Sociology Chapters 1-3 Key Terms
Variable
Any concept with measurable traits or characteristics that can change or vary from one person, time, situation, or society to another
Symbols
Anything that has socially come to stand for something else.
Dependent Variable
Assumed to be caused by the independent variable
Functionalist Perspectives
Based on the assumption that society is a stable, orderly system
Positivism
A belief that the world can best be understood through scientific inquiry. Has two dimension: methodological and social and political
Role
A collection of norms associated with a particular position in society. Ex: I am a student.
Interview
A data-collection encounter in which an interviewer asks the respondent questions and records the answers
Alienation
A feeling of powerlessness and estrangement from other people and from oneself.
Class
A group of people of roughly equivalent status in an unequal society
Counterculture
A group whose values set their members in opposition to the dominant society. They want to change the society in some way. Ex: hippies, hate groups
Survey
A poll in which the researcher gathers facts or attempts to determine the relationships among facts
Myth
A popular, but false notion that may be used, either intentionally or unintentionally, to perpetuate certain beliefs or "theories" even in the light of conclusive evidence on the contrary.
Status
A position in a social structure
Prestige
A positive or negative social estimation of honor
Questionnaire
A printed research instrument containing a series of items to which subjects respond
Global Interdependence
A relationship in which the lives of all people are intertwined closely and any one nation's problems are part of a larger global problem.
Society
A relatively self-sufficient and self-sustaining group of people united by social relationships and who live within a certain territory
Representative Sample
A selection from a larger population that has the essential characteristics of the total population
Theory
A set of logically interrelated statements that attempts to describe, explain, and (occasionally) predict social events
Power Elite
A small clique composted of top corporate, political, and military officials
Master Status
A social position of exceptional importance. Ex: Queen Elizabeth, presidential race
Taboo
A socially forbidden act. Ex: cannibalism, incest.
Language
A socially structured system of sound patterns with specific and arbitrary meaning
Institution
A stable cluster of values, norms, statuses, and rules that developed around the basic need of society.
Hypothesis
A statement of the expected relationship between two or more variables
Patriarchy
A system in which men dominate women and in which things that are considered to be "male" or "masculine" are more highly valued than those considered to be "female" or "feminine"
Achieved class
A system is which your social position is based on your own efforts. Sometimes this is called an open system.
Fad
A temporary, but widely copied activity followed by a large number of people. Ex: crocs, gauchos, dance styles, silly bands, heelies
Wonder
A topic. Something you have interest in and want to research.
Fashion
A valued style of behavior, thinking, or appearance that is long lasting. Ex: Jeans
Pop Culture
Consists of activities, products, and services patronized by the middle and working class. Ex: driving a Toyota. Going to a TCU opera and maybe taking a Southwest flight to get to Fort Worth.
High Culture
Consists of activities, products, and services, patronized by the elite in society. Ex: Floyd Mayweather owns millions in cars. Going to the opera in Vienna is high culture, especially if you take a private jet.
Material Culture
Consists of those things humans create that you can physically touch. Ex: desk, shoes, sunglasses, car, hat
Non Material Culture
Consists of those things humans create that you cannot physically touch. Ex: language, religious beliefs, legal system
Laws
Encoded norms. They are norms we take so seriously that we write them down and everyone has to follow them.
Macrolevel Analysis
Examines whole societies, large-scale social structures, and social systems instead of looking at important social dynamics in individuals' lives
Postmodern Perspective
Existing theories have been unsuccessful in explaining social life in contemporary societies that are characterized by post-industrialization, consumerism, and global communications
Mores
Fall under the category of moral violations. We do we morally expect people to do and behave. It can be fluid as it varies through societies and groups. They may not be illegal, but as a society we believe it is not right
Microlevel Analysis
Focuses on small groups rather than large-scale social structures
Social Dynamics
Forces for conflict and change
Social Statics
Forces for social order and stability
Triad
Group of three
Dyad
Group of two
Conflict Perspectives
Groups in society are engaged in a continuous power struggle for control of scare resources
Subcultures
Groups whose values and behaviors are so distinct they set their members apart from the general population . Ex: the Amish, polygamy gamilies
Interaction
Immediate reciprocally oriented communication between two or more people
Manifest Functions
Intended and/or overtly recognized by the participants in a social unit.
Qualitative Research
Interpretive descriptions (words) rather than statistics (numbers) are used to analyze underlying meanings and patterns of social relationships.
Gellschaft
Means association. It is about association and you know people by what they can sell you. A big city has impersonal relationships. Interaction is based on functional need. In a big city, people are oriented towards their personal needs versus the group.
Gemeinschaft
Means community. Refers to a small community or a small town. Tight knit. People might have strong interpersonal relationships. Kinship or family ties are really important. There is a common core of values and unity among the citizens.
Conceptualizing
Narrowing down a wonder and making it more specific
High-Income Countries
Nations with highly industrialized economies; technologically advanced industrial, administrative, and service occupations; and relatively high levels of national and personal income. Ex: USA, Canada, Australia
Middle-Income Countries
Nations with industrializing economies, particularly in urban areas, and moderate levels of national and personal income. Ex: China, Brazil, Mexico
Ascribed System
One in which your social position is determined at birth. Ex: Indian caste system
Social Facts
Patterned ways of acting, thinking, and feeling that exist outside any one individual but that exert social control over each person
Sociologists
People who are concerned with how and why people as members of a group act they way they do towards one another
Respondents
People who provide data for analysis through interviews or questionnaires.
Independent Variable
Presumed to be the cause of the relationship
Low-Income Countries
Primarily agrarian nations with little industrialization and low levels of national and personal income. Ex: nations of Africa
Personal Troubles
Private problems that affect individuals and the networks of people with whom they associate regularly. As a result, individuals within their immediate social settings must solve those problems.
Public Issues
Problems that affect large numbers of people and often require solutions at the societal level.
The Sociological Perspective
Provides a way of looking at life and understanding why people are they way they are
Sex
Refers to the biological and anatomical differences between females and males.
Ethnicity
Refers to the cultural heritage or identity of a group and is based on factors such as language or country of origin.
Gender
Refers to the meanings, beliefs, and practices associated with sex differences, referred to as femininity and masculinity
Symbolic Interaction
Refers to the peculiar and distinctive character of interaction as it takes place between human beings
Mechanical Solidarity
Social bonds based on collective conformity to tradition. You are bond together and connected to someone else because you have agreed. Amish is a prime example. They are bound together by their belief system, style of dress, mode of transportation, lack of electricity.
Organic Solidarity
Social bonds based on specialization and interdependence. You are bond to each other because of the fact that you specialize. If you specialize in something, you are good at one thing and if you ever need something you have to bond to another person to get something done.
Norms
Social rules or guidelines that specify is appropriate in a given situation
Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
Society is the sum of the interaction of groups and individuals
Research Methods
Specific strategies or techniques for systematically conducting research
Power
The ability of a person within a social relationship to carry out his or her own will despite resistance from others
Sociological Imagionation
The ability to see the relationship between individual experiences and the larger society. Created by C. Wright Mills.
Social Darwinism
The belief that those species of animals, including human beings, best adapted to their environment survive and prosper, whereas those poorly adapted die out
Culture
The complex pattern of living that humans have developed and that they pass from one generation to the next
Validity
The extent to which a study or research instrument accurately measures what it is supposed to measure
Reliability
The extent to which a study or research instrument yields consistent results when applied to different individuals at one time or to the same individuals over time.
Quantitative Research
The goal is scientific objectivity, and the focus is on data that can be measured numerically
Structured Interviews
The interviewer asks questions from a standardized questionnaire
Folkways
The least significant norms. If you violate one, it's not a big deal and people may notice because it is not illegal or immoral. Ex: not matching your socks together.
Sample
The people who are selected from the population to be studied
Urbanization
The process by which an increasing proportion of a population lives in cities rather than in rural cities
Industrialization
The process by which societies are transformed from dependence on agriculture and handmade products to an emphasis on manufacturing and related industries.
Socialization
The process by which we learn the ways of society or a particular group
Cultural Leveling
The process in which cultures become similar to one another. Ex: Coca-Cola, Christmas
Research
The process of systematically collecting information for the purpose of testing an existing theory or generating a new one
Class
The relative location of a person or group within the larger society, based on wealth, power, prestige, or other valued resources.
Culture Shock
The result of coming into contact with a radically different culture that challenges our basic assumptions. Ex: Texas has different culture than Seattle
Sociology
The study of human society and social behavior
Social Structures
The traits of groups as opposed to the traits of individual members themselves
Values
These are what justify norms and are specifically shared ideas about what are good, right, and desirable. They can change over time and they can vary from society to society.
Blase Urbanite
This occurs as a result of people being exposed to the crush of objects, events, and people in a city or urban environment
Latent Functions
Unintended functions that are hidden and remain unacknowledged by participants
Unit of Analysis
What or whom is being studied
Cultural Diffusion
When groups borrow culture from one another as a result of contact. Ex: food
Cultural Lag
When one part of culture changes and the other part lags behind. Generally technology changes and we do not have the laws to use the technology. Ex: glow in the dark dogs
Ethnocentrism
When we use our own culture to judge that of others
Cultural Relativism
When you judge another's culture on their own terms and standards
Nature
Your biology or your heredity
Nurture
Your social environment
