Exam 7: Barbies and Monster Trucks: Socialization and Doing Gender
Exam 1: A Day in the Life of Your Jeans: Using Our Stuff to Discover Sociology17 Questions
Exam 2: You Are What You Eat: Culture, Norms, and Values19 Questions
Exam 3: Fast Food Blues: Work in a Global Economy20 Questions
Exam 4: Coffee: Status, Distinction, and Good Taste20 Questions
Exam 5: Shopping Lessons: Consuming Social Order21 Questions
Exam 6: Get in the Game: Race, Merit, and Group Boundaries21 Questions
Exam 7: Barbies and Monster Trucks: Socialization and Doing Gender18 Questions
Exam 8: Dreaming of a White Wedding: Marriage, Family, and Heteronormativity20 Questions
Exam 9: I 3 My Phone: Technology and Social Networks21 Questions
Exam 10: Branding Your Unique Identity: Consumer Culture and the Social Self21 Questions
Exam 11: Looking Good: Ideology, Intersectionality, and the Beauty Industry21 Questions
Exam 12: Whats on Your Playlist Subcultures, Racism, and Cultural Appropriation21 Questions
Exam 13: Our Love-Hate Relationship With the Car: Masculinity, Industry, and Environmental Sustainability22 Questions
Exam 14: Appendix: Advertising and Society: an Overview of Sociological Methods22 Questions
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What do sociologists call the process by which people learn norms, role expectations and skills?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Define socialization. How can you apply the structure/agency thinking frame to it?
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Socialization is a lifelong process of learning norms, role expectations, and skills, in order to become a functional individual in a social world.
Agents of socialization are people and organizations that exert socializing influences, but the process is not unidirectional: individuals actively interpret, negotiate and resist socializing messages.
The structure/agency thinking frame allows us to ask questions about the relative power of agents of socialization (e.g. why do gender roles change little from generation to generation?) and socialized individuals (e.g. why do children socialized in similar ways come to do gender in different ways?).
Sexism is a belief system supported by the following system of social inequality:
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Ten-year old Tiffany's working-class parents have saved to buy her a miniature dirt bike and pay for membership at a track. Which of the following parenting strategies have her parents exhibited?
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Define gender policing. Is this concept compatible with the essentialist view of gender? Why?
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Research has discovered the following about poor African American girls, who only have access to white dolls:
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West and Zimmerman's idea of "doing gender" emphasizes the following aspect of social life:
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Which of the following is a factor contributing to the increasing consumption of toys in our society?
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Define excess consumption. What factors contribute to excessive consumption of toys in our society?
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Research has discovered that middle-class parents purchase toys with the intention of developing children's:
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Summarize the main changes in gender division of toys and toy advertising in North America during the 20th century. What important lesson about gender can we learn from these changes?
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How do middle-class and working-class parents, respectively, use toy purchases in socializing their children?
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The textbook shows that the quantity of mozzarella cheese eaten by Americans and the number of civil engineering doctorates awarded in the U.S. have been changing in a similar way over the past few decades. What is this relationship between mozzarella consumption and the number of doctorates called?
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How do poor children gain acceptance in a group of more affluent ones?
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