed (dominated by official belief systems - claim to have absolute
truth) societies eg Galileo
○​ Sociology
■​ Much is unscientific = not falsifiable - eg Marxism revolution
■​ Can be scientific - Ford
■​ Untestable ideas are not worthless - testable at later date, examine them
●​ Kuhn:
○​ Paradigm - defines what their science is - culture accepted uncritically due to
socialisation
£5.99
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
elliebean1
2.0
(1)

Also available in package deal

Thumbnail
Package deal
A-Level Sociology MEGA BUNDLE: Concise revision notes and full mark essays!
-
9 2025
£ 67.91 More info

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
elliebean1 University of Oxford
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
9
Member since
1 year
Number of followers
0
Documents
20
Last sold
2 weeks ago
A* Notes

First Year Oxford Law Student: sharing the notes that helped me achieve straight A* in A-levels (English Literature, History, Economics, Sociology)!

2.0

1 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
1
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these revision notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No problem! You can straightaway pick a different document that better suits what you're after.

Pay as you like, start learning straight away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and smashed it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions