Sociology is not just another easy social science elective.
It requires a massive shift in perspective that most textbooks fail to explain clearly.
According to the World Health Organization (2024), 14% of students experience major anxiety, often driven by the crushing workload of 100+ pages of theory reading every single week.
I saw a student post on Reddit recently: "I love the subject, but the workload is crushing me.
Between the 100+ pages of reading and the specific grading rubrics, I'm falling behind." But it's not just the reading.
It's the technical traps like Canvas SpeedGrader tracking and the fear of AI detection false positives.
When you're working 25+ hours a week, as the Lumina Foundation notes is common, your degree completion risk skyrockets.
Traditional tutoring doesn't fix the time deficit.
You need someone who can handle the analytical frameworks of Marx and Weber while navigating the proctoring software your professor insists on using.
But here's what most students don't know: the rubrics aren't just looking for knowledge, they're looking for a specific academic tone that busy workers simply don't have time to master.