HOME INSTITUTIONAL INFORMATIONINFORMATION ON DEGREE PROGRAMMES Social ServicesCERTIFICATE PROGRAMMESUSEFUL INFORMATION, RESOURCES & SERVICES FOR STUDENTSUSEFUL LINKS AND DOCUMENTSADITIONAL & SUPPORTING INFORMATION

SECTION I: GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT THE COURSE

Course Code Course Name Year Semester Theoretical Practical Credit ECTS
50912TATOZ-SHG3121 Turkey's Social and Cultural Structure 1 Fall 3 0 3 4
Course Type : Compulsory
Cycle: Associate      TQF-HE:5. Master`s Degree      QF-EHEA:Short Cycle      EQF-LLL:5. Master`s Degree
Language of Instruction: Turkish
Prerequisities and Co-requisities: N/A
Mode of Delivery: Face to face
Name of Coordinator: Instructor AKİF KEMAL KARATEPE
Dersin Öğretim Eleman(lar)ı:
Dersin Kategorisi: Field Specific

SECTION II: INTRODUCTION TO THE COURSE

Course Objectives & Content

Course Objectives: This course aims at changing the social structure of Turkey processes, it is to consider environmental conditions and in terms of relations with the outside world and examine in depth the last quarter of the 19th century, the period between the first half of the 20th century.
Course Content: In this course, the economic and social structures inherited from the Ottoman Empire Turkey; The establishment of the War of Independence and the Republic of Turkey; proclamation of secularism and reflections of revolutions such as clothing on daily life; exchange and population exchange; Establishment of Folk Houses and Village Institutes; state-society relations in the transformation process; II. Social and economic problems during World War II; and the transition to the multi-party regime will be addressed.

Course Learning Outcomes (CLOs)

Course Learning Outcomes (CLOs) are those describing the knowledge, skills and competencies that students are expected to achieve upon successful completion of the course. In this context, Course Learning Outcomes defined for this course unit are as follows:
Knowledge (Described as Theoritical and/or Factual Knowledge.)
  1) .
  2) .
  3) .
Skills (Describe as Cognitive and/or Practical Skills.)
  1) .
Competences (Described as "Ability of the learner to apply knowledge and skills autonomously with responsibility", "Learning to learn"," Communication and social" and "Field specific" competences.)
  1) .

Weekly Course Schedule

Week Subject
Materials Sharing *
Related Preparation Further Study
1) An overview of the Ottoman social and economic structure
2) An overview of the Ottoman social and economic structure
3) Transformation in the social structure in the Republican Period
4) Transition to multi-party period, modernization theory and criticisms
5) Important substitute national developmental model (1960-1980) and the rise of social movements
6) Important substitute national developmental model (1960-1980) and the rise of social movements
7) Rural and urban change: Urbanization, migration and slums, urbanization process and problems, change of family and family problems, demographic transformation
8) Midterm
9) In Turkey, after the 1980 political, economic and social transformation: Neoliberalism and globalization
10) In Turkey, after the 1980 political, economic and social transformation: Neoliberalism and globalization
11) Media, consumer culture and the transformative effect of new social movements on the social structure; technological and informatics transformation, identity politics
12) The effects of social and economic transformation of the social services and applications in Turkey
13) The effects of social and economic transformation of the social policy planning in Turkey
14)
15)
*These fields provides students with course materials for their pre- and further study before and after the course delivered.

Recommended or Required Reading & Other Learning Resources/Tools

Course Notes / Textbooks: Ders Anlatımı
References: 1-Kıray, M. 1988. Değişen Toplum Yapısı. Bağlam Yayınevi. İstanbul.
Keyder, Ç. 2008. Türkiye'de Devlet ve Sınıflar. İletişim Yayınları. İstanbul.
Karpat, K. 2003. Türkiye'de Toplumsal Dönüşüm. imge Yayınevi. Ankara.
Timur, T. 1994. Osmanlı Toplumsal Düzeni. İmge Yayınevi. Ankara.
Özbek, M. 2013. Popüler Kültür ve Orhan Gencebay Arabeski, İletişim Yayınları.İstanbul. (s. 31-57)
Buğra. A. 2008. Kapitalizm, Yoksulluk ve Türkiye'de Sosyal Politika. İletişim Yayınları. İstanbul.
Mardin, Ş. 1990. Tabakalaşmanın Tarihsel Belirleyicileri: Türkiye'de Toplumsal Sınıf ve Sınıf Bilinci, Türkiye'de Toplum ve Siyaset, İletişim Yayınları. İstanbul. ( s. 77-115)
H. İnan, 1983, Osmanlı Tarihi ve Dünya Sistemi, Toplum ve Bilim, no: 23, Güz , s. 9-38.
Berkes, N. 2002. Türkiye'de Çağdaşlaşma, YKY. İstanbul.
Zürcher, E.J. 1993. Modernleşen Türkiye'nin Tarihi, İletişim Yayınları. istanbul.
Mardin,Ş. 2002. "Türkiye: Bir Ekonomik Kodun Dönüşümü" (s. 195-230) "Türkiye'de Gençlik ve Şiddet" (s. 249-291),Türk Modernleşmesi, İletişim Yayınları, İstanbul.
Erder,S.1999. "Kentsel Gelişme ve Kentsel Hareketler-Gecekondu Hareketi", Toplum İçin Kent, Yerel Siyaset ve Demokrasi Seminerleri, WALD Yayını, İstanbul.(s. 293-312.)
Boratav, K. 2014. Türkiye İktisat Tarihi. İmge Yayınevi. Ankara.
Gürbilek, N. 2014. Vitrinde Yaşamak. Metiş Yayınları. İstanbul.
Özbek. N. 2013. Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nda Sosyal Devlet. İlerişim Yayınları. İstanbul.

SECTION III: RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN COURSE UNIT AND COURSE LEARNING OUTCOMES (CLOs)

(The matrix below shows how the course learning outcomes (CLOs) associates with programme learning outcomes (both KPLOs & SPLOs) and, if exist, the level of quantitative contribution to them.)

Relationship Between CLOs & PLOs

(KPLOs and SPLOs are the abbreviations for Key & Sub- Programme Learning Outcomes, respectively. )
CLOs/PLOs KPLO 1 KPLO 2 KPLO 3 KPLO 4
1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
CLO1
CLO2
CLO3
CLO4
CLO5

Level of Contribution of the Course to PLOs

No Effect 1 Lowest 2 Low 3 Average 4 High 5 Highest
           
Programme Learning Outcomes Contribution Level (from 1 to 5)
1) Explain the information about social work application areas and social work theory. 5
2) Define the risk groups.
3) Applies the theoretical knowledge learned in business life for a half year.
4) Gain the competencies defined as the institutional outcomes of our university at the basic level, developed in line with the expectations of the business world and society 5

SECTION IV: TEACHING-LEARNING & ASSESMENT-EVALUATION METHODS OF THE COURSE

Teaching & Learning Methods of the Course

(All teaching and learning methods used at the university are managed systematically. Upon proposals of the programme units, they are assessed by the relevant academic boards and, if found appropriate, they are included among the university list. Programmes, then, choose the appropriate methods in line with their programme design from this list. Likewise, appropriate methods to be used for the course units can be chosen among those defined for the programme.)
Teaching and Learning Methods defined at the Programme Level
Teaching and Learning Methods Defined for the Course
Lectures
Discussion
Case Study
Problem Solving
Demonstration
Views
Laboratory
Reading
Homework
Project Preparation
Thesis Preparation
Peer Education
Seminar
Technical Visit
Course Conference
Brain Storming
Questions Answers
Individual and Group Work
Role Playing-Animation-Improvisation
Active Participation in Class

Assessment & Evaluation Methods of the Course

(All assessment and evaluation methods used at the university are managed systematically. Upon proposals of the programme units, they are assessed by the relevant academic boards and, if found appropriate, they are included among the university list. Programmes, then, choose the appropriate methods in line with their programme design from this list. Likewise, appropriate methods to be used for the course units can be chosen among those defined for the programme.)
Aassessment and evaluation Methods defined at the Programme Level
Assessment and Evaluation Methods defined for the Course
Midterm
Presentation
Final Exam
Quiz
Report Evaluation
Homework Evaluation
Oral Exam
Thesis Defense
Jury Evaluation
Practice Exam
Evaluation of Implementation Training in the Workplace
Active Participation in Class
Participation in Discussions

Relationship Between CLOs & Teaching-Learning, Assesment-Evaluation Methods of the Course

(The matrix below shows the teaching-learning and assessment-evaluation methods designated for the course unit in relation to the course learning outcomes.)
LEARNING & TEACHING METHODS
COURSE LEARNING OUTCOMES
ASSESMENT & EVALUATION METHODS
CLO1 CLO2 CLO3 CLO4 CLO5
-Lectures -Midterm
-Discussion -Presentation
-Case Study -Final Exam
-Problem Solving -Quiz
-Demonstration -Report Evaluation
-Views -Homework Evaluation
-Laboratory -Oral Exam
-Reading -Thesis Defense
-Homework -Jury Evaluation
-Project Preparation -Practice Exam
-Thesis Preparation -Evaluation of Implementation Training in the Workplace
-Peer Education -Active Participation in Class
-Seminar - Participation in Discussions
-Technical Visit
-Course Conference
-Brain Storming
-Questions Answers
-Individual and Group Work
-Role Playing-Animation-Improvisation
-Active Participation in Class

Contribution of Assesment & Evalution Activities to Final Grade of the Course

Measurement and Evaluation Methods # of practice per semester Level of Contribution
Total %
PERCENTAGE OF SEMESTER WORK % 0
PERCENTAGE OF FINAL WORK %
Total %

SECTION V: WORKLOAD & ECTS CREDITS ALLOCATED FOR THE COURSE

WORKLOAD OF TEACHING & LEARNING ACTIVITIES
Teaching & Learning Activities # of Activities per semester Duration (hour) Total Workload
Course 14 3 42
Laboratory 0 0 0
Application 0 0 0
Special Course Internship (Work Placement) 0 0 0
Field Work 0 0 0
Study Hours Out of Class 14 2 28
Presentations / Seminar 0 0 0
Project 0 0 0
Homework Assignments 1 8 8
Total Workload of Teaching & Learning Activities - - 78
WORKLOAD OF ASSESMENT & EVALUATION ACTIVITIES
Assesment & Evaluation Activities # of Activities per semester Duration (hour) Total Workload
Quizzes 2 8 16
Midterms 1 8 8
Semester Final Exam 1 8 8
Total Workload of Assesment & Evaluation Activities - - 32
TOTAL WORKLOAD (Teaching & Learning + Assesment & Evaluation Activities) 110
ECTS CREDITS OF THE COURSE (Total Workload/25.5 h) 4