Inquizitive 5
a primary group
- a group of close friends and family members who get together to watch saturday night live on television each week
Primary group
- a married couple - a close-knit group of adult friends who have been together since middle school
secondary group
- a professional football team - a tailoring shop that makes bespoke (fully custom) suits for men
Structural functionalism
- affiliation groups like fraternities help create social cohesion in the context of a larger, possibly alienating, university system by bringing young men with shared values together
technical competence
- all members are expressly trained and qualified for their specific roles within the organization
specialization
- all members of a bureaucracy are assigned specific roles and tasks
a category
- all of the people watching Saturday Night Live on television last saturday
true statements about social media sites according to the statistics in the textbook
- almost 70% of all adults use a social networking site - every month, 1.1 billion people use instagram
True statements about social media engagement and our social connections
- americans are no more or less lonely or detached from one another than they have ever been - users of social media are more connected than nonusers
Robert Putnam
- americans have drastically reduced their levels of civic engagement over time
hierarchy
- bureaucracies always feature the supervision of subordinates by higher-ranking managers and bosses
Jen's soccer league is quite large. it includes 12 teams, and each team has approximately 15 members. Jen is very popular and has the most ties with individuals throughout the league. which social network concept best describes jen's situation?
- certrality
in-group
- classy - laid back
formal written communication
- documents such as memos (or emails) are the heart of the organization and the most effective way to communicate
Emile Durkheim
- group membership prevents a state of normlessness
aspects of group dynamics
- how groups achieve goals - how groups disintegrate - how groups change - how groups form
Impersonality
- in a bureaucracy, rules come before people; no individual receives special treatment
conflict theory
- in group and out group dynamics can contribute to stereotyping and conflict as fraternity brothers develop an "us vs. them" perspective regarding other frats and non-greeks
An employee at the local Department of Motor Vehicles puts in an eight-hour shift and then goes to a local bar and grill to celebrate a co-worker's birthday. What aspect of bureaucracy does this situation highlight?
- interpersonal interactions help humanize bureaucracies
false statements about social media engagement and our social connections
- no quantitative research has been conducted to examine how social media engagement influences social connections - facebook users have fewer close relationships and higher levels of social support than users of other social media and nonusers
out-group
- snobbish - lazy
Jeff Bezos, founder of amazon, has a rule that if a team cannot be fed by 2 pizzas, the team is too large. the "two pizza" rule exemplifies the concept of
- social loafing
Sherry Turkle
- societies value technology over relationships
expressive leadership
- the CEO of starbucks considers requiring all stores to being opening at 4:30am but after considering the undue stress it may add to employees, decided not to implement the change
an aggregate
- the audience at a taping of saturday night live
a secondary group
- the cast members of saturday night live
symbolic interactionism
- the pressure to conform to group culture (as in the cases of peer pressure and groupthink) can lead individuals to do things they might never do alone, and can have negative consequences, as in the case of frats hazing and binge drinking. it can also lead to positive actions, such as when frat members volunteer or raise money for charity
rules and regulations
- these are meant to make all operations as predictable as possible
Which statements correctly describe "the strength of weak ties"?
- weak ties provide benefits that strong ties do not - weak ties provide access to valuable information
instrumental leadership
- your boss does not care that forcing employees to work through the weekend may hurt morale. The project must be done by monday - the CEO of McDonald's knows that laying off 500 workers will bring discord among other employees but knows they much do so to meet quarterly goals
Fill in blank
The differences between a group and a (crowd) is whether the members identify with one another and whether interaction is temporary or permanent. A primary group consists of people such as (family members), whereas a secondary group might consist of people such as (students taking this course)
Melissa is a student studying biology at the university of michigan. she grew up in michigan, in a nearby town. identify each person as being a member of an in-group or out-group for melissa
in-group - a current community college student with whom Melissa went to high school - a history major at the university of michigan - her sister who is a student at michigan state Out-group - an ohio state student who went to Melissa's rival high school in michigan
Fill in blanks
power is the ability to (control) the actions of others and if legitimated, provides (authority). power can be (coercive) when it is backed by the threat of force, or (influential) when it is supported by persuasion
In the context of Charles Horton Cooley's theory of groups, classify each attribute as belonging to either primary or secondary groups
primary - end themselves - enduring membership secondary - instrumental in purpose - impersonal - contingent membership
Fill in the blank
Katie, Tara and Shanice are three african american women who just started college. the three of them make up an (triad). Katie and Tara often have friction in their friendship, so Shanice must referee between the two of them and adds (stability) in the group. these 3 friends are also members of a sorority and complete with a neighboring sorority over who throws the best parties. they see the neighboring sorority as an (out-group)