Social networks (Summer 2025)

Course content

How do the people you know affect the life you live? How does the web of those relationships affect society? We call these webs of relationships “social networks,” and they are some of the fundamental building blocks of social life.

This course introduces the core concepts about how we form connections in social life, and how those mechanisms affect culture, inequality, and politics. The course also introduces social network analysis, a set of quantitative and computational methodological tools, so as to help make sense of these topics in a scientific way.

Throughout the course we will discuss how (mis-)information, ideas, and diseases spread through society, how the people close to you and how people you barely know affect your beliefs and behavior, and how the structure of relationships in society affects the formation of inequalities on both small- and big-scales, among other things.

Education

BA and MA elective course

Course package:

Welfare, inequality and mobility 

Knowledge, organisation and policy

Culture, lifestyle and everyday life

 

Open to credit transfer students

Learning outcome

Knowledge

At the end of the course, the students will be able to:

  • Identify key concepts and principles relating to how social networks affect everyday life
  • Explain how network structures constrain and enable social life across a variety of contexts
  • Enumerate the mechanisms through which networks affect the spread of ideas, culture, and contagions

 

Skills

  • Use social networks concepts and principles to analyze specific cases
  • Apply basic social network analysis techniques to social network data

 

Competencies

  • Reason about which network principles, structures, mechanisms, or models are the most likely to be relevant to one situation or another
  • Critically reflect on the role that networks play in their own lives

     

Lectures, exercises, student presentations.

Readings will rely on a mix of textbook readings (about 50%), and research articles and books (about 50%).

Basic arithmetic and algebra

Collective
Continuous feedback during the course of the semester
Peer feedback (Students give each other feedback)
ECTS
7,5 ECTS
Type of assessment
Written assignment
Type of assessment details
The students are required to formulate their own exam questions based on pre-defined guidelines provided by the teacher. Students will receive the exam guidelines for formulating exam questions during the ongoing semester. The teacher is required to provide at least two exemplary exam questions that adhere to the guidelines.

The exam can be written individually or in groups of max. 4 students.
Length of the exam is 10 pages + 5 pages pr. extra group member.
Aid

The Department of Sociology prohibits the use of generative AI software and large language models (AI/LLMs), such as ChatGPT, for generating novel and creative content in written exams. However, students may use AI/LLMs to enhance the presentation of their own original work, such as text editing, argument validation, or improving statistical programming code. Students must disclose in an appendix if and how AI/LLMs were used; this appendix will not count toward the page limit of the exam. This policy is in place to ensure that students’ written exams accurately reflect their own knowledge and understanding of the material. All students are required to include an AI declaration in their exam submissions regardless of whether they have used generative AI software or not. This declaration should be placed as the last page of the exam submission. Please note that the AI statement is not included in the calculation of the overall length of your assignment. The template for the AI statement can be found in the Digital Exam system and on the Study Pages on KUnet under “Written exam”. Exams that do not declare if and how AI/LLMs were used will be administratively rejected and counted as one exam attempt.

Marking scale
7-point grading scale
Censorship form
No external censorship
Re-exam

Students will write a new written assignment based on the guidelines provided by the teacher. 

The exam can be written individually or in groups of max. 4 students.
Length of the exam is 10 pages + 5 pages pr. extra group member.

Criteria for exam assessment

Criteria for exam assessment:

Grade 12 is given for an outstanding performance: the student lives up to the course's goal description in an independent and convincing manner with no or few and minor shortcomings

Grade 7 is given for a good performance: the student is confidently able to live up to the goal description, albeit with several shortcomings

Grade 02 is given for an adequate performance: the minimum acceptable performance in which the student is only able to live up to the goal description in an insecure and incomplete manner

  • Category
  • Hours
  • Class Instruction
  • 42
  • Preparation
  • 37
  • Practical exercises
  • 6
  • Exam Preparation
  • 60
  • Exam
  • 60
  • English
  • 205

Kursusinformation

Language
English
Course number
ASOA22212U
ECTS
7,5 ECTS
Programme level
Bachelor
Full Degree Master
Placement
Summer
Schedulegroup
Week 32 + 33
Studyboard
Department of Sociology, Study Council
Contracting department
  • Department of Sociology
Contracting faculty
  • Faculty of Social Sciences
Course Coordinator
  • Andrew Christopher Herman   (13-6a776d7b6e8037716e7b766a77497c786c37747e376d74)
Saved on the 27-01-2025

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