Showing posts with label Introduction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Introduction. Show all posts

Thursday, August 28, 2025

Meditation 1: Listen for Where the Ringing Ends and the Silence Begins

 


Listen for where the ringing ends and the silence begins.

This will force your mind to tune into the present moment.  Be aware of the moment you are in; do not surrender this present moment to the past or the future. Let this remind you to turn off distractions that pull your attention from being in the moment. 


From Medium
Are you listening?
Do you take the time to simply stop and listen — to yourself?
Our world has so many distractions. Some are important. Most can be a total waste of time and genuinely rob us of who we are meant to be. 

Distractions rob us of our ability to be at our best. Research indicates that silence gives us the space to be creative and think deeply about what matters. And yet, where do we find silence today? And, do we even want to experience silence? Modern studies indicate we do not. Why?
Our brains are constantly seeking dopamine. These distractions can use up all of our time and keep us from knowing what we should spend our limited and precious time on. What is the solution? Silence is our best hope for success.

Silence speaks the international language of reflection. In many ways, it allows us to become more self-aware, to think about profound and trivial matters. Lawrence Durrell, a British author, said, "Does not everything depend on the interpretation of the silence around us?" Most of us have experienced conflict that can arise from a lack of restraint in speech. Are there such faults associated with silence? Gandhi said, "It is better in prayer to have a heart without words than words without a heart." If you see the wind in its calmness, it has a peaceful and pleasurable quality to it but the same wind once in motion can turn violent in stormy weathers. The same can be said of words.
 
Across disciplines—from neuroscience to psychology to cardiology—there’s growing consensus that noise is a serious threat to our health and cognition. And that silence is something truly vital—particularly for the brain.

“Noises cause stress, especially if we have little or no control over them,” explains Mathias Basner, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania who specializes in sound processing and rest. “The body will excrete stress hormones like adrenaline and cortisol that lead to changes in the composition of our blood—and of our blood vessels, which actually have been shown to be stiffer after a single night of noise exposure,” Basner says.


From TED, When Did You Last Take Some Time to Do Nothing?

Sunday, August 24, 2025

0.1 An Invitation to Sociology

Hello Sociology Scholars!

I want to welcome you to Sociology 101 and extend an invitation just as famous sociologist Peter Berger did in his book which was titled...
An Invitation to Sociology! Berger not only invited his readers to see the world through a sociological lens, but he also warned that "People who like to avoid shocking discoveries...should stay away from sociology." Sociology can be an amazing class that changes your perspective about the world and more importantly about yourself. These insights will hopefully increase your awareness about yourself as an individual, your interaction with others and your society in general. Sociology is excellent preparation for working with diverse people and data.
This class will provide you an introduction to sociology that will hopefully and unabashedly pique your interest in the discipline. And even if sociology does not become a focus of your studies, this course will still provide insight to whatever you choose to study whether it is education, medicine, business, or art to name a few. And, more importantly, this course will provide you with a more insightful understanding of your own growth as a person as well as a better understanding of the diverse people you interact with.

Are you fired up? Get ready to go! 😁 


Action Items:

There are a few tasks that I would like you to complete before our first class:


Student Demographics Survey 
I want to get to know each of you better as an individual, so please answer this demographic survey.  Please know that all of the information is private and only for me to see so share as much info as you are comfortable sharing.

Syllabus

Please read the syllabus.


Sakai Gradebook

Please upload a picture to Sakai so that I can see your picture in the gradebook.


Christopher Salituro
Adjunct Faculty
Sociology Department
Loyola University Chicago Alumnus ​1996, 2004
Go forth and set the world on fire!

Fired up and ready to go!

Saint Ignatius Loyola encouraged his followers in Latin, "Ite inflammate omnia" or, "Go forth, and set the world on fire!"

And so, I like to begin every class with another reference to fire:

"Fired up? Ready to go!"

This is a phrase I like to ask students as they enter my class.  It is a way of both checking in with students and reminding them that they are in my class and I want them to feel fired up about being in class. 

But the phrase is also a fleeting reminder that we all have an influence on our world.  Maybe that influence is just the room we are in, but that influence ripples out.  So that phrase is a reminder to be sociologically mindful.  It is a reminder that we are a participant in society.  Society doesn't just happen to us; we are participants in the process. That awareness is what Michael Schwalbe talks about as "sociological mindfulness." It can change how we think and act and therefore how we influence the world. As President Obama once said,
"One voice can change a room. 
And if it can change a room, it can change a city. 
And if it can change a city it can change a state 
And if it can change a state, it can change a nation 
And if it can change a nation, it can change the world."

(see the whole story by clicking on this link)

Regardless of your political affiliation, I think the sentiment here is true. You can change a room and that can change a much larger group. There's no telling where your influence stops. So, what do you want your voice to be? How do you want to impact the world? Think with sociological mindfulness about the impact you have on the world even if your influence may seem small. 


The last reason why I like to use that phrase is because, as the video shows, even if you are not feeling fired up, after interacting with someone and saying that you are fired up, it just might get you fired up!


Go Forth and Set the World on Fire!


I will often end my classes with this phrase.  Fire is energy.  It spurs a process of change. And, as Fr. Mark Bosco explains in Ite Inflammate Omnia: Setting the World on Fire with Learning published by Medium, 
...just as St. Ignatius wanted everyone to be set afire with passion and zeal for the Kingdom of God, we continually exhort our faculty, students, and alumni to be agents for change in the world, men and women for others.
As Ignation Spirituality explains from Loyola Press, fire purifies. Biblical examples include burning up weeds, refining gold, and Jesus's followers being inspired and empowered with tongues of flame. 

Whether you are Roman Catholic or Christian or neither, Nithya Vemireddy, a social Hindu, explains that there is much room and benefit for you to embrace the Jesuit values. We can find reverence and appreciation for creation in all things.  We can embrace our agency and awareness of our role in that creation.  We can acknowledge our shared humanity with a desire to affect that humanity with loving nurture.  And education can be our guide to each of these.

I hope that my class can contribute to that sentiment.  


And in nature we see rebirth through fire as well:

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Sociology and Careers






































Careers Beyond Academia

Research institutions and professional organizations are great places to do research and use your skills from sociology while also networking. For example:


ASA has a number of full time positions, see here: https://www.asanet.org/about/asa-staff-directory/
There are a number of positions at the ASA and some are entry level.  I know quite a few people who worked at ASA and then spring-boarded into other positions, for example:
Senior Consultant Training and People Development (DEI), Paradigm
Senior Social Scientist, National Institute of Health
Manager of Community Outreach and Enrollment, For the Love of Children 
Program Officer, National Academies of Science 
 
Here are some videos from the ASA: 

Other Research Institutions:

PEW  https://www.pewresearch.org/about/careers/

Census  https://www.census.gov/about/census-careers.html

Federal - Government Accountability Office (GAO)
Lots of jobs across the country, esp. in D.C.
Search for jobs beyond just "sociology" with key terms like research, analyst, social science,



For Undergraduates with a Sociology major:

the sankey visualization below shows the myriad careers that sociology majors end up in:




  1. Tech Industry Research
  2. Financial Planning
  3. Government Agencies

This is from the American Sociology Association's website:

The 21st century labor market is fast changing, increasingly global and technology-driven, the jobs that you may apply for as a graduate may not even exist yet. To navigate the 21st century means being able to keep up with the changing world.
As society evolves, you as a sociology major will have the tools to critically analyze the world and your place within it.


This page from Huffington Post will help allow you to explore why some students majored in sociology, what skill sets sociology students learn.


Here's a post from Everyday Sociology Blog about majoring in sociology.


Also, for finding jobs in sociology:

This is a link to the ASA page on jobs.  Here is a brief overview of where sociology majors end up after they complete their bachelor's degree.






















Here is a video about careers in sociology, embedded below:





Monday, August 18, 2025

Rogers Park Homage




From Chicago Magazine (2022), In Rogers Park, Only the Weird Survive,



Choose Chicago Rogers Park (2023)


An Explorer's Guide to Rogers Park, Chicago's Eccentric Far North Side







Sept. 4 2023, someone tried to turn Loyola beach into a nude beach! 😂. Possibly a sociology breaching norms experiment?! 



Speaking of beach-going, why is there no Friday morning swimclub at Loyola?  Can someone start that please?


Exploring how Indian and Pakistani Cultures & Western and Eastern Cultures Come Together on West Devon Avenue

Famous Sociology Majors

Famous sociology majors found at the ASA page here:  
https://www.ranker.com/list/famous-people-who-majored-in-sociology/reference

And from Soc Images, an exploration into the sociology major and athletes here 



Jerry Harkness, Loyola University basketball player and 1963 NCAA Champion and star of the first NCAA D1 team to field 4 black starters. Highlighted on the History Makers page.







LaRue Martin
- Loyola basketball player and #1 draft pick in the 1972 NBA draft. Active in the community, besides his corporate career, Martins's board memberships and civic affiliations have included the City Club of Chicago, YMCA Mentoring Program, the African American Advisory Council of the Cook County State's Attorney's office, the Urban League of N.W. Indiana, M.L.K. Boys and Girls Club of Chicago, The Leverage Network and De La Salle Institute Board of Directors.

Gabby Thomas, 3X gold medal winner and Harvard Grad (Honorable Mention), cites sociology as opening her eyes to health inequity and inspiring her to work with marginalized groups.

https://youtu.be/0ib_9AlsBT8?si=1YKspmbxuYkmJYvh&t=408


Amanda Gorman,
Poet Laureate, Harvard University grad.  Read about her on the Everyday Sociology blog and on the ASA's page.


















Bong Joon Ho, Director and Oscar winner 

Steph Curry, NBA All-Star and Champion, graduate of Davis U. Senior thesis was about advancing gender equity in sports.

Steph used his sociological mindfulness to respond to a 9 year old girl.



Megan Rapinoe, Crystal Dunn, Abby Dahlkemper and Rose Lavelle
from the U.S. Women's Soccer team














 
Michelle Obama, lawyer and First Lady of the United States, read a review of her thesis on the Racism Review website.












Ronald Reagan
, President of the United States










Cory Anthony Booker
, an American politician and United States Senator from New Jersey, in office since 2013. Previously he served as Mayor of Newark from 2006 to 2013.


Jen Psaki, White House Press Secretary for President Biden 







"Kal Penn" Kalpen Suresh Modi, Actor and White House Liaison for Arts and Humanities under President Obama 





















Mitch Albom, author Tuesdays with Morrie, sports writer









Alexi McCammond, reporter for Axios and MSNBC










Daniel Edward "Dan" Aykroyd, "Blues Brother," "Ghostbuster" actor, comedian, screenwriter and singer.














Michael Savage, an American radio host, author, activist, nutritionist, and political commentator.






Nina Dobrev
, actress and model, played the role of Mia Jones, the single teenage mother, on Degrassi: The Next Generation, from the show's sixth to ninth season. Since 2009 she has starred as Elena Gilbert on The CW's supernatural drama, The Vampire Diaries. 








Thomas "Tom" Joyner is an American radio host, host of the nationally syndicated The Tom Joyner Morning Show


Arne Duncan is an American education administrator who has been United States Secretary of Education since 2009. Duncan previously served as chief executive officer of the Chicago Public Schools district from 2001-2009




Chante Stonewall
is a Depaul University Women's basketball player, and the 

Big East scholar-athlete of the year, 2020.








Francis Perkins
, from Wikipedia: first female cabinet member for any US President, creator of social security.

Wellington Webb, mayor of Denver
Brett Schundler, mayor of Jersey City
Annette Strauss, former mayor of Dallas
Roy Wilkins, former head of NAACP
Rev. Jesse Jackson
Rev. Ralph Abernathy
Shirley Chisholm, former Congresswoman from NY
Maxine Waters, Congresswoman from LA
Barbara Mikulski, US Senator from Maryland
Tim Holden, Congressman from Pennsylvania
Saul Alinsky, father of community organizing
Saul Bellow, novelist
Emily Balch, 1946 Nobel Peace Prize winner (a social worker and social reformer)
Francis Perkins, social reformer and former Secretary of Labor
Richard Barajas, Chief Justice, Texas Supreme Court
Deepika Padukone, Indian film actress and model.