Sociology Test 2
group cohesiveness
"glue" that holds groups together
a reference group
A 28 year old woman is on the verge of a big promotion at work. Because she did not finish college until she was 25, she wonders about getting her career moving, especially since the entry-level job that she has is not impressive. She decides to attend her 10-year high school reunion only if she is promoted. If her old high school classmates have this effect on her, what kind of group do they represent?
Emilie Durkham
Group membership prevents a state of normlessness.
innovator
In the movie Office Space, the character Peter Gibbons spends much of the movie trying to find unconventional and even illegal ways of making more money. According to Robert Merton's typology of adaptations, into which category does Peter fit?
Sherry Turkle
Societies value technology over relationships.
reference group
When a group provides standards by which a person evaluates his own personal attributes (group effects what you do)
early in life until adulthood
When does primary socialization take place?
takes place throughout life (lifelong process)
When does secondary socialization take place?
primary groups
intimate connections; family or close friends
secondary groups
less intimate connections; co-workers or a classroom/classmates
socialization
lifelong process by which people learn the norms, values, and beliefs of their culture
role strain
occurs when there are contradictory expectations within one single role a person plays
category
people have something in common but are not connected in any other way (all eighteen year olds)
aggregates
people in a certain crowd
group
people who have something in common
game stage
stage where children play organized games and take on the perspective of the generalized other (final stage)
embodied status
status related to our physical selves (such as beauty or disability)
ascribed status
status we are born with, unlikely to change (gender, race)
achieved status
status we have earned, worked for
Asch's study
the first conformity study; the 3-line test
role
the set of behaviors expected from a particular status position
play stage
the stage after age 3 when children pretend or play at being "mommy," "firefighter," "princess," or "doctor"
master status
a status that seems to override all others in our identities
personal front
A waitress is hired at the local branch of La Maison de la Casa House, and on her first day, she is given strict instructions to always wear black pants with a white shirt, to never carry a notepad, and to always address customers as "sir" or "madam." All of these things are elements of:
as a way of targeting groups who threaten society's elites
According to conflict theory, why are vagrancy laws passed?
category
All left handed people in the US would be classified as an:
what is considered deviant changes over time
Although branding is no longer used as a form of punishment in the US, some subcultures have adopted it as a form of body art. This demonstrates that:
Robert Putnam
Americans have drastically reduced their levels of civic engagement over time.
most mental capacities, and even perhaps the ability to think, are learned through social interaction
Children growing up in extreme isolation proves that:
feral
Children raised without human interaction or with a minimum of human contact are referred to as ___ children.
impression management
Erving Goffman theorized social life as a kind of game in which we work to control the impressions others have of us. What did Goffman call this process?
A crowd doesn't necessarily feel a shared identity.
How do sociologists distinguish a group from a crowd?
through weak ties
How does info primarily travel through society?
The rules are applied unequally, and those with power or influence are punished much less harshly
If an upper-middle-class white college student is sentenced to rehab for the same drug crime that a lower-class black man is sentenced to jail for committing, what might a conflict theorist conclude about deviance?
the looking-glass self
Imagine a child who gets mediocre grades and is picked last for a team when games are played at recess. He likes to make jokes and pranks, and notices that people laugh when he does those things. The child starts to think that other people are laughing with him, not at him. This is:
in the play stage
Susie isn't old enough to go to school yet, but she loves to play house. She has a toy stove and pretends to be a mother. Sometimes, when that gets boring, she goes outside, takes a garden hose, and pretends to be a firefighter. George Herbert Mead would say that she is:
secondary deviance
The Saints and the Roughnecks example is an example of
groups have great power to induce conformity
The Solomon Arch experiment, in which a group of subjects were asked to compare the length of lines, demonstrated that:
the complex interaction between heredity traits and social learning
The nature vs nurture debate helps us understand:
backstage
The same waitress drops her professional/cheery temperament and cusses like a sailor once she is back in the kitchen. Example of:
group cohesion
The sense of solidarity, or team spirit, that an individual feels toward their group is called:
instrumental leaders
What are leaders called whose personal style makes them more task- or goal- oriented and less concerned with feelings?
ACTIVE PROCESS
What kind of process is socialization?
groupthink
What sort of group dynamic may have led officials at NASA to ignore warnings and launch the space shuttle Challenger, which exploded shortly after take-off?
primary groups
What type of group provides most of our emotional satisfaction?
violations of social norms
Which would sociologists consider the best definition of deviance?
Charles Cooley
Who made the process of "the looking-glass self?"
George Herbert Mead
Who made up the "play" and "game" stage?
social self
Without social interaction, humans cannot develop a ____.
status
a position in a social hierarchy that comes with a set of expectations (professor, parent, class clown, etc.)
role conflict
a situation in which two or more roles have contradictory expectations (football player taking off to be a dad and being criticized)
Milgram
conducted a conformity study that used a laboratory setting to test the lengths to which ordinary people would follow orders from a legitimate authority figure; test with the teacher, learner, and an experimenter
emotional cohesiveness
emotional connections or feelings holds group together
expressive needs
emotional needs; love and care
family, school, peers, mass media
examples of agents of socialization
preparatory stage
first stage; children mimic or imitate others
Instrumental needs
goal-based needs; not really emotional
task cohesiveness
groups that are held together by a common goal (sports team coming together to work out)
groupthink
in very cohesive groups, the tendency to enforce a high degree of conformity among members, creating a demand for unanimous agreement
I
inner self, creative, subjective, engages in action; the ACTOR
looking glass self
seeing ourselves as we BELIEVE others see us
me
what others think you should be; buffer, looks at society and says you should or shouldn't