Graduate Diploma

Courses Offered in SOCIOLOGY

The following courses are available for your Associate's degree. Each course provides you a unique educational experience. Each course is developed by an international staff of highly skilled instructors. The course material is updated to provide students with the latest current information in the subject.

  • Course Name

  • Courses Description

  • Credit Hours

  • Contemporary Social Theory

  • This brief course on Contemporary social theory provides a formal introduction to the way theories are constructed, stated, tested, and connected together to form a scientific body of knowledge.

  • 6 Credits

  • Urban Sociology

  • This course presents a balanced review of ecological arguments that urban arena produces unique experiential and urban-based cultural effects while exploring the broader political and economic contexts that produce/modify urban environment. Course provides insights of urban experience, focuses on significance of cultural, social organizational and political dimensions of urban change.

  • 6 Credits

  • Introduction to Social Psychology

  • This course offers a broad introduction to social psychology, the scientific study of human social influence and interaction. You will explore various ways people think about, affect, and relate to one another. Goals of this course are to improve understanding of social psychological explanations for social influence and interaction.

  • 6 Credits

  • Essential Statistics in Social Science

  • This course provides streamlined and accessible introduction to statistics. The course offers an essential and accessible overview to the introduction to social statistics. Clearly written with detailed step-by-step illustrations of statistical procedures, course provides clear and logical explanations for rationale and use of statistical methods of social research. 

  • 6 Credits

  • Introduction to Sociology

  • This course provides a broad overview of sociology and how it applies to everyday life. Major theoretical perspectives and concepts are presented, including sociological imagination, culture, deviance, inequality, social change, and social structure. You also explore the influence of governments, political relations, economy, and environment.

  • 6 Credits

x
Accept