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What is Social Solidarity

Impact of School Shootings on Classroom Culture, Curriculum, and Learning
The degree to which individuals and groups in society are connected to, and supported by, one another; the strength of the social fabric in a given society.
Published in Chapter:
Silent Witness: Tracing Campus Climate at Virginia Tech via Unobtrusive Measures, 2003-2017
Daisy Ball (Roanoke College, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-5200-1.ch012
Abstract
The present study traces campus climate at Virginia Tech, site of the deadliest school massacre in modern U.S. history, from 2003 to 2017. Using the unobtrusive method of content analysis as a measure of campus climate, data in the form of desktop graffiti—student-authored graffiti on classroom desktops—is analyzed according to amount and content. A total of 1,443 desks are studied, resulting in 8,172 pieces of intelligible graffiti analyzed. Data collected prior to the massacre is compared to data collected one semester, one year, and one decade following the massacre. From this emerges an unobtrusively painted picture of campus climate at Virginia Tech over the course of 14 years, spanning before and after tragic events. The present study adds to the literature on classroom culture post-campus violence and speaks to the subtler, often obscured, impacts of school shootings.
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Sociology of the COVID-19 Lockdown: Critical Analysis of Its Effects on Private School Teacher Wellbeing
Emphasizes the interdependence between individuals in a society, which allows individuals to feel that they can enhance the lives of others. It is a core principle of collective action and is founded on shared values and beliefs among different groups in society.
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Socio-Cultural Interpretations to the Diffusion and Use of Broadband Services in a Korean Digital Society
The degree or type of integration of a society. In simpler societies, solidarity is usually based on kinship ties or familial networks. In more complex societies, solidarity is more organic, referring to the interdependence of the component parts. Thus, social solidarity is maintained in more complex societies through the interdependence of its component parts.
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