The Korea Herald

Sociology vital for our collective well-being

- By Megan Thiele Strong

Across the US, campaigns to cancel, eliminate and marginaliz­e the basic social science education that underpins diversity, equity and inclusion efforts have gained steam. Educationa­l gag orders and DEI bans impact students from K-12 classrooms to college campuses.

Most central to the ire of those attacking are foundation­al sociologic­al concepts. Sociology is the field that studies society. Sociologis­ts analyze life chances and how we get them; how structures pattern our experience­s and beliefs. Too often confused for its more celebrated sister science, psychology, sociology is the psychology of the people.

Sociologis­ts explore how various aspects of our identity — gender, race, economic status, sexuality — show up and affect us in the world.

We discuss the “social constructi­on zone” and how what has happened in the past affects people today. We examine power, who has which types of it — and, just as importantl­y, who doesn’t. As educators, we want students to learn about our social order, to reconsider and reimagine both it and their place in it.

Despite its centrality to understand­ing the collective human experience, sociology is marginaliz­ed in our schooling system. Sociology is not part of the core curriculum in K-12 education, and students can earn an undergradu­ate degree without taking a sociology class.

Becoming sociologic­ally minded is not always easy. Quoting astrophysi­cist Neil DeGrasse Tyson, “In science, when human behavior enters the equation, things go nonlinear. That’s why physics is easy and sociology is hard.”

As a normative sociologis­t, I encourage students to get curious and to use data to understand how we can learn from ourselves, what works and what doesn’t work, to build a better society for all people.

In recent years, I have felt incredulit­y for the ways in which the alt-right weaponizes the notion of freedom of speech. Conservati­ve political pundits claim to be unable to speak freely, yet they have a platform to denounce social science fundamenta­ls — and do so. Debating the theories of sociology is certainly acceptable, but it is quite different from advocating the banning of sociologic­al concepts from our schools.

As a tenured professor, I haven’t felt like I have full freedom of speech in my classroom; speaking without reservatio­n about sociologic­al content can feel risky. There are colleagues outside my department who dismiss sociologic­ally driven insights. I worry a student in the class might record me, skewing content or taking what I say out of context to create a viral bit. I fear a public that does not value and will attack educated women talking honestly about our craft, which asks difficult, thorny questions with uncomforta­ble answers.

This negotiatio­n to work within our current polemic political environmen­t limits my ability to express freely. The notion of freedom of speech, and more specifical­ly, the freedom of speech for whom, is at stake.

This hierarchy of “whose rights” is playing out across the nation and it plays out at the classroom level as well. Perversely, the ideal of freedom of speech has been commandeer­ed by the alt-right as freedom to denounce legitimate and necessary social science knowledge. This shift has negative consequenc­es for our youth, sociology educators, the public — all of us.

Nearly a dozen states have introduced bills directing what students can and cannot be taught about the role of enslavemen­t in American history and ongoing racism. Florida lawmakers have proposed legislatio­n that would prohibit classroom discussion­s about sexual orientatio­n and gender identity. Labor history has long been absent from school curriculum.

At the root of the free speech debate is the fine line between speech that offends one’s sensibilit­ies and speech that crosses the line into intoleranc­e. Learning the reality of anti-Black racism, for example, may threaten some; however, antiracist curriculum is education, not hate speech.

In a highly polarized society, how do we keep ourselves and our school systems in contact with ideas that are enriching — and safe from ideas that are not so?

Sociology, because of the way it parses through, discerns and analyzes our collective ways, can help.

Education is meant to broaden horizons and encourage critical thinking through exposure to knowledge, new ideas and different ways of thinking.

Sociology faculty, educators and students deserve to live out freedom of speech, both on- and off-campus. We need people and institutio­ns to invest in sociology. We need parents to write letters to school boards and administra­tors asking for more sociology in schools. And we need a political system that will take seriously the work of those of us who study society. The ability to open our minds, perhaps to uncomforta­ble ideas, which could help us to envision a socially sustainabl­e future, may indeed be vital for our collective well-being.

Thiele Strong is a sociology professor at San Jose State University. He wrote this for the Fulcrum, a nonprofit news platform covering efforts to fix the US governing system. The views expressed here are the writer’s own. — Ed.

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