In sociology, roles play behaviors expected by individuals occupying a particular social status or position. Role is a socially recognized integrated behavioral model that provides a means to identify individuals and participate in society. It can also be used as a strategy to cope with repeated occurrence situations and to cope with roles of other people (such as parent / child role). The term borrowed from the use of the drama emphasizes the difference between the actor and the part. Even if other people occupy this position, their character is relatively stable. Individuals who are given the doctor's role should act in a specific way, like every role playing the role of Hamlet. Individuals may have their own style, but this is within the expected behavior
Role expectations include behavior and quality. The teacher can provide lectures, assign challenges, prepare exams, but also be devoted, caring, sincere and responsible. One person is a husband, a father, an artist, and a patient, and each position has different obligations, obligations, privileges, and rights from other positions. . . We also refer to social status
Diana Kendall is a professor of sociology at Baylor University and teaches various courses including sociology introductory, sociological theory (undergraduates and graduate schools), medicine sociology, race, class and sex. Prior to that, I enjoyed sociological education for many years and served as the president of social behavior science courses at Austin Community College. Professor Kendall actively participates in domestic and local society conferences such as the American Sociological Association, Social Women's Sociologist, Society Problem Research Association, Southern Society, Southwest Sociology Society.
The University Sociology course is designed to introduce sociological studies of society to students. Sociology focuses on the systematic understanding of social interaction, social organization, social institution, and social change. The theme of sociological thought, the interaction between the individual and society, the way of change and social stability, cause and effect of social inequality, and includes the social construction of human life. Understanding sociology helps to discover and explain social patterns and how these patterns change over time in different environments. Through the lively social foundation of everyday life, sociology will also develop the critical thinking by revealing the social structures and processes that shape the different forms of human life.