🎮 AQA Crime and Deviance Boss Battle is live!

A brightly lit retro arcade game machine featuring a crime scene theme with police elements, set in a vibrant gaming venue.

Students enter their initials, battle through 5 timed arcade levels and revise theories of crime, class, gender, ethnicity, globalisation, green crime, state crime, media, surveillance, punishment, victims and the criminal justice system.

Perfect for AQA A-level Sociology Paper 3 revision.

This arcade-style revision quiz is designed for AQA A-level Sociology students studying Crime and Deviance for Paper 3. Students enter their initials like an old-school arcade machine, then work through five timed levels based on the AQA specification: crime, deviance, social order and social control; sociological explanations of crime and deviance; the social distribution of crime by social class, gender and ethnicity; globalisation, media, green crime, human rights and state crime; and crime control, surveillance, prevention, punishment, victims and the criminal justice system. The quiz includes key sociologists and concepts commonly used in AQA Crime and Deviance, including Durkheim, Merton, Cohen, Cloward and Ohlin, Becker, Cicourel, Lemert, Young, Lea and Young, Hall, Chambliss, Gordon, Box, Heidensohn, Carlen, Messerschmidt, Gilroy, Bowling and Phillips, Garland, Foucault, Cohen, Mathiesen, Christie, Walklate, Zemiology, green criminology and state crime.

Hard Mode: Paper 3

Crime Boss Battle

AQA A-level Sociology revision for Crime and Deviance. Enter your initials, tackle five research-heavy levels, beat the timer and save your score to the leaderboard.

Player
Score0
Level0/5
Cleared0
Rank

Enter your initials before starting

This is the harder version of the AQA Crime and Deviance arcade quiz. The answers shuffle every time, so A–D will not follow a predictable pattern.

Each level has 20 research-focused questions and a fresh five-minute timer. The pass mark is now 15 out of 20.

  • Level 1: Functionalism, strain, subcultures and interactionism
  • Level 2: Marxism, class, realism and crimes of the powerful
  • Level 3: Gender, ethnicity, age and measuring crime
  • Level 4: Globalisation, media, green crime and state crime
  • Level 5: Control, surveillance, punishment, victims and CJS
High Score Entry
ENTER INITIALS TO UNLOCK START

5 levels. 100 questions. 5 minutes per level. Answers shuffle A–D each time.

Leave a Reply

Cambridge OCR A-Level Sociology Crime and Deviance Escape Room: Paper 3 Section B Interactive Revision Activity

Cambridge OCR A-level Sociology Paper 3 is Debates in Contemporary Society. Section A focuses on Globalisation and the Digital Social World, while Section B requires students to choose one option: Crime and Deviance, Education, or Religion, Belief and Faith. The Crime and Deviance option focuses on how crime and deviance are socially constructed, measured, socially…

AQA A-Level Sociology Theory and Debates Revision Escape Room: Interactive Activity on Sociological Theory, Science, Values, Social Policy and Exam Skills

AQA A-level Sociology includes Theory and Methods across both Paper 1 and Paper 3. The theory and debates material asks students to understand key sociological perspectives, including consensus, conflict, structural and social action theories; debates about modernity and postmodernity; the relationship between theory and methods; whether sociology can be scientific; debates about objectivity, subjectivity and…

AQA A-Level Sociology Crime and Deviance Revision Escape Room: Interactive Activity on Theories, Social Distribution, Globalisation, Media, Crime Control and Exam Skills

Crime and Deviance is the compulsory Paper 3 topic for AQA A-level Sociology. Students need to understand sociological explanations of crime, deviance, social order and social control; the social distribution of crime by class, gender and ethnicity; globalisation, media, green crime, human rights and state crime; and crime control, surveillance, prevention, punishment, victims and the…

Leave a Reply

About the author

The Sociology Guy is a pseudonym originally used by Craig Gelling when he was working in an FE College to provide an outlet for his frustrations with how he was expected to teach and strict rules around intellectual property in his former employer. The Sociology Guy name came from his early years as a supply teacher, where students would often not know his name and ask for ‘the sociology guy’ when coming to the staff room. Initially set up in 2018 as an anonymous You Tube channel, Craig has since written, recorded and presented for many different organisations and education providers. His purpose is to try and make sociology both accessible and understandable for all students and support teachers to inspire the next generation of sociologists.

Discover more from The Sociology Guy

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading