51ºÚÁÏ

Last updated

20 August 2025

pdf, 2.65 MB
pdf, 2.65 MB
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pdf, 1.37 MB
pptx, 12.41 MB
pptx, 12.41 MB
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wav, 38.65 MB
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wav, 53.49 MB
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pptx, 12.11 MB
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pdf, 2.72 MB
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pdf, 1.46 MB

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This Social Mobility and Values bundle within the Stratification and Differentiation A Level Sociology unit (7192/2) provides students with a thorough and evaluative understanding of the extent to which individuals and groups can move between social classes, and how values around success, status, and opportunity influence these patterns. The PDF summary explains key types of mobility—intragenerational and intergenerational, vertical and horizontal—alongside sociological debates about whether Britain is an open or closed society. It explores how factors such as education, social capital, cultural capital, ethnicity, gender, and class background impact life chances and mobility outcomes.

The PowerPoint presentation presents these ideas through charts, mobility tables, theory-overview slides, and real-world case studies, helping students connect sociological theory to contemporary social trends. To develop strong analytical and exam-writing skills, the bundle includes connectives worksheets and skills-based activities such as mobility case analysis, class-background comparison tasks, and theory-application grids.

A dedicated podcast episode breaks down the myth vs. reality of meritocracy, challenges the idea of a level playing field, and discusses whether mobility is truly improving or becoming more restricted. The question bank includes short-answer and 20-mark essay questions with model responses, such as “Evaluate the view that social mobility in Britain is limited by class background." An interactive quiz reinforces key definitions, theories, and data in an engaging and student-friendly format.

Altogether, this bundle equips learners with the conceptual clarity and critical insight needed to examine one of the most socially relevant aspects of stratification—how status is gained, lost, or inherited in modern society.

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A bundle is a package of resources grouped together to teach a particular topic, or a series of lessons, in one place.

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A Level Sociology: Stratification and Differentiation Bundle

The Stratification and Differentiation unit in A Level Sociology (AQA 7192/2) offers students an in-depth investigation into how society is divided and how inequality is structured, maintained, and challenged. This topic explores the systems and processes through which individuals and groups are socially stratified by class, gender, ethnicity, and age, and examines how these divisions affect people’s life chances, status, and power. Students are introduced to a range of sociological perspectives on inequality, including Functionalist, Marxist, Weberian, Feminist, and Postmodernist approaches. These are applied to key themes such as social mobility, class structure, life chances, poverty, and cultural and economic capital. The unit also investigates ideologies of inequality, looking at how beliefs like meritocracy and individualism justify or obscure systemic disadvantage. A focus is on how patterns of stratification have changed over time in British society, examining whether society is becoming more open and mobile, or whether old inequalities persist in new forms. Students will assess the extent of social mobility, the significance of work and education in shaping outcomes, and the influence of values, identity, and ideology in maintaining or challenging inequality. The unit is both theoretical and applied, encouraging students to critically evaluate empirical evidence, historical trends, and sociological theory. It supports strong development of AO1 (knowledge), AO2 (application to contemporary society), and AO3 (critical analysis and evaluation), making it essential preparation for success in Paper 2 and for building synoptic links across the specification. By the end of this unit, students will be able to confidently assess the nature and extent of inequality in modern society, the mechanisms by which it is reproduced, and the ideologies that seek to justify or resist it

£12.70

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