Skip to main content
Chapter 1 of 15
Study Plan

Introducing Indian Society

Jharkhand Board · Class 12 · Sociology

Step-by-step guide to study Introducing Indian Society in Jharkhand Board Class 12 Sociology. Topics to cover, practice strategy, and time allocation.

45 questions20 flashcards5 concepts

Interactive on Super Tutor

Studying Introducing Indian Society? Get the full interactive chapter.

Quizzes, flashcards, AI doubt-solver and a step-by-step study plan — built for study plan and more.

1,000+ Class 12 students started this chapter today

A comparison illustrating the difference between common sense knowledge about society (partial, biased) and sociological knowledge (holistic, objective).
Super Tutor

Super Tutor has 5+ illustrations like this for Introducing Indian Society alone — flashcards, concept maps, and step-by-step visuals.

See them all

Study Plan

1
Day 1–2

Learn the Theory

Read the textbook chapter carefully. Note down definitions, formulas, and key concepts.

2
Day 3

Practice Problems

Solve textbook exercises and additional practice questions. There are 45 questions available for this chapter.

3
Day 4

Revise & Test

Revise key formulas and concepts without looking at notes. Take a practice quiz to test your understanding. Mark weak areas for re-revision.

4
Day 7

Spaced Revision

Revisit Introducing Indian Society after a week. Use flashcards for quick recall. Solve previous year questions from this chapter.

What to Focus On

  • Sociology is unique because students already possess prior knowledge about society before studying it.
  • Prior knowledge (common sense) is 'partial' — it is both incomplete and biased towards one's own social group.
  • The initial stage of learning Sociology involves 'unlearning' common sense assumptions.

  • A social map locates an individual within the web of social relationships and groups in society.
  • Social identities include age, region/language, economic class, religion, caste/tribe, and gender.
  • Young people (age 18 and below) account for approximately 40% of India's population.

  • Common sense knowledge is acquired through socialization and feels 'natural' but is partial and biased.
  • Sociological understanding is systematic, critical, evidence-based, and strives to be objective.
  • Sociology requires 'unlearning' common sense assumptions to see social reality more completely.

Memory Tips

Sociology is unique because everyone already knows something about society before studying it

Prior knowledge about society is both an advantage AND a disadvantage for learning Sociology

Common sense knowledge is 'partial' — meaning both incomplete AND biased

Self-reflexivity — the ability to look at yourself from the outside, critically

Want a personalised study plan?

Super Tutor creates a day-by-day plan for Jharkhand Board Class 12 Sociology that adapts to your exam date and pace.

Create My Study Plan — Free

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the important topics in Introducing Indian Society for Jharkhand Board Class 12 Sociology?
Key topics in Introducing Indian Society include Chapter 1 Concept Map: Introducing Indian Society, Chapter 1 — Core Concepts Overview, Overview of Introducing Indian Society — Key Concepts. These are the concepts Jharkhand Board Class 12 examiners draw on most — study them first, then practise related questions.
How to score full marks in Introducing Indian Society — Jharkhand Board Class 12 Sociology?
Understand the core concepts first, then work through the 45 practice questions available for this chapter. Revise formulas and definitions regularly, and use flashcards for quick recall before the exam.

Sources & Official References

Content is aligned to the official syllabus. Refer to the board website for the latest curriculum.

For serious students

Get the full Introducing Indian Society chapter — for free.

Quizzes, flashcards, AI doubt-solver and a step-by-step study plan for Jharkhand Board Class 12 Sociology.