UPSC Sociology Optional Course Details : -
Features:
- Class Schedule: 2-hour sessions, 5 days a week.
- Comprehensive Syllabus Coverage: Complete coverage of Optional Subject Paper I & II through detailed lectures.
- Clarity in Concepts: Complex terms and concepts are explained in a clear, easy-to-understand manner.
- Practical Examples: Everyday examples are used to ensure students not only grasp concepts but can also articulate and write effectively about them.
- Answer Writing Practice: Integrated answer writing practice throughout the course duration.
- Regular Class Tests: Frequent tests followed by focused discussions and improvement suggestions.
- Study Materials: Comprehensive handouts and notes with clear explanations and up-to-date information.
- Accessibility: Classes are available in both Offline and Live-Online formats, offering flexibility and convenience for all students.
Sociology Optional Coaching in Delhi
Factors |
RAM IAS ACADEMY |
Faculty |
Babita Madem |
Batch Size |
50 |
Teaching style at coaching |
Interactive and Notes giving |
Good Infrastructure of Online Facility |
It allows unlimited access to its classes to the end of the batch. |
Performance of students |
Many rank holders have cracked UPSC CSE. |
Feedback from past students |
Past students said that this institute gives guidance in all aspects from every aspect and maintains a balance with teachers. Good teaching staff with conceptual teaching. |
Offline Fees |
Rs. 50,000 (Incl. GST) |
Online Fees |
Rs. 45,000 (Incl. GST) |
Hybrid Fees |
Rs. 55,000 (Incl. GST) |
Website |
www.ramias.in |
Phone Number |
8368853795 |
Mode |
Online, Offline & Hybrid |
Syllabus of Sociology
Paper - I
FUNDAMENTALS OF SOCIOLOGY
Sociology - The Discipline:
- (a) Modernity and social changes in Europe and emergence of Sociology.
- (b) Scope of the subject and comparison with other social sciences.
- (c) Sociology and common sense.
Sociology as Science:
- (a) Science, scientific method, and critique.
- (b) Major theoretical strands of research methodology.
- (c) Positivism and its critique.
- (d) Fact value and objectivity.
- (e) Non-positivist methodologies.
Research Methods and Analysis:
- (a) Qualitative and quantitative methods.
- (b) Techniques of data collection.
- (c) Variables, sampling, hypothesis, reliability, and validity.
Sociological Thinkers:
- (a) Karl Marx - Historical materialism, mode of production, alienation, class struggle.
- (b) Emile Durkhteim - Division of labour, social fact, suicide, religion and society.
- (c) Max Weber - Social action, ideal types, authority, bureaucracy, protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism.
- (d) Talcolt Parsons - Social system, pattern variables.
- (e) Robert K. Merton - Latent and manifest functions, conformity and deviance, reference groups.
- (f) Mead - Self and identity.
Stratification and Mobility:
- (a) Concepts - equality, inequality, hierarchy, exclusion, poverty, and deprivation.
- (b) Theories of social stratification - Structural functionalist theory, Marxist theory, Weberian theory.
- (c) Dimensions - Social stratification of class, status groups, gender, ethnicity and race.
- (d) Social mobility - open and closed systems, types of mobility, sources and causes of mobility.
Works and Economic Life:
- (a) Social organization of work in different types of society - slave society, feudal society, industrial capitalist society.
- (b) Formal and informal organization of work.
- (c) Labour and society.
Politics and Society:
- (a) Sociological theories of power.
- (b) Power elite, bureaucracy, pressure groups and political parties.
- (c) Nation, state, citizenship, democracy, civil society, ideology.
- (d) Protest, agitation, social movements, collective action, revolution.
Religion and Society:
- (a) Sociological theories of religion.
- (b) Types of religious practices: animism, monism, pluralism, sects, cults.
- (c) Religion in modern society: religion and science, secularization, religious revivalism, fundamentalism.
Systems of Kinship:
- (a) Family, household, marriage.
- (b) Types and forms of family.
- (c) Lineage and descent.
- (d) Patriarchy and sexual division of labour.
- (e) Contemporary trends.
Social Change in Modern Society:
- (a) Sociological theories of social change.
- (b) Development and dependency.
- (c) Agents of social change.
- (d) Education and social change.
- (e) Science, technology, and social change.
Paper - II
INDIAN SOCIETY: STRUCTURE AND CHANGE
A. Introducing Indian Society:
Perspectives on the Study of Indian Society:
- (a) Indology (G.S. Ghure).
- (b) Structural functionalism (M. N. Srinivas).
- (c) Marxist sociology (A. R. Desai).
Impact of colonial rule on Indian society:
- (a) Social background of Indian nationalism.
- (b) Modernization of Indian tradition.
- (c) Protests and movements during the colonial period.
- (d) Social reforms.
B. Social Structure:
Rural and Agrarian Social Structure:
(a) The idea of Indian village and village studies
(b) Agrarian social structure— evolution of land tenure system, land reforms.
Caste System:
- (a) Perspectives on the study of caste systems: G. S. Ghurye, M. N. Srinivas, Louis Dumont, Andre Beteille.
- (b) Features of caste system.
- (c) Untouchability-forms and perspectives
Tribal Communities in India:
- (a) Definitional problems.
- (b) Geographical spread.
- (c) Colonial policies and tribes.
- (d) Issues of integration and autonomy.
Social Classes in India:
- (a) Agrarian class structure.
- (b) Industrial class structure.
- (c) Middle classes in India.
Systems of Kinship in India:
- (a) Lineage and descent in India.
- (b) Types of kinship systems.
- (c) Family and marriage in India.
- (d) Household dimensions of the family.
- (e) Patriarchy, entitlements, and sexual division of labour.
Religion and Society:
- (a) Religious communities in India.
- (b) Problems of religious minorities.
C. Social Changes in India:
Visions of Social Change in India:
- (a) Idea of development planning and mixed economy.
- (b) Constitution, law, and social change.
- (c) Education and social change.
Rural and Agrarian Transformation in India:
- (a) Programmes of rural development, Community Development Programme, cooperatives, poverty alleviation schemes.
- (b) Green revolution and social change.
- (c) Changing modes of production in Indian agriculture.
- (d) Problems of rural labour, bondage, migration.
Industrialization and Urbanisation in India:
- (a) Evolution of modern industry in India.
- (b) Growth of urban settlements in India.
- (c) Working class: structure, growth, class mobilization.
- (d) Informal sector, child labour.
- (e) Slums and deprivation in urban areas.
Politics and Society:
- (a) Nation, democracy and citizenship.
- (b) Political parties, pressure groups, social and political elite.
- (c) Regionalism and decentralization of power.
- (d) Secularization.
Social Movements in Modern India:
- (a) Peasants and farmers' movements.
- (b) Women’s movement.
- (c) Backward classes & Dalit movements.
- (d) Environmental movements.
- (e) Ethnicity and Identity movements.
Population Dynamics:
- Population size, growth, composition and distribution.
- Components of population growth: birth, death, migration.
- Population Policy and family planning.
- Emerging issues: ageing, sex ratios, child and infant mortality, reproductive health.
Challenges of Social Transformation:
- (a) Crisis of development: displacement, environmental problems and sustainability.
- (b) Poverty, deprivation and inequalities.
- (c) Violence against women.
- (d) Caste conflicts.
- (e) Ethnic conflicts, communalism, religious revivalism.
- (f) Illiteracy and disparities in education.
8. Books to Study for UPSC Sociology Syllabus
9. The below table provides a booklist for both papers on sociology optional. Initially, one can start with Sociology Ncert’s Class 11th and 12th for a basic understanding of the subject. After that, move to standard or reference books for the subject as listed below:
Booklist for Paper 1 |
Booklist for Paper 2 |
- Haralambos and Holborn's Sociology: Themes and Perspectives - Anthony Giddens' Sociology Introduction. - George Ritzer's sociological theory. - O. P. Gauba's An Introduction to Political Theory. - Essential Sociology by Nitin Sangwan - IGNOU Sociology Study Material |
- Social Change in Modern India by M N Srinivas. - Caste: Its Twentieth-Century Avatar Veena Das's Indian Sociology Handbook by M N Srinivas - IGNOU Sociology Study Material - Indian Society: Themes and Social Issues by Nadeem Hasnain - Yogendra Singh's modernization of Indian tradition. - A R Desai's Social Background of Indian Nationalism. |