WEEK 2 QUIZ
Safety and security
According to Bowlby attachments come from a need for
Mores
Behavior that carries moral significance. Violations of this type of social rule often is accompanied by both informal and formal sanctions
Norms, Symbols, Values
Fundamental components of culture are:
Values, ideas, concepts, and rules regarding acceptable and unacceptable behavior
Non-material elements include:
Funeral practices
One of the clearest ways we see culture expressed is through
Norms
Simple Social rules:
True
T or F: Avoidance of the topic of death characterizes much of the American viewpoint
True
T or F: From the sociological perspective, funeral rites serve an important function by providing social cohesion, bringing people together in a shared expression of grief and remembrance.
True
T or F: Sadness is the most common feeling found in the bereaved
False
T or F: The funeral serves its most useful purpose when it minimizes the reality of death
Bereavement
The experience of emotion of grief. "The Event" of a loss/death is known as
Industrialization
The process by which a society transforms from a primarily agricultural adaptive strategy (economy) to the manufacturing of goods and services through advanced technical enterprises.
Globalization
The process of connecting countries and cultures in economic, political, and social activities
Ethnocentrism
The propensity to believe that one's own culture and way of life represent what's normal or are superior to all others
Uncomplicated grief
The term "normal grief" is sometimes referred to as
Social integration
There are a number of specific behaviors frequently associated with normal grief reactions, which one is NOT a normal grief reaction
Grief Syndrome
This is a set of symptoms associated with loss
Mourning
This is an adjustment process that involves grief or sorrow over a period of time and helps in the reorganization of the life of an individual following loss or death of someone loved
Extreme withdrawal
Which of the following is NOT a manifestation of normal grief
Attachment Theory (Bowlby)
5/5Grade: 5 out of 5 points possible This is the tendency in human beings to make strong affectional bonds with others coming from the need for safety and security
