Information Revolution
(noun)
Refers to the most recent era of technological developments, including cell phones and the Internet.
Examples of Information Revolution in the following topics:
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Modernization and Technology
- With the introduction of mechanized textile production in New England during the Industrial Revolution, many women who previously earned wages by sewing or weaving in their homes took positions at textile mills, working outside of the home for the first time.
- With the introduction of mechanized textile production in New England during the Industrial Revolution, many women who previously earned wages by sewing or weaving in their homes took positions at textile mills, working outside of the home for the first time.
- The printing press became a key factor in the rapid spread of the Protestant Revolution and is thought to have enabled the development of national identities.
- The technologies of the Renaissance period, which introduced methods of mechanization, were the predecessors of the mass-production techniques that fueled the Industrial Revolution during the 18th and 19th centuries, which started in Great Britain and emanated outwards.
- These processes may be considered the phase of technological innovation following the Industrial Revolution, which some have labeled the Information Revolution.
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Postindustrial Societies: The Birth of the Information Age
- An example of the Information Age is how virtually every individual uses the Internet in some way at their place of work.
- The idea is linked to the concept of a digital age or digital revolution, as most of this information is instantaneously available online.
- The Information Age formed by capitalizing on computer microminiaturization advances.
- This graph shows the drastic increase in Internet usage, indicative of the pervasiveness of the Information Age.
- Examine the impact the Information Age has on the accessibility and breadth of information available to society
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Work and Technology
- The Information Age has impacted the workforce through automation and computerization, resulting in higher productivity and fewer jobs.
- The Information Age has impacted the workforce in several ways.
- There is another way in which the Information Age has impacted the workforce: automation and computerization have resulted in higher productivity coupled with net job loss.
- Discuss the shift in the economy from mechanization to automation due to the Information Age and its impact on the modern industrial worker
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Industrial Societies: The Birth of the Machine
- During the Industrial Revolution (roughly 1750 to 1850) changes in technology had a profound effect on social and economic conditions.
- Examples of the technological innovation of the Industrial Revolution include the invention of steam and coal engines.
- The period of time covered by the Industrial Revolution varies with different historians.
- Great Britain provided the legal and cultural foundations that enabled entrepreneurs to pioneer the Industrial Revolution.
- Analyze the shift from manual to machine based labor during the First and Second Industrial Revolutions
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Sexual Behavior Since Kinsey
- The Kinsey Report helped spark the sexual revolution, in which social regulations regarding sexual activity were loosened.
- While other sexualities were still stigmatized in most post-Kinsey environments, the sexual revolution was marked by popular acceptance of premarital sex.
- Kinsey's 1950s study of sexuality contributed to the sexual revolution of the 1960s in two ways.
- Another scientific product had a profound impact on the development of the sexual revolution: the development of oral contraception.
- Summarize the impact of the Kinsey Report and the sexual revolution of the 1960s on American sexuality
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The Changing Face of the Workplace
- The Information Age has impacted the workforce in several ways.
- There is another way in which the Information Age has impacted the workforce: automation and computerization have resulted in higher productivity .
- Examine the impact of the Information Age on the workforce, from automation to polarization
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Societal Development
- When capitalised, The Industrial Revolution refers to the first known industrial revolution, which took place in Europe during the 18th and 19th centuries.
- What is some times referred to as The Second Industrial Revolution describes later, somewhat less dramatic changes resulting from the widespread availability of electric power and the internal-combustion engine.
- Post-industrial societies are often marked by:an increase in the size of the service sector or jobs that perform services rather than creating goods (industry)either the outsourcing of or extensive use of mechanization in manufacturingan increase in the amount of information technology, often leading to an Information Ageinformation, knowledge, and creativity are seen as the new raw materials of the economy
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Monarchies and Liberal Democracies
- Throughout history, monarchies have been abolished, either through revolutions, legislative reforms, coups d'état or wars.
- The twentieth century saw a major escalation of this process, with many monarchies violently overthrown by revolution or war, or abolished as part of the process of decolonization.
- Near the end of the 18th century, these ideas inspired the American and French Revolutions, the latter giving birth to the ideology of liberalism, and instituting forms of government that attempted to apply the principles of the Enlightenment philosophers into practice.
- Reforms and revolutions helped move most European countries towards liberal democracy.
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Gatekeeping
- Information moves step by step through channels.
- Information must pass a "gate" to move from one channel to the next.
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Capitalism, Modernization, and Industrialization
- Sociologists Weber, Marx and Durkheim envisioned different impacts the Industrial Revolution would have on both the individual and society.
- Three early sociologists, Max Weber, Karl Marx, and Emile Durkheim, envisioned different outcomes of the Industrial Revolution on both the individual and society and described these effects in their work.
- Max Weber was particularly concerned about the rationalization of society due to the Industrial Revolution and how this change would affect humanity's agency and happiness.
- Karl Marx took a different perspective on the Industrial Revolution.
- Compare the similarities and differences between Weber's Rationalization, Marx's Alienation and Durkheim's Solidarity In relation to the Industrial Revolution