Have you ever talked about “role models" or “self-fulfilling prophecies?" Have you ever said to someone "it's not what you know, it's who you know?" Have you ever talked about "glass ceilings?" If you've used any of these ideas, you've used sociology. These are all concepts that originated in empirical sociological research and have since seeped into popular consciousness.

Sociology is one of the great fields of inquiry of the modern era. The idea of social relations or social forces, the idea that much of life is causally shaped by specific relations among large groups of people, belongs alongside the theory of gravity, evolution, the unconscious, and other seminal ideas that have transformed human life and consciousness in the last few centuries. 

Faculty Perspective on Sociology (YouTube)

A HISTORY OF EXCELLENCE IN AN EVOLVING DISCIPLINE

Keeping up a tradition that goes back to the nineteenth century, UVM's sociology faculty apply the sociological lens to everything from social class to sexuality, from crime to the mass media, from aging to leisure. We teach students how to think sociologically and to apply that thought to real-world situations. If you are actively concerned about the world you live in and want to do something constructive and useful in it, sociology provides our best means for understanding how social life works.

UVM's Sociological Pioneer: Samuel Franklin Emerson
A History of FARRAND-BENEDICT HOUSE

sociology newsletter cover