SOCIAL HISTORY OF MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY GREECE

Course Information
TitleΚΟΙΝΩΝΙΚΗ ΙΣΤΟΡΙΑ ΝΕΩΤΕΡΗΣ ΚΑΙ ΣΥΓΧΡΟΝΗΣ ΕΛΛΑΔΟΣ / SOCIAL HISTORY OF MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY GREECE
CodeΥΒ.1.021
FacultyEducation
SchoolEarly Childhood Education
Cycle / Level1st / Undergraduate
Teaching PeriodWinter/Spring
CoordinatorIfigeneia Vamvakidou
CommonNo
StatusActive
Course ID80003378

Programme of Study: UPS of School of Early Childhood Education (2012-today)

Registered students: 107
OrientationAttendance TypeSemesterYearECTS
CoreBackround CourseWinter/Spring-6

Class Information
Academic Year2018 – 2019
Class PeriodSpring
Faculty Instructors
Weekly Hours3
Class ID
600138452
Course Type 2016-2020
  • Background
Course Type 2011-2015
General Foundation
Mode of Delivery
  • Face to face
Digital Course Content
Learning Outcomes
1. Social history of modern and contemporary Greece. Theoretical and methodological approaches. 2. Social mobility, women, young people, workers. Diaspora. 3. Social, cultural developments in Greece in the 20th century. 4. Instrumental applications in early childhood education. 4.1. The concept of historic time. Relation to local historic space (ruins, monuments, museums). 4.2. Historic time and its relation to personal experience of space by thematic category (the example of home, school, church, workplace). 5. Documentation of the above with visits and audio-visual and other material. 5.1. Visits to places connected with 19th and 20th century industrial archaeology (spaces of dwelling, civilisation, education, work etc.) in Thessaloniki, Edessa, Kavala, Xanthi. 5.2. Films and documentaries relating to social and cultural parameters of the history of contemprary Greece. 5.3. Interviews (oral testimony) documenting social and cultural events in the history of contemporary Greece.
General Competences
  • Apply knowledge in practice
  • Retrieve, analyse and synthesise data and information, with the use of necessary technologies
  • Adapt to new situations
  • Make decisions
  • Work autonomously
  • Work in teams
  • Work in an international context
  • Work in an interdisciplinary team
  • Generate new research ideas
  • Design and manage projects
  • Appreciate diversity and multiculturality
  • Respect natural environment
  • Demonstrate social, professional and ethical commitment and sensitivity to gender issues
  • Be critical and self-critical
  • Advance free, creative and causative thinking
Course Content (Syllabus)
Social history, an account of social processes and relations, looks into the elements, the structure and the interconnections in human society, its manifestations and their historic continuity, in order to identify the manifold mechanisms of its evolution. It attempts to understand and interpret the course of that evolution through theoretical generalisation and a search for universalities in the succession of episodes in inter-human relations. Selected scientific methods are used to frame systems for assessing the position of the various social factors so as to reveal trends in the historic process. Social history classes propose culture as an analytical category, for it is a significant means of approaching social reality. A cultural approach to social phenomena asserts the notable contribution of the parameter of culture in introducing the student to systems of codes and values. Comprehension of historical facts is sought through a synthesis combining the study of culture with that of the category (economy) considered to be of capital importance in the construction of values, conscience and culture itself. The viewpoint of the course is broadened and enriched as it shifts to a discussion of culture and its parameters. Some of the problems of culture that are explored correspond to manifestations of social groups that share common elements of identity, such as national sentiment. Our investigation of the relation of culture to the movement of nations and other social groups includes the complex bundle of values, convictions, mentalities and practices that form each group’s way of life. Other aspects of culture that are addressed relate to the defence of fundamental human rights. Learning outcomes: Students should gain an understanding of the process obeyed by the science of history and the human and social sciences in general. The perception of history that they will acquire will prove invaluable for understanding social phenomena, will broaden their horizons and will help them cope with complex duties in their future professional careers as regards their particular public (pre-school children), in other paths of early childhood education sciences and in the various related occupations that they may take up.
Keywords
Society, culture, communication
Educational Material Types
  • Notes
  • Video lectures
  • Multimedia
  • Book
Use of Information and Communication Technologies
Use of ICT
  • Use of ICT in Course Teaching
  • Use of ICT in Communication with Students
Description
Courses with the use of multimedia, power point et similar instruments Electronic communication with students
Course Organization
ActivitiesWorkloadECTSIndividualTeamworkErasmus
Lectures451.8
Fieldwork301.2
Field trips and participation in conferences / seminars / activities100.4
Written assigments401.6
Total1255
Student Assessment
Description
Participation to courses 10% Tests 10% Research paper 40% Final exams 40%
Bibliography
Course Bibliography (Eudoxus)
Alexandros Dagkas, Le mouvement social dans le Sud-Est européen pendant le ΧΧe siècle : questions de classe, questions de culture, Epicentre, Thessalonique 2008. Κ. Βακαλόπουλος, Νεότερος Ελληνισμός η Επώδυνη Πορεία (1774-1833), Ιωάννης Αρχ. Χαρπαντίδης, Θεσσαλονίκη 2010.
Additional bibliography for study
Αλέξανδρος Δάγκας, Σημειώσεις Κοινωνικής Ιστορίας, Επίκεντρο, Θεσσαλονίκη 2008.
Last Update
17-06-2013