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  • Module 6: Social Stratification and Inequality

    This house, formerly owned by the famous television producer, Aaron Spelling, was for a time listed for $150 million dollars

    Figure 6.1 This house, formerly owned by the famous television producer, Aaron Spelling, was for a time listed for $150 million dollars. It is considered one of the most extravagant homes in the United States and is a testament to the wealth generated in some industries. (Photo courtesy of Atwater Village Newbie/flickr)


    Introduction

    Eric grew up on a farm in rural Ohio, left home to serve in the Army, and returned to take over the family farm a few years later. He moved into the same house he had grown up in and soon married a young woman with whom he had attended high school. As they began to have children, they quickly realized that the income from the farm was no longer sufficient to meet their needs. With little experience beyond the farm, Eric accepted a job as a clerk at a local grocery store. It was there that his life and the lives of his wife and children were changed forever.

    One of the managers at the store liked Eric, his attitude, and his work ethic. He took Eric under his wing and began to groom him for advancement at the store. Eric rose through the ranks with ease. Then the manager encouraged him to take a few classes at a local college. This was the first time Eric had seriously thought about college. Could he be successful, Eric wondered? Could he actually be the first to earn a degree in his family? Fortunately, his wife also believed in him and supported his decision to take his first class. Eric asked his wife and his manager to keep his college enrollment a secret. He did not want others to know about it in case he failed.

    Eric was nervous on his first day of class. He was older than the other students, and he had never considered himself college material. Through hard work and determination, however, he did very well in the class. While he still doubted himself, he enrolled in another class. Again, he performed very well. As his doubt began to fade, he started to take more and more classes. Before he knew it, he was walking across the stage to receive a Bachelor’s degree with honors. The ceremony seemed surreal to Eric. He couldn’t believe he had finished college, which once seemed like an impossible feat.

    Shortly after graduation, Eric was admitted into a graduate program at a well-respected university where he earned a Master’s degree. He had not only become the first in his family to attend college but also he had earned a graduate degree. Inspired by Eric’s success, his wife enrolled at a technical college, obtained a degree in nursing, and became a registered nurse working in a local hospital’s labor and delivery department. Eric and his wife both worked their way up the career ladder in their respective fields and became leaders in their organizations. They epitomized the American Dream—they worked hard and it paid off.

    This story may sound familiar. After all, nearly one in three first-year college students is a first-generation degree candidate, and it is well documented that many are not as successful as Eric. According to the Center for Student Opportunity, a national nonprofit, 89 percent of first-generation students will not earn an undergraduate degree within six years of starting their studies. In fact, these students “drop out of college at four times the rate of peers whose parents have postsecondary degrees” (Center for Student Opportunity quoted in Huot 2014).

    Why do students with parents who have completed college tend to graduate more often than those students whose parents do not hold degrees? That question and many others will be answered as we explore social stratification.

    Module Objectives

    At the end of this module, students will be able to:

    1. Differentiate between open and closed stratification systems (CLO 4)
    2. Distinguish between caste and class systems (CLO 4)
    3. Describe several types of social mobility (CLO 2)
    4. Recognize characteristics that define and identify the class (CLO 5 and CLO 6)
    Introduction to Global Inequality
    To achieve these objectives: 

    MODULE ACTIVITIES

    1. Read the Module 6 Introduction
    2. Read Chapter 6: Social Stratification and Inequality in Introduction to Sociology Pressbooks text
    3. Respond to the discussion prompts and questions by the due dates outlined in the assignment. Due: Post Day xx, Reply Day xx (MO 3, CLO 2)
    4. Submit your completed assignments by the due date assigned to each assignment. Due Day xx (MO 1, 2, CLO4, CLO2)