KEMBAR78
IPHP Q2 MOD3.pptx
After going through this module, you are
expected to:
1. identify the different types of society;
2. differentiate their qualities;
3. explain digital society and digital citizenship;
4. identify the effects of being a member of
digital society.
LEARNING TASK 1
Before delving into the discussion, fill
out the table on the next slides about
the things you have learned from society
and your contributions to it.
Things you
learned from
society
How did you
learn them?
Impact on you
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Things you have
contributed to
society
How did you
share them to
the community?
Impact on
Society
What is a
society?
Society may be defined as the
permanent union of men who are
united by modes of behavior that
are demanded by some common
end, value, or interest. Analyzed
semantically, the term denotes a
union of one kind or another.
(Philosophical Analysis)
People who live in a definable
community and who share a
culture. (Strayer, 2015)
“Society is a number of like-minded
individuals who know and enjoy their
like-mindedness and are therefore
able to work together for common
ends.”
(Giddings)
“Society is the general term for
persons living in social relations.”
(Kimbal Young)
“Society is the complex of organized
associations and institutions within
the community.”
(George Douglas Howard Cole)
A largely self-sufficient community arising
because of the bare necessities of life and
continuing for the sake of a good life,
common to all its members.
(Aristotle)
The ideal society is one in which the
citizens live happy lives. Further, they do
so not by making their main aim money,
or a pleasant life, or power, as is the case
with most people in our societies.
(Plato)
7 elements of society?
• Social Organization.
• Language.
• Customs and Traditions.
• Religion.
• Arts and Literature.
• Forms of Government.
• Economic Systems.
CATEGORIES OF SOCIETY
Pre-Industrial Societies
Industrial Society
Post Industrial Society
Pre-Industrial Societies
Tribal Society
Feudal Society
Tribal Society
“Tribe” - a group of peoples living
in a primitive setting under a
leader or chief
Tribal Society
“preliterate
society”
“primitive
society”
or
4. language systems of tribes are
unwritten which provides a narrow
extent of communication
5. show a self-sustaining structure
which is absent in the modern society
Feudal Society
Feudalism refers to the
political, and social system that
prevailed in Europe from about
ninth to the fifteenth century
Due to the lack of effective
centralized government during
this period, kings and lords
granted land and provided
protection to lesser nobles known
as vassals.
In return, these vassals swore oaths of
loyalty and military service to their
lords. Peasants known as serfs were
bound to the land and were subject to
the will of their lords.
INDUSTRIA
L
SOCIETY
One which uses advance technology to
drive a masssive production industry that
will support a large
population. The objective of an industrial
economy is the fast and efficient
manufacturing of standardized products.
Post Industrial
Society
Post Industrial Society is marked by a progress
from a manufacturing-based to a service-based
economy. Post industrialization is most evident in
countries and regions that were among the first
to experience the Industrial Revolution, such as
the United States, western Europe, and Japan.
Daniel Bell, an American sociologist, first
coined the term ‘post-industrial’ in 1973 in
his book “The Coming of Post-Industrial
Society: A Venture in Social Forecasting,”
which describes several features of this
kind of society.
Characteristics of a
Post Industrial
Society
1.a shift from the production of goods to the
production of services
2.replacement of manual laborers with technical
and professional workers
3.the replacement of practical knowledge with
theoretical knowledge
4.focusing to the theoretical and ethical
implications of new technologies,
5. the development of recent scientific disciplines—that
involve new forms of information technology, cybernetics,
or artificial intelligence—to evaluate the theoretical and
ethical implications of new technologies.
6. an emphasis on the university and polytechnic institutes
which produce graduates who innovate and lead the new
technologies contributing to a postindustrial society.
7. the changing values and norms which reflects the
influences on the society
DIGITAL SOCIETY
AND THE
INFORMATION AGE
 have wildly affected our interactions and
activity in the 21st century
have significantly changed our way of
learning, working and socializing
we rely with the use of modern technology
paved many opportunities reaching bigger
audiences
 have access to sources and technologies which
enables people to connect with activities whether
economic, social, political, or educational
people can manipulate the phasing of learning (e.g.
free sources) or businesses (e.g. online selling)
without a large sum of money used as a capital and
can share ideas and perspectives to the international
audiences as they connect beyond
A digital society is a modern, progressive
society formed as a result of the adoption and
integration of Information and Communication
Technologies (ICT) at home, work, education
and recreation and supported by advanced
telecommunications and connectivity systems
and solutions.
Digital
Citizenship
Digital Citizenship is the ability
to navigate our digital
a way that is safe and responsible
to actively and respectfully engage
these spaces.
A digital citizen is a person who is
knowledgeable and responsible enough to
effectively use different social platforms in
the internet and often engage in useful
topics and issues that will help build a
better society, politics and government.
Being
Digital Citizens
Isin and Rupert (2015)
(2015)
This book suggests that if we constitute ourselves
as digital citizens, we
become subjects of power in cyberspace. We
enact ourselves on
the internet, considering and understanding the
opportunities presented by
this medium, such as anonymity, communication,
and influence.
THE
DISEMBODIED
SUBJECT
Disembodied
lacking of body
freed from the body
lacking in substance,
or any firm relation to
Disembodied subject
(in technological society) does not mean that
human person is no longer living with their
bodies, rather, in a manner of speaking, people
are slowly putting aside their bodies in relating
with others because the technological society
offers an alternative which apparently resolves
human of an embodied subject.
 Face_x0002_to-face interaction is too stressful and
difficult while virtual interactions are relatively
easier
 people prefer communicating using virtual world,
even if the person involved is someone seen on a
regular basis
 Everyone is glued to their devices – cellphones,
tablets, laptops, or any device and they are all
probably interacting with their virtual societies
EXAMPLE OF
DISEMBODIED
HUMAN
RELATIONSHIPS
taking selfies
virtual meetings
video calling
online educational
learning
Learning Task: Using an
overlapping Venn diagram, learners must
analyze
all the differences and similarities of the
major historic societies. Use the
rubrics as guide for answering.
Performance
Areas
Outstanding 4 Very
Satisfactory
3
Satisfactory
2
Needs
Improvement 1
Concept
Arrangemen
t
Each
section of
the diagram
contains
four facts
easily
identified.
Each
section
of the
diagram
contains
three facts
easily
identified.
Each
section
of the
diagram
contains
two
facts that
are
somewhat
identified.
Each
section
of the
diagram
contains
very
few facts
that
are not
easily
Primary
Source
Content
The student
exhibits
mastery of
the material
as
evidenced
by attention
to detail.
Student
illustrates a
firmer
understan-
ding of most
of
the
similarities
and
differences
brainstormed
The
student
displays a
limited
understan-
ding of
some
details on
the
subject
matter.
Student
shows little
or no
understan-
ding of the
topic.
There are a
few details.
Linking
Content
together
Reflects
factual
information
that
corresponds
with the
appropriate
section of the
diagram.
Most of the
information is
factual and
seemingly
corresponds
with the
appropriate
section of the
diagram.
Reflects some
factual
information
and
attempts to
put it
in the
correspondin
g
section of the
diagram.
Contains
non_x0002_fa
ctual
information
that
does not
correspond to
the
appropriate
section of the
diagram
True or False: Write the word True if the
statement is correct and write the
word False if the statement conveys
otherwise. Write your answer on a separate
sheet of paper.
1. Human societies remain the same.
2. Tribal societies have an established
property right.
3. Post-industrial societies focus on
development of mass production.
4. Virtual society relatively provides a new world
for us.
5. The virtual society and the technological
devices today are starting to reshape the
human person and human interactions and
relationships.
6. Virtual worlds and disembodied
relations promote commitment.
7. One of the features of industrial society is that it
emphasizes on the importance of universities and
polytechnic institutes which produce graduates
who innovate and lead the new technologies
contributing to a postindustrial society.
8. Feudal society has its historical roots from Asia
Minor.
9. The language systems of tribes are well-
written which provides a vast extent of
communication.
10. Human society continuously develop as
humans develops themselves.
IPHP Q2 MOD3.pptx

IPHP Q2 MOD3.pptx

  • 2.
    After going throughthis module, you are expected to: 1. identify the different types of society; 2. differentiate their qualities; 3. explain digital society and digital citizenship; 4. identify the effects of being a member of digital society.
  • 3.
    LEARNING TASK 1 Beforedelving into the discussion, fill out the table on the next slides about the things you have learned from society and your contributions to it.
  • 4.
    Things you learned from society Howdid you learn them? Impact on you 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
  • 5.
    Things you have contributedto society How did you share them to the community? Impact on Society
  • 6.
  • 7.
    Society may bedefined as the permanent union of men who are united by modes of behavior that are demanded by some common end, value, or interest. Analyzed semantically, the term denotes a union of one kind or another. (Philosophical Analysis)
  • 8.
    People who livein a definable community and who share a culture. (Strayer, 2015)
  • 9.
    “Society is anumber of like-minded individuals who know and enjoy their like-mindedness and are therefore able to work together for common ends.” (Giddings)
  • 10.
    “Society is thegeneral term for persons living in social relations.” (Kimbal Young)
  • 11.
    “Society is thecomplex of organized associations and institutions within the community.” (George Douglas Howard Cole)
  • 12.
    A largely self-sufficientcommunity arising because of the bare necessities of life and continuing for the sake of a good life, common to all its members. (Aristotle)
  • 13.
    The ideal societyis one in which the citizens live happy lives. Further, they do so not by making their main aim money, or a pleasant life, or power, as is the case with most people in our societies. (Plato)
  • 14.
    7 elements ofsociety? • Social Organization. • Language. • Customs and Traditions. • Religion. • Arts and Literature. • Forms of Government. • Economic Systems.
  • 15.
    CATEGORIES OF SOCIETY Pre-IndustrialSocieties Industrial Society Post Industrial Society
  • 16.
  • 17.
    Tribal Society “Tribe” -a group of peoples living in a primitive setting under a leader or chief
  • 18.
  • 19.
    4. language systemsof tribes are unwritten which provides a narrow extent of communication 5. show a self-sustaining structure which is absent in the modern society
  • 20.
    Feudal Society Feudalism refersto the political, and social system that prevailed in Europe from about ninth to the fifteenth century
  • 21.
    Due to thelack of effective centralized government during this period, kings and lords granted land and provided protection to lesser nobles known as vassals.
  • 22.
    In return, thesevassals swore oaths of loyalty and military service to their lords. Peasants known as serfs were bound to the land and were subject to the will of their lords.
  • 23.
  • 24.
    One which usesadvance technology to drive a masssive production industry that will support a large population. The objective of an industrial economy is the fast and efficient manufacturing of standardized products.
  • 25.
  • 26.
    Post Industrial Societyis marked by a progress from a manufacturing-based to a service-based economy. Post industrialization is most evident in countries and regions that were among the first to experience the Industrial Revolution, such as the United States, western Europe, and Japan.
  • 27.
    Daniel Bell, anAmerican sociologist, first coined the term ‘post-industrial’ in 1973 in his book “The Coming of Post-Industrial Society: A Venture in Social Forecasting,” which describes several features of this kind of society.
  • 28.
    Characteristics of a PostIndustrial Society
  • 29.
    1.a shift fromthe production of goods to the production of services 2.replacement of manual laborers with technical and professional workers 3.the replacement of practical knowledge with theoretical knowledge 4.focusing to the theoretical and ethical implications of new technologies,
  • 30.
    5. the developmentof recent scientific disciplines—that involve new forms of information technology, cybernetics, or artificial intelligence—to evaluate the theoretical and ethical implications of new technologies. 6. an emphasis on the university and polytechnic institutes which produce graduates who innovate and lead the new technologies contributing to a postindustrial society. 7. the changing values and norms which reflects the influences on the society
  • 31.
  • 32.
     have wildlyaffected our interactions and activity in the 21st century have significantly changed our way of learning, working and socializing we rely with the use of modern technology paved many opportunities reaching bigger audiences
  • 33.
     have accessto sources and technologies which enables people to connect with activities whether economic, social, political, or educational people can manipulate the phasing of learning (e.g. free sources) or businesses (e.g. online selling) without a large sum of money used as a capital and can share ideas and perspectives to the international audiences as they connect beyond
  • 34.
    A digital societyis a modern, progressive society formed as a result of the adoption and integration of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) at home, work, education and recreation and supported by advanced telecommunications and connectivity systems and solutions.
  • 35.
  • 36.
    Digital Citizenship isthe ability to navigate our digital a way that is safe and responsible to actively and respectfully engage these spaces.
  • 37.
    A digital citizenis a person who is knowledgeable and responsible enough to effectively use different social platforms in the internet and often engage in useful topics and issues that will help build a better society, politics and government.
  • 38.
    Being Digital Citizens Isin andRupert (2015) (2015)
  • 39.
    This book suggeststhat if we constitute ourselves as digital citizens, we become subjects of power in cyberspace. We enact ourselves on the internet, considering and understanding the opportunities presented by this medium, such as anonymity, communication, and influence.
  • 40.
  • 41.
    Disembodied lacking of body freedfrom the body lacking in substance, or any firm relation to
  • 42.
    Disembodied subject (in technologicalsociety) does not mean that human person is no longer living with their bodies, rather, in a manner of speaking, people are slowly putting aside their bodies in relating with others because the technological society offers an alternative which apparently resolves human of an embodied subject.
  • 43.
     Face_x0002_to-face interactionis too stressful and difficult while virtual interactions are relatively easier  people prefer communicating using virtual world, even if the person involved is someone seen on a regular basis  Everyone is glued to their devices – cellphones, tablets, laptops, or any device and they are all probably interacting with their virtual societies
  • 44.
  • 45.
    taking selfies virtual meetings videocalling online educational learning
  • 46.
    Learning Task: Usingan overlapping Venn diagram, learners must analyze all the differences and similarities of the major historic societies. Use the rubrics as guide for answering.
  • 48.
    Performance Areas Outstanding 4 Very Satisfactory 3 Satisfactory 2 Needs Improvement1 Concept Arrangemen t Each section of the diagram contains four facts easily identified. Each section of the diagram contains three facts easily identified. Each section of the diagram contains two facts that are somewhat identified. Each section of the diagram contains very few facts that are not easily
  • 49.
    Primary Source Content The student exhibits mastery of thematerial as evidenced by attention to detail. Student illustrates a firmer understan- ding of most of the similarities and differences brainstormed The student displays a limited understan- ding of some details on the subject matter. Student shows little or no understan- ding of the topic. There are a few details.
  • 50.
    Linking Content together Reflects factual information that corresponds with the appropriate section ofthe diagram. Most of the information is factual and seemingly corresponds with the appropriate section of the diagram. Reflects some factual information and attempts to put it in the correspondin g section of the diagram. Contains non_x0002_fa ctual information that does not correspond to the appropriate section of the diagram
  • 51.
    True or False:Write the word True if the statement is correct and write the word False if the statement conveys otherwise. Write your answer on a separate sheet of paper.
  • 52.
    1. Human societiesremain the same. 2. Tribal societies have an established property right. 3. Post-industrial societies focus on development of mass production. 4. Virtual society relatively provides a new world for us.
  • 53.
    5. The virtualsociety and the technological devices today are starting to reshape the human person and human interactions and relationships. 6. Virtual worlds and disembodied relations promote commitment.
  • 54.
    7. One ofthe features of industrial society is that it emphasizes on the importance of universities and polytechnic institutes which produce graduates who innovate and lead the new technologies contributing to a postindustrial society.
  • 55.
    8. Feudal societyhas its historical roots from Asia Minor. 9. The language systems of tribes are well- written which provides a vast extent of communication. 10. Human society continuously develop as humans develops themselves.