Deck 17: Education

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Question
Home schooling is new to the education scene, becoming popular due to the dissatisfaction of parents over the quality of public education.
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Question
A central sociological principle is that a nation's education system reflects its culture.
Question
Once it began as a formal institution in the early city-states, education continually progressed throughout history to its present level.
Question
The correspondence principle is the idea that distance education provides a better quality education that eliminates the prejudice of teachers, tracking, and other dysfunctions that are a part of a public school education.
Question
The hunting-gathering societies have no separate social institution called education.
Question
Tracking is a form of gatekeeping in which students are sorted by their perceived abilities rather than their achieved abilities.
Question
In Japan, a philosophy based on cooperation and group effort ensures virtually every student qualifies for admission to college.
Question
The Rosenthal-Jacobsen experiment confirms that regardless of their ability, students who are expected to do better generally do.
Question
Statistics accumulated since 1992 show school deaths have progressively increased due to shootings every year.
Question
George Farkas discovered that girls and Asian American students receive higher grades than their academic equals because they know how to signal their teachers they are better students.
Question
According to your author, it is impossible to replicate the give-and-take conversations essential to good teaching that occur in a face-to-face class within online classes.
Question
Children who are home schooled become socially challenged when they encounter real world experiences.
Question
Research has shown that people who go farther in school live longer.
Question
Providing childcare is an example of a manifest function of the public school system.
Question
Social integration promotes a student's dedication to a national identity.
Question
Conflict theorists stress that the hidden curriculum in schools perpetuates social inequalities.
Question
The cultural transmission of values is a latent function of education.
Question
All U.S. states have mandatory education laws requiring children to attend school.
Question
The Rist research demonstrated that social class and not intellectual capability was the basis of how teachers assigned students to reading levels in kindergarten.
Question
Conflict theorists conclude that through the correspondence principle, the U.S. educational system is designed to turn students into dependable workers who will not question their bosses.
Question
What is the most popular way to accomplish gatekeeping?

A) creating a two-tier level of schools
B) charging tuition for students to attend the better schools
C) tracking or sorting students into different education programs
D) opening programs to all students
Question
What is the root of the word school as well as its literal meaning?

A) It comes from the Latin word scholastic, meaning academic.
B) It comes from the Old English word school that meant private facility.
C) It comes from the Greek word schole' meaning leisure.
D) It comes from the German word skool which means house of learning.
Question
Edinboro University of Pennsylvania is one of the largest "wheelchair" universities in the United States, providing access of all programs to all students and establishing special wheelchair programs in sports competition. This is an example of ________.

A) mainstreaming
B) acculturation
C) social integration
D) leveling
Question
Who was the educator from Massachusetts, who, in 1837, proposed the "common school" to be supported through tax dollars and established throughout the state?

A) Noah Webster
B) Horace Mann
C) James B. Watson
D) John Dewey
Question
What event created the belief that formal education was essential to the well-being of society?

A) the American Revolution
B) the industrialization of society
C) the discovery that the world was round
D) the invention of the steam-powered printing press
Question
Who was the sociologist who observed that industrialized nations are becoming credential societies?

A) Randall Collins
B) Michael Burawoy
C) Robert Merton
D) Pitirim Sorokin
Question
Who were the two Americans who proposed universal schooling as a means to create a uniform national culture?

A) John Dewey; William Julius Wilson
B) Horace Mann; Alexander Hamilton
C) Thomas Jefferson; Noah Webster
D) John Quincy Adams; John B. Watson
Question
What event was responsible for the change in the Russian education system in 1917?

A) World War I
B) the Russian Revolution
C) the emergence of the Stalin regime
D) the establishment of the Communist party
Question
Prior to a formal system of education that included schools, teachers, and diplomas how was the manifest function of education accomplished?

A) through a process of acculturation
B) through heredity and genetics
C) Children relied on instinct to develop skills needed.
D) Children relied on experimentation and imitation.
Question
Which group was most responsible for maintaining a level of literacy during the Dark Ages by focusing on learning Greek, Latin, and Hebrew?

A) nobles
B) property owners
C) sailors
D) monks
Question
What is the central sociological principle of education as it relates to a nation's needs?

A) It is a reflection of the nation's culture and economy.
B) It creates a system of labeling individuals to facilitate occupation and role.
C) It is a formal system necessary for international recognition.
D) It is the basis of developing a sense of national pride.
Question
Schools determining which people will enter what occupation based on their capabilities is referred to as ________.

A) mainstreaming
B) multicultural representation
C) telescoping
D) social placement
Question
When employers use diplomas and degrees to determine who is eligible for jobs, even through the diploma or degree may be irrelevant to the actual work, it becomes a ________ society.

A) fiduciary
B) bifurcated
C) credential
D) bureaucratic
Question
One of the functions performed by schools is to promote a sense of national identity and stabilize the political system. This function is referred to as ________.

A) gatekeeping
B) social integration
C) mainstreaming
D) tracking
Question
From a functionalist perspective, what is the teaching of knowledge and skills which reinforces positive consequences in students?

A) required prerequisites
B) latent functions
C) manifest functions
D) social imperative
Question
How did Horace Mann propose that the common schools he established be funded?

A) federal funding
B) public taxation
C) private tuition
D) corporate donations
Question
What is the process by which schools pass a society's core values from one generation to the next?

A) cultural transmission of values
B) social integration of education
C) multiculturalism of society
D) social pluralism of culture
Question
What was necessary for education to develop as a separate social institution?

A) The feudal system had to end.
B) A sufficient number of people had to become literate.
C) The printing press had to be invented to permit the printing of books.
D) Society had to develop a sufficient surplus so some workers could become teachers.
Question
Although cooperation is a core value in Japan, Japanese students are admitted to college only on the basis of intense competition. This is an example of a ________.

A) cultural contradiction
B) value conflict
C) status inconsistency
D) role ambiguity
Question
The three functionalists who advocated gatekeeping as a means to support people on the basis of merit and advocated social placement were ________, ________, and ________.

A) Robert Merton; Talcott Parsons; Pitirim Sorokin
B) Kingsley Davis; Edwin Sutherland; Herbert Spencer
C) Talcott Parsons; Kingsley Davis; Wilbert Moore
D) Wilbert Moore; Michael Burawoy; John B. Watson
Question
You are taking an IQ test which will be used to determine your intelligence level. The first question asks you to identify all of the equipment you will need to play the game of shoeball. The second question asks the rules of the game. Finally, the third question asks you to explain how shoeball is scored and the number of points you need to win the game. Based on this question, what does the test demonstrate?

A) It accurately measures intelligence.
B) The test should be called a vocational aptitude test.
C) The test is totally unreliable.
D) It has a cultural bias in measuring intelligence.
Question
What is the concept that some jobs require few skills and can be performed by people of less intelligence?

A) multicultural representation
B) personal growth
C) social placement
D) dedicated workers
Question
In the research by Rosenthal and Jacobson, certain students identified as "spurters" excelled throughout the school year. How did Rosenthal and Jacobson select them?

A) They were the students who did the best academic work in their previous grade.
B) They were randomly chosen after taking a routine IQ test.
C) Spurters were from the families of the highest socioeconomic class.
D) Spurters were students from two-parent families of the dominant class.
Question
IQ tests measure not only intelligence but also ________.

A) social integration
B) skills
C) is acquired knowledge
D) higher math
Question
Based on the research of sociologist George Farkas, which two groups of students were most successful in signaling their teachers they were good students?

A) boys and African Americans
B) boys and Latina girls
C) girls and Asian Americans
D) girls and Latino Americans
Question
There are approximately ________ million students enrolled in high school, and another ________ million students enrolled in U.S. colleges and universities today.

A) 15; 13
B) 18; 25
C) 60; 40
D) 62; 60
Question
What is the correspondence principle?

A) The social structure of schools reflects their society.
B) Family structure is based on the school's structure.
C) Students learn more easily through distance education.
D) Large corporations control what is taught in U.S. schools.
Question
What do less rigorous teaching, dummied down textbooks and less reading have in common with watching television, and playing video and computer games?

A) All are related to low math scores on the SAT tests.
B) All are related to low verbal scores on the SAT tests.
C) They all contribute to poor testing on standardized tests.
D) They all contribute to poor academic skills among high school students.
Question
What do studies demonstrate in regard to the level of social skills home schooled students develop?

A) Home-schooled students are functionally illiterate when it comes to social skills.
B) Home-schooled students have significant behavioral problems.
C) Home-schooled students are shy and timid when encountering new social situations.
D) Home-schooled students are equal or do better than conventional schooled students.
Question
Using exceptionally simple questions on an exam and "dummying down" grading scales so everyone passes are examples of a growing problem in education called ________.

A) mediocrity
B) mainstreaming
C) gatekeeping
D) telescoping
Question
When Ray Rist conducted a participant observation study in an African American grade school, what did he conclude was the underlying basis for assigning children to different worktables in kindergarten?

A) students' preference
B) students' personality
C) sex of the student
D) social class
Question
How are public schools primarily funded?

A) federal grants
B) state grants
C) state and federal grants
D) local property taxes
Question
At Harvard University 90 percent of the students graduate with honors. The faculty recommend to counter this honors inflation limiting the percentage of students who could graduate with honors in any one class. This is an example of __________.

A) raising standards
B) honor curriculum
C) an equal playing field
D) academic distinction
Question
What do conflict theorists believe is the purpose of the hidden curriculum?

A) It encourages the mainstreaming of students.
B) It promotes individual change.
C) It maintains the power of teachers.
D) It promotes social inequalities.
Question
A sociologist who studied face-to-face interactions in the classroom between teachers and students would be emphasizing which sociological perspective?

A) symbolic interactionism
B) structural functionalism
C) the conflict perspective
D) the neo-conflict perspective
Question
Who developed the concept of self-fulfilling prophecy that explains why originally false assumptions become true because the outcome was predicted?

A) Talcott Parsons
B) Edwin Sutherland
C) Robert Merton
D) Donald Cressey
Question
What social worker suggested the dice question for IQ tests?

A) Adrian Dove
B) Talcott Parsons
C) Michael Burawoy
D) Travis Henry
Question
According to Ray Rist's research, how long did it take for teachers to determine a child's potential success in school?

A) by the end of the first two weeks of kindergarten
B) the mid-year of kindergarten
C) the end of kindergarten
D) the end of first grade
Question
The most significant predictor of whether a student will attend college is his/her ________.

A) test scores
B) motivation
C) family background
D) personality
Question
Sociologists Rosenthal and Jacobson found that when teachers were told that certain students would probably spurt ahead during the year, those students actually did better than other students on IQ tests. What does this illustrate?

A) some students are more motivated
B) students will respond to teachers' expectations
C) students are predictable
D) education is the best route to success
Question
What is the major difference between distance learning in the past where a lesson was broadcast to thousands of students simultaneously and distance learning today?

A) Teachers today are more qualified to do distance learning than in the past.
B) Television sets are larger which makes watching the lesson more interesting.
C) Students enjoyed distance learning more in the past.
D) Technology has made distance learning interactive and more stimulating today.
Question
Provide reasons why home-schooled children score as highly as they do on a standardized test?
Question
Why is the United States becoming more and more of a credential society?
Question
If admission to college in Japan is highly competitive and based exclusively on national test scores, why are the students of wealthy families more likely to be admitted to college?
Question
Renee has difficulty in reading and writing. However, despite her problem with reading and writing, she has been passed into the next grade every year. This is an example of ________.

A) tracking
B) functional literacy
C) social promotion
D) mainstreaming
Question
Why did public education spread and develop a strong support system in the United States following the beginning of the Industrial Revolution?
Question
What was the purpose of social placement as proposed by Parsons, Davis, and Moore?
Question
In the United States today nearly half of all entering college freshmen have an overall high school grade-point average of 4.0, twice what it was in 1970. What is the reason for this increase in students with high grades?

A) Students are learning more.
B) Teachers have inflated grades.
C) Students now retain more information than before.
D) Most students can read at a higher grade level.
Question
Which of the following statements is least accurate based on the results sociologists discovered while researching school violence?

A) There is a trend toward greater school violence.
B) Boys die in school incidents at a rate three times greater than girls.
C) Shootings account for about three-fourths of all school related deaths.
D) The media is largely responsible for creating a myth there is greater school violence.
Question
According to a study of 15,000 students in public and Catholic schools, the superior test performance of students in Catholic schools in comparison to public schools was due to ________.

A) the dedication of the teacher to education
B) the social class of the student
C) higher standards and greater parent involvement
D) one-on-one tutoring
Question
In order to recruit a sufficient number of teachers in California, the competency level of teachers to be hired was lowered to a tenth grade level. Other states have made similar adjustments. How did the author of the text describe this change?

A) He called it "a necessary adjustment in American education."
B) He compared it to the Great Depression.
C) He blamed the universities for not doing a better job preparing teachers.
D) He called it "a national disgrace."
Question
What was the common school?
Question
Higher grades given for the same work or a general rise in student grades without a corresponding increase in learning is known as __________.

A) grade reward
B) education promotion
C) curriculum enhancement
D) grade inflation
Question
What was the requirement for fulfilling mandatory education laws in 1918?
Question
Why did two-year colleges change their name from junior college to community college?
Question
Identify two latent functions of education.
Question
To qualify as distance learning, what needs to be in effect?

A) The class must be held in a traditional classroom.
B) Students must be able to ask questions.
C) Students can come and go during class at their pleasure.
D) Students are not physically present with the instructor.
Question
What are some of the family functions that educational systems have greatly affected and even replaced in American society?
Question
Jed is 31 and qualifies as being functionally illiterate. Which of the following statements would best describe Jed's situation?

A) Jed has an IQ below the dull normal range.
B) Jed is suffering from attention deficit disorder.
C) Jed has difficulty reading and writing.
D) Jed has no social skills and has an antisocial personality.
Question
Based on the research of sociologists James Coleman and Thomas Hoffer, what is the reason Catholic school students score higher on tests than public school students?

A) Catholic schools have higher standards and greater parental involvement.
B) Catholic schools have smaller classes with fewer students.
C) Catholic schools have newer schools.
D) Catholic schools have fewer bureaucratic issues.
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Deck 17: Education
1
Home schooling is new to the education scene, becoming popular due to the dissatisfaction of parents over the quality of public education.
False
2
A central sociological principle is that a nation's education system reflects its culture.
True
3
Once it began as a formal institution in the early city-states, education continually progressed throughout history to its present level.
False
4
The correspondence principle is the idea that distance education provides a better quality education that eliminates the prejudice of teachers, tracking, and other dysfunctions that are a part of a public school education.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The hunting-gathering societies have no separate social institution called education.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Tracking is a form of gatekeeping in which students are sorted by their perceived abilities rather than their achieved abilities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
In Japan, a philosophy based on cooperation and group effort ensures virtually every student qualifies for admission to college.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The Rosenthal-Jacobsen experiment confirms that regardless of their ability, students who are expected to do better generally do.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Statistics accumulated since 1992 show school deaths have progressively increased due to shootings every year.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
George Farkas discovered that girls and Asian American students receive higher grades than their academic equals because they know how to signal their teachers they are better students.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
According to your author, it is impossible to replicate the give-and-take conversations essential to good teaching that occur in a face-to-face class within online classes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Children who are home schooled become socially challenged when they encounter real world experiences.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Research has shown that people who go farther in school live longer.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Providing childcare is an example of a manifest function of the public school system.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Social integration promotes a student's dedication to a national identity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Conflict theorists stress that the hidden curriculum in schools perpetuates social inequalities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The cultural transmission of values is a latent function of education.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
All U.S. states have mandatory education laws requiring children to attend school.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The Rist research demonstrated that social class and not intellectual capability was the basis of how teachers assigned students to reading levels in kindergarten.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Conflict theorists conclude that through the correspondence principle, the U.S. educational system is designed to turn students into dependable workers who will not question their bosses.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
What is the most popular way to accomplish gatekeeping?

A) creating a two-tier level of schools
B) charging tuition for students to attend the better schools
C) tracking or sorting students into different education programs
D) opening programs to all students
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
What is the root of the word school as well as its literal meaning?

A) It comes from the Latin word scholastic, meaning academic.
B) It comes from the Old English word school that meant private facility.
C) It comes from the Greek word schole' meaning leisure.
D) It comes from the German word skool which means house of learning.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Edinboro University of Pennsylvania is one of the largest "wheelchair" universities in the United States, providing access of all programs to all students and establishing special wheelchair programs in sports competition. This is an example of ________.

A) mainstreaming
B) acculturation
C) social integration
D) leveling
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Who was the educator from Massachusetts, who, in 1837, proposed the "common school" to be supported through tax dollars and established throughout the state?

A) Noah Webster
B) Horace Mann
C) James B. Watson
D) John Dewey
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
What event created the belief that formal education was essential to the well-being of society?

A) the American Revolution
B) the industrialization of society
C) the discovery that the world was round
D) the invention of the steam-powered printing press
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Who was the sociologist who observed that industrialized nations are becoming credential societies?

A) Randall Collins
B) Michael Burawoy
C) Robert Merton
D) Pitirim Sorokin
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Who were the two Americans who proposed universal schooling as a means to create a uniform national culture?

A) John Dewey; William Julius Wilson
B) Horace Mann; Alexander Hamilton
C) Thomas Jefferson; Noah Webster
D) John Quincy Adams; John B. Watson
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
What event was responsible for the change in the Russian education system in 1917?

A) World War I
B) the Russian Revolution
C) the emergence of the Stalin regime
D) the establishment of the Communist party
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Prior to a formal system of education that included schools, teachers, and diplomas how was the manifest function of education accomplished?

A) through a process of acculturation
B) through heredity and genetics
C) Children relied on instinct to develop skills needed.
D) Children relied on experimentation and imitation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Which group was most responsible for maintaining a level of literacy during the Dark Ages by focusing on learning Greek, Latin, and Hebrew?

A) nobles
B) property owners
C) sailors
D) monks
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
What is the central sociological principle of education as it relates to a nation's needs?

A) It is a reflection of the nation's culture and economy.
B) It creates a system of labeling individuals to facilitate occupation and role.
C) It is a formal system necessary for international recognition.
D) It is the basis of developing a sense of national pride.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Schools determining which people will enter what occupation based on their capabilities is referred to as ________.

A) mainstreaming
B) multicultural representation
C) telescoping
D) social placement
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
When employers use diplomas and degrees to determine who is eligible for jobs, even through the diploma or degree may be irrelevant to the actual work, it becomes a ________ society.

A) fiduciary
B) bifurcated
C) credential
D) bureaucratic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
One of the functions performed by schools is to promote a sense of national identity and stabilize the political system. This function is referred to as ________.

A) gatekeeping
B) social integration
C) mainstreaming
D) tracking
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
From a functionalist perspective, what is the teaching of knowledge and skills which reinforces positive consequences in students?

A) required prerequisites
B) latent functions
C) manifest functions
D) social imperative
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
How did Horace Mann propose that the common schools he established be funded?

A) federal funding
B) public taxation
C) private tuition
D) corporate donations
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
What is the process by which schools pass a society's core values from one generation to the next?

A) cultural transmission of values
B) social integration of education
C) multiculturalism of society
D) social pluralism of culture
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
What was necessary for education to develop as a separate social institution?

A) The feudal system had to end.
B) A sufficient number of people had to become literate.
C) The printing press had to be invented to permit the printing of books.
D) Society had to develop a sufficient surplus so some workers could become teachers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Although cooperation is a core value in Japan, Japanese students are admitted to college only on the basis of intense competition. This is an example of a ________.

A) cultural contradiction
B) value conflict
C) status inconsistency
D) role ambiguity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
The three functionalists who advocated gatekeeping as a means to support people on the basis of merit and advocated social placement were ________, ________, and ________.

A) Robert Merton; Talcott Parsons; Pitirim Sorokin
B) Kingsley Davis; Edwin Sutherland; Herbert Spencer
C) Talcott Parsons; Kingsley Davis; Wilbert Moore
D) Wilbert Moore; Michael Burawoy; John B. Watson
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
You are taking an IQ test which will be used to determine your intelligence level. The first question asks you to identify all of the equipment you will need to play the game of shoeball. The second question asks the rules of the game. Finally, the third question asks you to explain how shoeball is scored and the number of points you need to win the game. Based on this question, what does the test demonstrate?

A) It accurately measures intelligence.
B) The test should be called a vocational aptitude test.
C) The test is totally unreliable.
D) It has a cultural bias in measuring intelligence.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
What is the concept that some jobs require few skills and can be performed by people of less intelligence?

A) multicultural representation
B) personal growth
C) social placement
D) dedicated workers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
In the research by Rosenthal and Jacobson, certain students identified as "spurters" excelled throughout the school year. How did Rosenthal and Jacobson select them?

A) They were the students who did the best academic work in their previous grade.
B) They were randomly chosen after taking a routine IQ test.
C) Spurters were from the families of the highest socioeconomic class.
D) Spurters were students from two-parent families of the dominant class.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
IQ tests measure not only intelligence but also ________.

A) social integration
B) skills
C) is acquired knowledge
D) higher math
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Based on the research of sociologist George Farkas, which two groups of students were most successful in signaling their teachers they were good students?

A) boys and African Americans
B) boys and Latina girls
C) girls and Asian Americans
D) girls and Latino Americans
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
There are approximately ________ million students enrolled in high school, and another ________ million students enrolled in U.S. colleges and universities today.

A) 15; 13
B) 18; 25
C) 60; 40
D) 62; 60
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
What is the correspondence principle?

A) The social structure of schools reflects their society.
B) Family structure is based on the school's structure.
C) Students learn more easily through distance education.
D) Large corporations control what is taught in U.S. schools.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
What do less rigorous teaching, dummied down textbooks and less reading have in common with watching television, and playing video and computer games?

A) All are related to low math scores on the SAT tests.
B) All are related to low verbal scores on the SAT tests.
C) They all contribute to poor testing on standardized tests.
D) They all contribute to poor academic skills among high school students.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 106 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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49
What do studies demonstrate in regard to the level of social skills home schooled students develop?

A) Home-schooled students are functionally illiterate when it comes to social skills.
B) Home-schooled students have significant behavioral problems.
C) Home-schooled students are shy and timid when encountering new social situations.
D) Home-schooled students are equal or do better than conventional schooled students.
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50
Using exceptionally simple questions on an exam and "dummying down" grading scales so everyone passes are examples of a growing problem in education called ________.

A) mediocrity
B) mainstreaming
C) gatekeeping
D) telescoping
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51
When Ray Rist conducted a participant observation study in an African American grade school, what did he conclude was the underlying basis for assigning children to different worktables in kindergarten?

A) students' preference
B) students' personality
C) sex of the student
D) social class
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52
How are public schools primarily funded?

A) federal grants
B) state grants
C) state and federal grants
D) local property taxes
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53
At Harvard University 90 percent of the students graduate with honors. The faculty recommend to counter this honors inflation limiting the percentage of students who could graduate with honors in any one class. This is an example of __________.

A) raising standards
B) honor curriculum
C) an equal playing field
D) academic distinction
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54
What do conflict theorists believe is the purpose of the hidden curriculum?

A) It encourages the mainstreaming of students.
B) It promotes individual change.
C) It maintains the power of teachers.
D) It promotes social inequalities.
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55
A sociologist who studied face-to-face interactions in the classroom between teachers and students would be emphasizing which sociological perspective?

A) symbolic interactionism
B) structural functionalism
C) the conflict perspective
D) the neo-conflict perspective
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56
Who developed the concept of self-fulfilling prophecy that explains why originally false assumptions become true because the outcome was predicted?

A) Talcott Parsons
B) Edwin Sutherland
C) Robert Merton
D) Donald Cressey
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57
What social worker suggested the dice question for IQ tests?

A) Adrian Dove
B) Talcott Parsons
C) Michael Burawoy
D) Travis Henry
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58
According to Ray Rist's research, how long did it take for teachers to determine a child's potential success in school?

A) by the end of the first two weeks of kindergarten
B) the mid-year of kindergarten
C) the end of kindergarten
D) the end of first grade
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59
The most significant predictor of whether a student will attend college is his/her ________.

A) test scores
B) motivation
C) family background
D) personality
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60
Sociologists Rosenthal and Jacobson found that when teachers were told that certain students would probably spurt ahead during the year, those students actually did better than other students on IQ tests. What does this illustrate?

A) some students are more motivated
B) students will respond to teachers' expectations
C) students are predictable
D) education is the best route to success
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61
What is the major difference between distance learning in the past where a lesson was broadcast to thousands of students simultaneously and distance learning today?

A) Teachers today are more qualified to do distance learning than in the past.
B) Television sets are larger which makes watching the lesson more interesting.
C) Students enjoyed distance learning more in the past.
D) Technology has made distance learning interactive and more stimulating today.
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62
Provide reasons why home-schooled children score as highly as they do on a standardized test?
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63
Why is the United States becoming more and more of a credential society?
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64
If admission to college in Japan is highly competitive and based exclusively on national test scores, why are the students of wealthy families more likely to be admitted to college?
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65
Renee has difficulty in reading and writing. However, despite her problem with reading and writing, she has been passed into the next grade every year. This is an example of ________.

A) tracking
B) functional literacy
C) social promotion
D) mainstreaming
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66
Why did public education spread and develop a strong support system in the United States following the beginning of the Industrial Revolution?
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67
What was the purpose of social placement as proposed by Parsons, Davis, and Moore?
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68
In the United States today nearly half of all entering college freshmen have an overall high school grade-point average of 4.0, twice what it was in 1970. What is the reason for this increase in students with high grades?

A) Students are learning more.
B) Teachers have inflated grades.
C) Students now retain more information than before.
D) Most students can read at a higher grade level.
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69
Which of the following statements is least accurate based on the results sociologists discovered while researching school violence?

A) There is a trend toward greater school violence.
B) Boys die in school incidents at a rate three times greater than girls.
C) Shootings account for about three-fourths of all school related deaths.
D) The media is largely responsible for creating a myth there is greater school violence.
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70
According to a study of 15,000 students in public and Catholic schools, the superior test performance of students in Catholic schools in comparison to public schools was due to ________.

A) the dedication of the teacher to education
B) the social class of the student
C) higher standards and greater parent involvement
D) one-on-one tutoring
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71
In order to recruit a sufficient number of teachers in California, the competency level of teachers to be hired was lowered to a tenth grade level. Other states have made similar adjustments. How did the author of the text describe this change?

A) He called it "a necessary adjustment in American education."
B) He compared it to the Great Depression.
C) He blamed the universities for not doing a better job preparing teachers.
D) He called it "a national disgrace."
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72
What was the common school?
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73
Higher grades given for the same work or a general rise in student grades without a corresponding increase in learning is known as __________.

A) grade reward
B) education promotion
C) curriculum enhancement
D) grade inflation
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74
What was the requirement for fulfilling mandatory education laws in 1918?
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75
Why did two-year colleges change their name from junior college to community college?
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76
Identify two latent functions of education.
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77
To qualify as distance learning, what needs to be in effect?

A) The class must be held in a traditional classroom.
B) Students must be able to ask questions.
C) Students can come and go during class at their pleasure.
D) Students are not physically present with the instructor.
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78
What are some of the family functions that educational systems have greatly affected and even replaced in American society?
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79
Jed is 31 and qualifies as being functionally illiterate. Which of the following statements would best describe Jed's situation?

A) Jed has an IQ below the dull normal range.
B) Jed is suffering from attention deficit disorder.
C) Jed has difficulty reading and writing.
D) Jed has no social skills and has an antisocial personality.
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80
Based on the research of sociologists James Coleman and Thomas Hoffer, what is the reason Catholic school students score higher on tests than public school students?

A) Catholic schools have higher standards and greater parental involvement.
B) Catholic schools have smaller classes with fewer students.
C) Catholic schools have newer schools.
D) Catholic schools have fewer bureaucratic issues.
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