Intro To Sociology - Midterm
Why does the family have such a powerful impact as an agent of socialization?
Family begins the socialization process before there are any other competing influences
A cultural group that exists harmoniously within a larger, dominant culture is called a
Subculture
________ is an example of something that would be part of an individual's or society's symbolic culture
belonging to a political party
On any given day, you probably depend on many strangers to provide electricity, water, natural gas, weather forecasts, and other services. According to Émile Durkheim, this interdependence gives rise to
organic solidarity
Although many people believe that expectations for personal space are inborn, members of many cultures are accustomed to noticeably less personal space than those of others. This helps demonstrate that people's expectations for personal space are
a part of our culture and, as such, are learned rather than inborn
The Japanese observed soldiers playing baseball during the American occupation of Japan after World War II and later adopted it as one of their pastimes. This is an example of
Cultural Diffusion
What is a sociologist's theoretical perspective if they argue that we have seen the "dissolution of master narratives or metanarratives"?
Postmodernism
________ research would involve observing a group in order to determine its norms, values, rules, and meanings.
Qualitative
Which of the following is a disadvantage of using existing sources of data for research?
Researchers often seek answers to questions the data does not directly address
According to Sigmund Freud, the ________ is the part of the mind that is responsible for representing culture within us and serving as the moral component of our personality in the psychoanalytic theory.
Superego
What is the sociological imagination?
The ability to understand the interplay between the self and larger social forces
The definition of "culture"
The entire way of life of a group of people, and it acts as a lens through which we view the world
What is it called when someone has the ability to understand another culture in terms of that culture's own norms and values without reference to any other culture's standards?
cultural relativism
The famous anthropologist Margaret Mead said that the United States of America is the best place to raise a female child. Her assertion is an example of
ethnocentrism (bias to one's own culture)
Microsociology is an approach that
examines interactions between individuals and how those interactions reflect larger societal patterns.
Macrosociology is an approach that
examines large-scale social structures to see how they affect individual lives.
Sociologist Harry Gracey observed that kindergartners are not just being taught about counting numbers and learning the alphabet. They are also being taught "skills" such as following rules, remaining in their seats, and other things that will be necessary for the work world. What are these "skills" called?
the hidden curriculum
If a researcher has obtained informed consent from all of their participants, it means that
the participants understand the nature of the research and are participating freely
Reactivity is
the tendency of research participants to change their behavior in response to being studied
Ethnographers are overt about their roles if
they openly admit that they are doing sociological research
Many American colleges and universities require students to take classes on non-Western cultures. Why might these requirements exist?
to demonstrate the value of multiculturalism and to reduce ethnocentrism
A goal of socialization is
to teach norms, values, and beliefs
The primary goal of comparative and historical research methods is to
understand relationships between parts of society in various regions and time periods
An example of something that would be part of the material culture of an individual or society would be
weapons of war
Which of the following is an example of a total institution?
A prison
What is postmodernism?
As a philosophy, postmodernism rejects concepts of rationality, objectivity, and universal truth. Instead, it emphasizes the diversity of human experience and multiplicity of perspectives. It's hectic
Research has been conducted regarding why teens engage in smoking and other deviant behaviors. The most important factor in statistically predicting whether or not a teen will engage in a particular deviant behavior is the presence or absence of peers who are also involved in that behavior. This is probably because the other teens are acting
As agents of socialization
What practice did Bernard McGrane suggest that individuals adopt to better understand the world around them?
Beginner's Mind
The values, norms, and practices of the most powerful group within a society are called
Dominant culture
The analysis of documents such as medical records, photographs, diaries, letters, newspapers, and song lyrics uses which of the following types of data?
Existing Sources
The research method MOST closely related to the scientific method is
Experimental Research
Julie Bettie's ethnography Women without Class: Girls, Race, and Identity examined the role of race and class in the lives of girls in California's Central Valley. She did most of her work at a high school, hanging out with students and writing down her observations. What do ethnographers call her written observations?
Field Notes
In their ethnography Promises I Can Keep: Why Poor Women Put Motherhood before Marriage,Kathryn Edin and Maria Kefalas studied the realities of single motherhood for poor, urban women. They immersed themselves in the community before beginning their research. Edin moved her family to the city, and both ethnographers volunteered in community programs. Immersing themselves in the community is an example of
Gaining Access
Erving Goffman theorized social life as a kind of performance in which we work to control the impressions others have of us. What did Goffman call this process?
Impression Management
Why can sociologists who conduct interviews only gather data from a limited number of people?
Interviews are very time-consuming
Why is the discussion of the article "Body Ritual among the Nacirema" useful to sociologists?
It challenges people's inability to observe their own cultures
What is a disadvantage of using ethnography/participant observation as a method of social research?
It is difficult for another researcher to repeat or replicate any particular study
Many Marxist sociologists assume that large-scale economic structures are the most important factors in shaping people's lives. This assumption is an example of
Macrosociology
What did Max Weber mean when he said that modern people are trapped in an "iron cage"?
Most aspects of life are increasingly controlled by rigid rules and rationalization.
What do the several cases of children who grew up in extreme social isolation, such as the case of Genie in 1970, suggest?
Most of our mental capacities, and perhaps even the ability to think, are learned through social interaction
What is the relationship between the self and society according to symbolic interactionism?
The self is shaped by society, but society is also shaped by the self
What is an advantage of using surveys as a research method?
They reveal attitudes and beliefs inaccessible by any other means
Which theorist argued that if people define a situation as real, it is real in its consequences?
W. I. Thomas
How is culture transmitted and internalized?
We learn values and beliefs slowly and incrementally
A paradigm is
a set of assumptions, theories, and perspectives that makes up a way of understanding social reality
Which of the following is an example of a culture war?
anti-abortion advocates demonstrating in front of a family planning clinic
organic solidarity
based upon the dependence individuals have on each other in more advanced societies
Countercultural groups such as the hippies of the 1960s
challenged the norms of the dominant culture
What have scholars called Erving Goffman's ideas, given that impression management relies so much on strategies of performance?
dramaturgy
What does the concept of the looking-glass self help explain?
how we develop a self-concept based on our perceptions of others' judgments of us
Oftentimes, a larger number of people claim that they voted in their recent local elections than the number that actually did vote. This is perhaps because more people believed that they should have voted. This belief is an example of
ideal culture
Sociology can be defined as the systematic and scientific study of human society and social behavior from ________ to ________
large-scale institutions; individual interactions
Socialization is the
lifelong process by which people learn the norms, values, and beliefs of their culture
Researcher Pam Fishman studied the conversations of heterosexual couples to determine how power is created and maintained through everyday, face-to-face interactions. How would you describe her approach? (Micro/Macro)
microsociological
According to George Herbert Mead, what are children learning when they begin to take the perspective of a generalized other in their games?
the attitudes and expectations of society as a whole