Jane Allyn Piliavin- Sociology at UW Madison, bascom graphic

SOCIOLOGY 647: SOCIOLOGY OF SPORT


Summer, 2005 : DRAFT SYLLABUS. Guest speakers are as of last year and will change. This is just to give you an idea of the class.

PROFESSOR: Jane Piliavin OFFICE HOURS: TWR: 2-4, Friday, 10-12, and by appointment
Office: 2450 Social Science

E-mail: Jpiliavi@ssc.wisc.edu

Phone: 262-4344 Home: 233-9090
  Messages: 262-2921

CLASS MEETS: TWR 11:45-1:55, 6112 Social Science Building, May 24-June 30.

REQUIRED TEXTS: (available at University Bookstore)

  • D. Stanley Eitzen and George H. Sage, Sociology of North American Sport, 7th edition, New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 2003
  • D. Stanley Eitzen, Ed., Sport in Contemporary Society: An Anthology, 6th edition, New York: Worth Publishers, 2001

There will be a few additional readings on electronic reserve or the internet.

REQUIREMENTS AND GRADING:

100% attendance is required during the times class is meeting. There are only 18 meetings of the class, so missing one class is almost like missing a week in a normal semester of 14 weeks.

There will be no examinations in this class. The requirements are as follows:

  • Class attendance and participation, including evaluations of panel presentations and final student lectures — 10% of grade
  • Book or movie review of 3 pages, due Tuesday of week 3 -- 15% of grade.
  • Panel presentation in week 3 or 4 and 4 page position paper due Tuesday of week 5 — 25% of grade
  • Take-home quizzes on readings — 15% of grade. Weeks two through five.
  • Research paper – 6 - 8 pages – (or lecture of 30-40 minutes) asking and trying to answer a sociological question related to sport. Due Friday of last week of class – 35% of grade.

All of the papers will be submitted in electronic form to http://www.turnitin.com, where they can be checked for plagiarism. This is to protect both students and professor from unnessessary unpleasantness.


BOOK OR MOVIE REVIEW:

During the first week of class, you will select a novel, autobiography, or film available on video (fictional or documentary). A list will be provided, but you can suggest one not on the list. You will do a 3 page review, consisting of one page in which you describe the contents of the book or film, followed by 2 pages in which you critique it and point out and discuss sociological issues raised in it. This is due Tuesday, June 7. Click here for Sports Illustrated's 50 best films. See instructions.

PANEL POSITION PAPER:

Each person will be required to prepare one short (4 page) paper, dealing with one of five panel topics. You will also be required to participate in the panel discussion for that topic. We will have these panel discussions on five or six topics, and you will be asked in the first week of class to rank order seven topics in terms of your interest in them and state your preferred side (pro or con). I will do magic with these ratings and let you know by the next week which panel topics we will use and which one you are assigned to. Panels will take place in weeks 3 and 4. Regardless of when you do your presentation, the paper is due on Tuesday, June 21. See instructions.

Click here for panel list.

QUIZZES:

Take-home quizzes covering the readings assigned for the week will be given out each Tuesday in weeks two through five. They are to be handed in on Wednesday of the same week. Some questions may ask you to compare something covered in one week's readings with something dealt with earlier. They will be mainly short answer and short essay, with some True-False or multiple-guess. There will be no trick questions, and all answers will be found in the readings. The purpose for this homework is -- in the absence of exams -- to assure that class members have done the reading, allowing us to have intelligent discussions of their content.

FINAL PAPER OR PRESENTATION:

This project may be an outgrowth of sociological issues raised in your book or film review, but could be on some other sociological topic. You will consult with me regarding your ideas before embarking on your project; there are three options for meeting this requirement:

  • You can do an observation of some sport, either as a participant, a coach, or a spectator. This involves taking "field notes", drawing conclusions from those notes, developing hypotheses, and, when possible, testing them with later observations. This project will also involve doing qualitative interviews with participants. You will turn in a thesis statement and a brief description of your proposed data collection methodology in week 3. Field notes will be turned in once a week in weeks 4 and 5. The project will also involve some library research dealing with the ideas you develop in the course of your observations. The final product is a 6-8 page paper.

  • You can write a 6-8 page library research paper on your topic. You will need to turn in a thesis statement and a list of book and journal references in week three, and an outline and an expanded reference list in week four. You may also use internet sources, interviews with relevant individuals, or other information.

  • You can prepare a 30-40 minute lecture to be given in week 6. This lecture should involve some use of media as visual aids. As with option two, I will want a thesis statement and a list of references in week three, and an outline and an expanded reference list in week four. The lecture cannot rely on materials assigned for the course. The final product is your lecture, but also a "script" (or a detailed outline), with copies of your visual materials or the powerpoint slides, if you use that technque, as well as your reference list.

Graduate students (and honors students) are urged to take advantage of the opportunity to present a lecture; however they are free to choose any of the projects. A longer, more "professional" paper or lecture will be expected.

With lecture projects, I will hold a conference with you on Thursday or Friday of week four, to give you nine days (two weekends and the week between) to prepare your lecture in final form. You will give it on one of the three days of week six. With written paper projects, I will return your outline with my suggestions at a conference on the Monday or Tuesday of week five. This will give you seven or eight days to write your paper.

If not very many people choose to do lectures, we will use the last two days of week six for brief presentations of the findings of your observational or library research papers.

The outline of topics, readings, videos, and guest speakers below is tentative. More interesting issues may come up, leading us to change the order of topics, omit some, or add others. I like to keep an open mind.

TOPICS OF THE COURSE AND READINGS:


E&S = Eitzen & Sage, text
E = Eitzen, book of readings

Date Subjects and Videos Assignments

Week 1:

May 24, Tuesday

Introduction

What is "sport?" (as compared to play, recreation, etc.)
Play in other species: early origins of sport?

VIDEO:

  • George Carlin, "What is sport?" (HBO)

What is sports[man]ship?

VIDEO:

  • Unsportsmanlike conduct (CBS, 1995)
  • Where have you gone, Joe Dimaggio?

No readings, of course.

Readings are due on the date on which they are indicated. For example, you should read E&S, Chapters 1 and 2 for May 25-- that is, on May 24, today).

May 25

Why study sport? What is the Sociology of sport?

Methodological issues.

The history of sport

  • VIDEOS: History of tennis (early days)
  • History of women in sport (1999)
  • E&S: Chapter 1
  • E&S, Chapter 2

May 26, Thursday

Sport and societal values.
VIDEOS:

  • George Carlin, "Baseball vs. football"
  • American game, Japanese rules (1988)

Youth sports:

VIDEOS:

  • Kids in sports (HBO, 1987) Segment 1
  • Overscheduled kids
  • Violent parents
  • Venus Williams
  • E&S: Chapter 3
  • E: pp. 1-9, 20-37 (Eitzen, Coakley)

  • E&S: Chapter 4

  • E: 38-49;136-149(Coakley, Tye, Ryan)
  • Week 2:

    May 31, Tuesday

    High school sports

    Gender in sport, I: Sport socialization for boys and girls
    VIDEOS:

    • Recruiting in grade school gyms (1993)
    • Friday night lights
    • High school girl plays football

    Sports Injuries

    • E&S Chapter 5
    • E: 50-60 (Bissinger)
    • E: 309-332; 123-133(Conniff, Eitzen & Ziinn)

    June 1, Wednesday


    Gender in sports, II:
    College sports and beyond

    * Terry Gawlik, Assistant Athletic Director, on Title IX

    VIDEOS:

    • Debbie Brill (1990),
    • Diamond dreams (1994)
    • Gender equity in sports (1993)
    • Equal access for all (1990)
    • E&S Chapter 14
    • E: pp. 150-154; 293-308 (Heywood, Weistart)

     

    ***Book or movie review is due Tuesday, June 7***

    June 2, Thursday

    The student-athlete and big-time college sports

    *David Harris: Director of Academic Services, Athletic Department

    VIDEOS:

    • UNLV Basketball (1991)/ Fresno State (1998)
    • Real Sports (HBO, 1998) Arizona State
    • Knight Commission

    Week 3:

    June 7, Tuesday

    PANEL #1

    Winning and losing: The humanistic critique of sport

    VIDEOS:

    • Columbia University 33-game losing streak/
      breaking the streak (1991)
    • Brave in the attempt (1985)/ Special Olympics ice skaters (1998)
    • E&S Chapter 15
    • E, pp. 155-165; 167-179 (Eitzen)
    June 8, Wednesday

    PANEL #2

    Character, attitudes, personality, & sport

    VIDEO:

    • Character and sport (ABC, 1988)

    Sports and positive and negative deviance


    VIDEOS:

    • Out of Bounds (1995)
    • All pumped up (steroids in High School)

     

    • E&S, Chapter 7
    • E, pp. 180-186(Begley & Brandt)


    June 9, Thursday

    PANEL #3

    Sports and aggression; male bonding


    VIDEOS:

    • Sports and violence (CBS, 1994)
    • Hockey enforcers
    • E, pp. 60-77, 190-197 (Curry, Neimark)

     

    Week 4:

    June14, Tuesday

    PANEL #4

    Sports, religion, and magic

    VIDEO:

    • Glory of their times (1990) (excerpt on Charlie Faust)
    • Mt. Zion Academy (HBO, 1998)

     

    • E&S: Chapter 8
    • E: 10-19 (Burstyn)

     

     

    June15, Wednesday

    PANEL #5

    role of the media

    * Justin Doherty, Director, UW Sports Information, on the impact of the media on sports

    • E&S: Chapter 11
    • E: 79-105 (Messner, et al., Hilliard)

     

    June16,
    Thursday

    Panel #6

    Sports and politics; focus on the Olympics

    * Jeff Sauer, former Head Coach, Men's Hockey

    VIDEO:

    • East German sports (1988)
    • 1980 US Hockey win

    The Nazi Olympics

    • E&S: Chapter 9
    Week 5:

    June 21, Tuesday

    The economics of sport: college and beyond

    * Jamie Pollard, Deputy Athletic Director, Wisconsin Athletics

    on the Funding of college sport

    • E&S: Chapter 10
    • E: pp. 236-255; 167-179 (Armstrong, Noll & Zimbalist)


    • ***** Panel papers are due today, Tuesday, June 21 *****
    June 22, Wednesday

    Sports and social stratification.

    Social mobility. Is sport a way up and out?

    VIDEOS:

    • George Carlin "Golf" (1993)
    • History of NASCAR
    • King Richard (1989) (stock car racing)
    • Jeff Gordon (1998) (changing racing's image)

    gender and race differences in power, position, and earnings

    • E&S: Chapter 12
    • E: pp 256-263; 267-274 (Eitzen, Simpson)





    June 23, Wednesday

    Racial discrimination and stereotyping in sports; "stacking"

    VIDEO:

  • In Whose Honor?


  • Homosexuality and sport

    VIDEO:

    • Lesbians and the LPGA (Real sports, 2000)
    • Esera Tuaolo, former NFL football player (2002) and footnote
    • E&S Chapter 13
    • E: pp. 107-122, 275-291

    E: 333-352; 358-372 (Griffin, Pronger)

    Racial Report Card

    Week 6:

    June 28 Tuesday

    Athletic role identity, injury, and retirement from sport

    VIDEOS:

    • Knocking heads. (ABC, ,Disposable heroes (HBO, 1988) ("positive deviance" and its consequences)


      If time: Sports fans, BIRGing, and "home field advantage"
     

    June 29, 30

    class member lectures or brief paper presentations

     

     

    ** Final papers are due Friday, July 1 **


    Possible panel topics for weeks 2 and 3:

     

    • Because of the danger to athletes and excessive corruption in promotions, professional boxing should be outlawed.
    • Schools and colleges should give as much emphasis and financial support to sports for girls and women as for boys and men — even if, because of budgetary constraints, this makes it necessary to cut back on the boys' and men's programs.
    • Big time college sports is a commercial entertainment enterprise and has no legitimate place on a college campus.
    • Because of the intrusion of politics and personal favoritism in judging such events as gymnastics, figure skating, and diving, the Olympic games should consist only of sports whose outcomes can be decided objectively, by times, distances, goals, and points.
    • College players in the revenue sports at Division 1-A schools are essentially professionals, like minor league baseball players, and should receive salaries.
    • At public universities, organized team prayer before and after games violates the separation of church and state and should not be allowed, although private prayer and devotionals are permissible.
    • "Winning isn't everything, it's the only thing": Vince Lombardi.
    • Organized youth sports programs like Little League Baseball or youth soccer represent an unwise intrusion of adults into the play activities of children.

    Top

    Questions? Comments? Please contact jpiliavi@ssc.wisc.edu

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