Intro to Soc Test 1
Which of the following describes how deviance can be explained from the functionalist perspective?
Deviance clarifies moral boundaries and affirms norms
Why do social scientists who use interviews rarely speak with large numbers of people
Face-to-face interviews are very time consuming
Agents of socialization
Family, school, peers, media
Correlation
Relationship between two variables
How is culture transmitted and internalized?
We learn values and beliefs slowly and incrementally.
Durkheim theorized that the rapidly changing conditions of modern life lead to anomie. What is anomie?
normlessness or a loss of connections to the social world
Researchers should avoid using double barreled questions when designing a survey. What are double barreled questions
questions that ask about multiple issues
In 1998, former NFL linebacker Chris Spielman was forced to choose between staying with his sick wife and playing professional football. What sort of sociological phenomenon was he experiencing?
role conflict
the sociological imagination
the ability to understand the interplay between the self and larger social forces
Deviance can be considered relative because whether or not a behavior is considered deviant depends upon the historical, cultural, and situational context in which it occurs.
true
The writings of Émile Durkheim, Karl Marx, and Max Weber were deeply influenced by their life experiences
true
Role strain
when roles associated with a single status clash
Causation
A variable that causes another to change-hard to prove
__________ is the economic system that emerged during the industrial Revolution
Capitalism
If a sample of sociological research is representative, then
a smaller group of people studied can tell us something about a larger group
Max Weber believed that modern industrialized societies were characterized by which off the following institutions
bureaucracies
________ argues that punishments for rule violators are unequally distributed, with those near the top of society subject to more lenient rules and sanctions than those at the bottom.
conflict theory
The values, norms, and practices of the most powerful group within a society are called
dominant culture
What is it called when an individual uses their group's way of doing things as the standard for judging others?
ethnocentrism
According to sociologists, our genetic makeup determines what kind of personality and character traits we develop in life.
false
Agents of socialization are mutually exclusive and do not overlap.
false
No harm can come from participants as a result of completing a questionnaire
false
Symbolic interactionism analyzes social phenomena at the macro level, while structural functionalism and conflict theory analyses are at the micro level.
false
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
Informal norms are different from formal norms, in that
informal norms are implied and unwritten.
one of the functions of symbolic culture is that
it enables people to communicate
socialization is the
lifelong process by which people learn the norms, values, and beliefs of their culture.
Corporal punishments like branding or amputation, commonly used in colonial America, were designed to
mark the offender