Preview

tma03

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1774 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
tma03
TMA03- PART 1. ASSIGNMENT PLAN

Go through each heading and explain what the table is telling me.
Why would the figure be what it is – for what reason?

TMA03- PART 2. ASSIGNMENT PLAN

INTRODUCTION:

▪ Explain the text given ▪ What is assignment about ▪ What is identification – categories ▪ Phoenix and Pattynama - ref

MAIN PART

▪ Who is Narendra and what does he do ▪ What identities does he have ▪ What are the discourses of visitor to national park and chairmen ▪ Racial & ethnic identities ▪ Unmarked identity – Othering (RACIAL)

CONCLUSION

▪ Where does Narendra’s heart lay – ethnic or both?

TMA03

PART 1: What does this table tell us about the identities of people visiting England’s national parks?

PART 2: What does the following article tell us about the relationship between place and identity?

LAURA DORLING
PI: A9699756
PART ONE

Based on the table provided, it is possible to tell the identities of the people visiting England’s national parks.
Over half of the adults surveyed are over 45 years of age. Older people seem to appreciate places like national parks and if they are retired, they have a lot more time on their hands than people working. This means that younger people are more interested in visiting towns/cities and seaside resorts. Younger people are not educated in the same way and are very driven by what is fashionable.
There is no obvious preference for gender type visitor to the National Park.

The majority of visitors to National Parks were ‘Wealthy Achievers’ or ‘Comfortably off’. 12% less wealthy achievers were ‘All trip-takers’. Wealthier people are upper-classed, more educated and appreciate the finer things that National Parks offer such as nature and spectacular views. There is also a lot of history and culture attached to National Parks which the more educated people would appreciate.
14% of the total adult population are recorded as being



References: Ward,D., (2007), ‘Access for all’, The Guardian, 22 August, DD131 Introducing the Social Sciences – Part 1, Assignment Booklet 2011E, The Open University. Phoenix and Pattynama, (2006) ‘Identities in everyday life’ in Taylor,S., Hinchliffe, S., Clarke,J. and Bromley, S. (eds) Making Social Lives, Milton Keynes, The Open University. Salmon (1985) ‘Identities in everyday life’ in Taylor,S., Hinchliffe, S., Clarke,J. and Bromley, S. (eds) Making Social Lives, Milton Keynes, The Open University. Trevor Phillips, (2004), in Ward,D., (2007), ‘Access for all’, The Guardian, 22 August, DD131 Introducing the Social Sciences – Part 1, Assignment Booklet 2011E, The Open University. Self Reflection I found the contrast between place and identity interesting in this assignment. I thought it was challenging for Narendra to be in the position but could bring exciting new changes. I found it difficult writing part one of this assignment as wasn’t sure if it flowed well.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    Our national parks are a supposed to be a natural treasure. Here the unspoiled grandeur and beauty of nature can be appreciated in its most pristine form. However, the amount of people that are visiting these parks has risen to levels that threaten the very beauty and well-being of these paradises. Its now seems apparent that there is a price to pay for allowing humans into an area that did not have many humans before.…

    • 1765 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Denali National Park

    • 276 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In summation, land and wildlife study and conservation remains an important issue. Ever growing numbers of people enjoy visiting wild parks, however, they must also remain aware of the true reason the parks exist. In addition to beauty, National Parks are priceless areas that provide the study of wildlife and the local environment in order to better understand how to protect them for future generations to enjoy.…

    • 276 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Taylor. S. 2009 ‘Who do we think we are? Identities in everyday life’ in Taylor. S, Hinchcliffe. S, Clarke. J, Bromley. S (eds) Making Social Lives. Milton Keynes. The Open University.…

    • 1482 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Frenchman's Cap Analysis

    • 847 Words
    • 4 Pages

    HUMAN-NATURE RELATIONSHIPS: Topic 4 the middle of the Franklin-Gordon Wild Rivers National Park. Development in this area has allowed for a wider range of user groups access the area but does this compensate for the effects on the wilderness? The concept of low impact and sustainable development are vital in ensuring that only benefits come from the development. Human-relationship is impacted by the development especially in poor weather vital for giving a good experience, facilities allow a wider range of user groups to participate and become integrated with nature whilst developing an ecocentric attitude to preserve nature.…

    • 847 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Abbey believes industrial tourism is becoming a bigger problem to all national parks. In abbey’s opinion he thinks motor vehicles should be prohibited on the grounds of any national monument. “ we have agreed not to drive our automobiles into cathedrals, to concert halls, art museums…we should treat our national parks with the same deference, for they, too, are holy places” (pg. 65). Abbey believes that the only way to truly experience the beauty of nature is to walk through, bike ride through, or horseback ride through. As said before abbey is a humanist and has not sympathy for the elderly who travel to national parks for vacations, he says they “had the opportunity to see the country when it was still relatively unspoiled” (pg. 67). He also has no sympathy for children who are “too small to ride bicycles and too heavy to be borne on their parents’ backs.” (pg.…

    • 816 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Identities are the definition of who we are, our peculiarities which distinguish us from any other entity. Our identities could be extremely complex, processing our ethnic group, cultural background as well as family status. However, it could also be defined in an abstract way, containing all the lived experience we have concealed and our own perspectives. Through the integration with others, based on a derisive self-perception, we may tend to disguise our true selves to search for approval. While we often attain to make a forceful stand for maintaining our own personalities, we are being true to ourselves even to the detriment to our sense of belonging.…

    • 897 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    mr bla bla

    • 824 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Act 1975 Race Relations Act 1976 Disability Discrimination Act 2005 Data Protection Act 1988 Equal Opportunities Act 2006 Debra Clarke PTLLS Assignment 2...…

    • 824 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    The chapter that I shall be concentrating on is ‘identifying social identities’. I will be identifying both the positive and negative ways that can influence people’s lives.…

    • 1336 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    South Downs National Park

    • 747 Words
    • 3 Pages

    People’s identity is given by their similarities and differences, it is important that we look at the elements of people’s identity these elements can be based upon their characteristics of race, gender, age, ethnicity, class and place. Identities can be given ‘out of place’ (Stephanie Taylor, 2009, p.175) Jonathon Raban observes a street in New York and with a large number of homeless people living on the street Jonathan expresses how he noticed the negative ways in which other people described them and how they had been giving the identity which had ‘marked’ them as: long-term mental patients discharged from hospitals... crack addicts, thieves, alcoholics, hobos the temporarily jobless, the alimony defaulters, rent-hike victims. (Raban, cited in Making Social Lives, 2009, p. 175-176) Raban set out to perform an experiment of two different identities, the first to walk and look ahead, not focusing on the street people but walking like most of the people on the pathway. The second where he acted like a street person by sitting himself in a vacant fire hydrant, he then watched the crowd pass by whilst settled into an armchair position like the Street People did. Both of these gave Raban…

    • 747 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    K218 Tma01

    • 1522 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Staples, M., Meegan, J., Jefferies, E. and Bromley, S. (2009) DD101 Introducing the social sciences, ‘Learning Companion 2’, Milton Keynes, The Open University.…

    • 1522 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    8. Do you think access to common resources such as national parks (owned collectively by all citizens) should be open to everyone, all the time? Would your opinion change if the influence of the “crowd” actually diminished the park natural resources or aesthetic value?…

    • 299 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Giddens, A. (1991). Modernity and self-identity: Self and society in the late modern age. Cambridge: Polity.…

    • 1208 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Not only is there more room for a greater variety of identities to emerge; it is also the case that the construction of identity has become a known requirement. Modern Western societies do not leave individuals in any doubt that they need to make choices of identity and lifestyle - even if their preferred options are rather obvious and conventional ones, or are limited due to lack of financial (or cultural) resources. As the sociologist Ulrich Beck has noted, in late modern societies everyone wants to 'live their own life', but this is, at the same time, 'an experimental life' (2002: 26). Since the social world is no longer confident in its traditions, every approach to life, whether seemingly radical or conventional, is somewhat risky and needs to be worked upon - nurtured, considered and maintained, or amended. Because 'inherited recipes for living and role stereotypes fail to function' (ibid), we have to make our own new patterns of being, and - although this is not one of Beck's emphases - it seems clear that the media plays an important role here. Magazines, bought on one level for a quick fix of glossy entertainment, promote self-confidence (even if they partly undermine it, for some readers, at the same time) and provide information about sex, relationships and lifestyles which can be put to a variety of uses. Television programmes, pop songs, adverts, movies and the internet all also provide numerous kinds of 'guidance' - not necessarily in the obvious form of advice-giving, but in the myriad suggestions of ways of living which they imply. We lap up this material because the social construction of identity today is the knowing social construction of identity. Your life is your project - there is no escape. The media provides some of the tools which can be used in this work. Like many toolkits, however, it contains some good utensils and some useless ones; some that might give beauty to the project, and some that might…

    • 356 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Research Proposal

    • 1872 Words
    • 8 Pages

    * Hostelling, H. (1947), “The Economics of Public Recreation: The Prewitt Report”. Washington D.C: National Park Series.…

    • 1872 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Tourism Marketing

    • 26233 Words
    • 91 Pages

    .( Bryden, D.M., Westbrook, S.R., Burns, B., Taylor, W.A., and Anderson, S. 2010. Assessing the economic impacts of nature based tourism in Scotland Scottish Natural Heritage Commissioned Report No. 398.)…

    • 26233 Words
    • 91 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays