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Sociology

An introduction to thinking like a sociologist for Years 7–9: what society is, how families and identity work, how we're shaped by the people around us, and why life isn't equal for everyone. Builds the vocabulary and habits of mind that make GCSE Sociology click.

All schools · Years 7–9 · no exam board

Y7–Y9

Key Stage 3

No exam board at KS3. The bank is built around a coherent introductory social-science framework that maps cleanly onto KS3 citizenship and PSHE, and lays the groundwork for GCSE Sociology, Psychology and History options.

7

Topics in scope

What is society? · Family and relationships · Identity and belonging · Socialisation · The media · Inequality and life chances · Crime and social order. Concrete, age-appropriate ideas, not watered-down GCSE.

High

Fit for spaced repetition

KS3 Sociology is built on precise everyday vocabulary: norms, values, culture, stereotypes, socialisation, inequality. Short daily recall turns 'I sort of get it' into terms students can define and use with confidence.

What's covered

The vocabulary of society. Built early.

KS3 Sociology gives younger students the words for things they already notice: why families differ, where their identity comes from, how the media shapes what they think, why life isn't fair for everyone. Educator's recall mechanic makes those terms stick.

What is society?

  • What sociology studies: looking at people in groups
  • Norms, values and culture: a society's shared way of life
  • Rules, laws and social order: why societies need them
  • Groups and institutions: family, school, government
  • Nature vs nurture: are we born or made this way?

Family & identity

  • Different family types: nuclear, extended, single-parent, blended
  • What families are for, and how they've changed
  • What shapes who we are: gender, ethnicity, culture, heritage
  • Subcultures and youth groups
  • Stereotypes and labels, and the harm they do

Socialisation & the media

  • Primary socialisation: learning from the family
  • Secondary socialisation: school, peers and the media
  • Social media: influence, influencers and echo chambers
  • Fake news and how to check what you see
  • How the media shapes what we think is normal

Inequality, life chances & crime

  • Wealth and income: what they are and how they differ
  • Life chances: why outcomes aren't equal for everyone
  • Fairness, rights and social justice
  • Why people break the rules: causes of crime
  • Patterns in crime: who, where and why

Framework-aligned, sourced and fact-checked. Cards cover: what society and sociology are (norms, values, culture, rules and social order), family and relationships (types, roles, how families have changed), identity and belonging (gender, ethnicity, subcultures, stereotypes), socialisation (family, school, peers, media), the media (social media, influence, fake news), inequality and life chances (wealth, fairness, justice), and crime and social order (why people break rules, patterns in crime).

Try it for four weeks. Free.

One school. Unlimited classes. No card limit. No teacher limit. If your students aren't practising daily by the end of the trial, you owe us nothing.