SOCI 2013 | Course Architecture Visual

Course Architecture Visual

Birds-Eye View of Learning Progression

8 Modules, 64 Assignments, Progressive Skills Development

5 min read Visual overview

DOCUMENT PURPOSE: This visual guide provides high-level overview of course structure. You'll see how 8 modules build cognitive complexity, how skills progression scaffolds from simple (hierarchical thinking) to advanced (hypergraph thinking), and how all frameworks coordinate across the semester.

Section 1: Course Metrics At-a-Glance

8
Modules
16 weeks (2 weeks each)
64
Assignments
8 per module (identical structure)
1,000
Total Points
125 per module
68%
High-Engagement
Constructive + Interactive

Modality Distribution

Online: 56%
Face-to-Face: 44%

ICAP Distribution

Passive: 0% (0 pts)
Active: 32% (320 pts)
Constructive: 24% (240 pts)
Interactive: 44% (440 pts)

Section 2: Two-Week Module Structure (Universal Pattern)

All 8 modules follow identical structure. This consistency reduces cognitive load while content complexity increases.

WEEK 1: Foundation

x.1
Norton Ch A
Read + Annotate (Active) | 10 pts
x.2
InQuiz + Visual Notes
Quiz + Concept Map (Active + Constructive) | 15 pts
x.3
F2F Lab Week 1
Collaborative Case (Interactive) | 20 pts
Week 1 Total: 45 points | DEL: Discover → Engage

WEEK 2: Integration

x.4
Norton Ch B
Read + Annotate (Active) | 10 pts
x.5
InQuiz + Visual Notes
Quiz + Concept Map (Active + Constructive) | 15 pts
x.6
Mega-Map Prep
Synthesis Map (Constructive) | 20 pts
⚠️ Due 10:00 AM Thursday
x.7
F2F Lab Week 2
RQ Evolution (Interactive) | 35 pts
Week 2 Total: 80 points | DEL: Discover → Learn

ARCHITECTURAL PRINCIPLE: Structure stays constant, content evolves. Students master the workflow pattern by Module 2, freeing cognitive resources for increasingly complex sociological concepts in Modules 3-8.

Section 3: Visual Skills Progression (Scaffolded Complexity)

Visual Notes and Mega-Maps require increasingly sophisticated thinking skills. This scaffolding aligns with Bloom's Taxonomy and Cognitive Load Theory.

Module Visual Skill Required Complexity Bloom's Level Example
M1 Hierarchical Understand Tree diagram: Culture → Material/Nonmaterial → Symbols/Language/Values
M2 Hierarchical + Sequential ⭐⭐ Apply Research process flowchart with decision points
M3 Comparative Matrix ⭐⭐ Analyze 2×2 grid comparing socialization agents (family/peers/media/school)
M4 Cyclical + Causal ⭐⭐⭐ Analyze Feedback loop: Interaction → Definition → Behavior → Interaction
M5 Multi-Level Nested ⭐⭐⭐ Evaluate Micro/Meso/Macro levels with bidirectional influences
M6 Network (Simple) ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Evaluate Inequality factors (race/class/gender) with intersecting effects
M7 Network (Complex) ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Create Institutions (family/economy/education/government) mutually influencing
M8 Hypergraph (Advanced) ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Create Social change: Multiple causes → Multiple mechanisms → Multiple outcomes with feedback

SCAFFOLDING RATIONALE: Students aren't asked to create complex network diagrams in Week 1. They start with simple hierarchies (tree diagrams), then add sequential/comparative thinking, then causal loops, then networks, then hypergraph synthesis by Module 8. Each skill builds on previous skills.

Section 4: Module Content Map

MODULE 1

Sociological Perspective

Ch 1: Sociology + Culture
Skill: Hierarchical thinking
RQ: What is sociology?
MODULE 2 ⭐⭐

Sociological Research

Ch 2: Methods + Ch 3: Ethics
Skill: Sequential + Hierarchical
RQ: How do sociologists study?
MODULE 3 ⭐⭐

Socialization

Ch 4: Socialization + Ch 5: Groups
Skill: Comparative matrix
RQ: How do we become social?
MODULE 4 ⭐⭐⭐

Social Interaction

Ch 6: Deviance + Ch 7: Stratification
Skill: Cyclical + Causal
RQ: Why do people conform/deviate?
MODULE 5 ⭐⭐⭐

Social Structure

Ch 8: Race + Ch 9: Gender
Skill: Multi-level nested
RQ: How does inequality work?
MODULE 6 ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Social Inequality

Ch 10: Economy + Ch 11: Politics
Skill: Network (simple)
RQ: How are systems connected?
MODULE 7 ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Social Institutions

Ch 12: Family + Ch 13: Education
Skill: Network (complex)
RQ: Why do institutions matter?
MODULE 8 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Hypergraph Project Capstone

NO new chapters (Synthesizes M1-M7)
Research: Concept Inventory → Standardization → Class Codebook → Meta-Analysis (FINAL EXAM)
Students become data generators + meta-analysts

Section 5: Bloom's Taxonomy Alignment Across Course

Bloom's Level Course Phase Assignment Types ICAP Mode
Remember Week 1-2 reading Norton (x.1, x.4) Active
Understand Week 1-2 quizzing InQuizitive (x.2, x.5) Active
Apply Week 1 lab F2F Lab Week 1 (x.3) Interactive
Analyze Week 1-2 visual notes Visual Notes (x.2, x.5) Constructive
Evaluate Week 2 synthesis Mega-Map Prep (x.6) Constructive
Create Week 2 lab F2F Lab Week 2 (x.7) Interactive

BLOOM'S PROGRESSION: Each two-week module moves students from lower-order thinking (Remember/Understand in Week 1) through higher-order thinking (Apply/Analyze/Evaluate/Create in Week 2). By Module 8, students regularly work at Create level.

Section 6: Hypergraph Research Question Thread (M1→M8)

Each module's RQ Evolution Lab (x.7) advances students' research question from simple to hypergraph complexity:

M1

What is sociology?

Definitional question. Single concept exploration.

M2 ⭐⭐

How do sociologists study X?

Methodological question. Process understanding.

M3 ⭐⭐

How does X influence Y?

Causal question. Two-variable relationship.

M4 ⭐⭐⭐

What is the relationship between X and Y?

Relational question. Bidirectional or cyclical.

M5 ⭐⭐⭐

How do X, Y, and Z interact?

Multi-variable question. Three-way interactions.

M6 ⭐⭐⭐⭐

How do multiple factors (A, B, C) shape outcome D?

Network question. Multiple causes, single outcome.

M7 ⭐⭐⭐⭐

How do systems (institution, structure, process) mutually influence each other?

Complex network question. Reciprocal causation.

M8 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

How do multiple causes interact through multiple mechanisms to produce multiple outcomes with feedback effects?

Hypergraph question. Non-linear, emergent complexity.

HYPERGRAPH ACHIEVEMENT: By Module 8, students can formulate research questions that reflect authentic sociological complexity—multiple interacting causes, mediating mechanisms, feedback loops, and emergent outcomes. This is graduate-level thinking scaffolded across 16 weeks.

Key Takeaways for Reviewer

This course architecture demonstrates:

  1. Structural consistency: All 8 modules use identical 8-assignment pattern, reducing cognitive load
  2. Progressive complexity: Visual skills scaffold from simple hierarchies (⭐) to hypergraph synthesis (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
  3. Bloom's alignment: Every module progresses from Remember → Create within two weeks
  4. ICAP optimization: 68% of points from Constructive + Interactive (highest learning gains)
  5. Modality strategy: 56% online (Active/Constructive), 44% F2F (Interactive)
  6. RQ evolution: Research questions advance from definitional (M1) to hypergraph complexity (M8)
  7. Content integration: 16 textbook chapters organized into 8 thematic two-chapter modules
  8. Framework coordination: TILT + ICAP + DEL + Bloom's + CLT all align with architectural design

SOCI 2013 Hybrid Course | Evidence-Based Pedagogy Documentation Package

To see validation data confirming this architecture, review Document #05 (Peer Review Validation Summary)