Deck 5: Understanding Socialization

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Question
Which of these best describes socialization?

A) the ability to follow social norms and expectations of one's society through the processes of social interaction
B) the innate ability to follow social norms and expectations of one's society
C) a concept in which one's learned social behavior remains static
D) a concept in which one's learned social behavior remains the same generation to generation
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Question
Socialization is part of the process of ______, in which individuals internalize the values and norms of a society and pass them to the next generation.

A) life course
B) social behavior
C) social reproduction
D) resocialization
Question
When a baby is born, the parents call the child by name, dress the child in gendered clothing, and give the baby soft blankets. As the child grows older, the child will receive different toys and be expected to act differently than when a baby. This is an example of ______.

A) social existence
B) the life course
C) nurture
D) resocialization
Question
A young woman graduates high school and moves out of her parent's house in order to attend college. While there, she learns how to cook, do laundry, and pay her own bills, none of which she did while living at home. This is an example of ______.

A) resocialization
B) nurture
C) self-consciousness
D) a lack of socialization
Question
How would getting married be considered an agent of resocialization?

A) Getting married requires learning new social norms.
B) Marriage is where one learns self-awareness.
C) Marriage teaches new social roles that the one must adapt to.
D) Marriage encourages people to stay in touch with their families.
Question
Children who are raised in isolation and have few opportunities for social interaction are typically labeled as ______.

A) unintelligent
B) feral
C) resocialized
D) gendered
Question
Feral children present a unique opportunity for scientists to study ______.

A) the impact of nurture without the influence of nature
B) the socialization process
C) how social interaction impacts biology
D) the impact of nature without the influence of nurture
Question
Scientists note that ______ refers to a person's biology, while ______ is formed by cultural and social learning.

A) assimilation, accommodation
B) accommodation; assimilation
C) nurture; nature
D) nature; nurture
Question
When scientists study children who have lived in isolation, these children demonstrate ______.

A) how little society and social interactions affect who we are
B) how society and social interactions affect who we are
C) how biology affects our ability to interact in socially acceptable ways
D) that these children can never learn to interact with others in socially acceptable ways
Question
Sociologist George Herbert Mead was influenced by which of Charles Horton Cooley's concepts?

A) deviant behavior
B) anomie theory
C) the looking-glass self
D) social conditioning
Question
When an individual develops a sense of self through social interactions and is aware of how others see her or him, this person has learned ______.

A) socially acceptable behavior
B) primary socialization
C) status
D) self-consciousness
Question
How would Mead explain the concept of taking the role of the other?

A) People are socialized to put themselves in the place of others.
B) People are influenced by how they perceive others see them.
C) People become aware of what others do and imitate them.
D) People become complacent and do not develop their independent selves.
Question
Individuals who are constantly asking friends if they look okay are exhibiting ______ behavior.

A) role
B) taboo
C) deviant
D) self-conscious
Question
A child enters preschool and becomes more aware of how classmates are interacting and responding to each other, which impacts how the child develops. How would Mead explain this?

A) The child is learning self-consciousness through interactions with classmates.
B) The child is developing "I-communication."
C) The child is becoming self-oriented.
D) The child is developing an awareness of symbolic interaction.
Question
According to Mead, when a child imitates the behavior of a parent, like pretending to fix dinner or go to work, the child is ______.

A) taking the role of the other
B) projecting parental roles
C) performing a front stage function
D) demonstrating self-consciousness
Question
How would college be considered an agent of resocialization?

A) College provides the student with social norms.
B) College is where one learns self-awareness.
C) College teaches new social roles that the student must adapt to.
D) College encourages students to stay in touch with their families.
Question
Family, peers, mass media, and schools are all examples of ______.

A) ethnomethodology
B) paradigms
C) agents of socialization
D) secondary socialization
Question
Which person is demonstrating primary socialization?

A) an adult receiving a higher paying position at work
B) a high school student learning a foreign language
C) a college student specializing in a field
D) a parent teaching a young child the alphabet
Question
What is typically the first agent of socialization for children?

A) family
B) religion
C) peers
D) school
Question
Sociologist Annette Lareau's classic study looked at how children coming from families of different economic status spent their free time. She found that children in middle class families were more likely than lower income families to ______.

A) play and watch television in their free time
B) use media in their free time
C) have structured free time
D) have part time jobs
Question
A factor that can create a negative socialization experience for a child in school is ______.

A) age
B) skin color
C) reinforcement
D) identity
Question
How does the hidden curriculum impact students in school?

A) It provides teachers with instructions on what to teach in each course.
B) It signifies the separate needs of each individual student.
C) It outlines which students will do better in school and which will need help.
D) It promotes obedience to authority figures and social norms.
Question
A boy who just started attending a new school is trying to make friends. A group of boys invite him to their house, where they offer the new kid a cigarette. Even though he has never smoked and has no desire to, he does anyway. This is an example of ______.

A) positive socialization
B) rebellion
C) group disconformity
D) peer pressure
Question
Much of the sociological research on peers and socialization involves ______ behaviors.

A) age-related
B) deviant
C) gender
D) race
Question
A location in which a person is closed off from external influences is called a ______ institution.

A) total
B) complete
C) utopian
D) limited
Question
What is an example of a total institution?

A) prison
B) school
C) home
D) summer camp
Question
The ongoing process of learning the social expectations of male and female behavior, roles, and appearance in one's culture refers to gender ______.

A) expression
B) fluidity
C) socialization
D) segregation
Question
When parents are shopping for toys for their child, how might their choices impact the child's developing gender socialization?

A) The child will develop skills appropriate for their particular gender.
B) The toys teach the child the norms, values, and beliefs of school.
C) The child will use the toys to play with friends and learn social interactions.
D) The toys selected will help to reinforce gender role expectations.
Question
How does gender socialization impact a female child's development?

A) Gender socialization will influence the child's sexual development.
B) The child will learn expected gender roles when parents purchase toys and clothing.
C) Gender socialization will allow the child to determine the role she will play.
D) Gender socialization will show the child that biology is the most important factor.
Question
Which of these is an example of gender socialization?

A) Parents of a college student encourage their son to pursue a career in teaching.
B) Parents of a young girl encourage her to excel in mathematics and science.
C) A young girl wants a toy truck for her birthday, but her parents buy her a Barbie van instead.
D) A young boy loves to sing, so his parents enroll him in a drama camp for the summer.
Question
We experience ______ when we have competing demands within a particular social role and status.

A) role fatigue
B) role strain
C) social incompetence
D) social desire
Question
Due to budget cuts, a boss is forced to fire an employee who is a close friend. The boss is most likely experiencing ______.

A) role strain
B) social dissonance
C) a mixed role situation
D) role conflict
Question
How do social roles develop?

A) Each person develops one social role they use for all situations.
B) People use different social roles throughout each day based on different social expectations.
C) Society assigns social roles based on socioeconomic status level.
D) Social roles are developed based on our true selves and our self-identity.
Question
A drama student is trying to get a job as an actor. While waiting for a role, he accepts a serving job at a restaurant to pay the bills. A role is eventually offered, but it is not going to pay enough to allow him to quit his other job. While he is waiting tables, he tries to remember his lines for his acting job. How would a sociologist describe what this student is experiencing?

A) The student is experiencing role conflict as he tries to be both a waiter and an actor.
B) The student is experiencing a self-consciousness crisis as he tries to make everyone happy.
C) The student is experiencing a gender role identity conflict as he works in a female gendered job as wait staff.
D) The student is experiencing role strain as he presents different social selves to the customers.
Question
A single mother has three young children. She works as an attorney at a small law firm. One child gets sick and needs to go to the doctor at the same time the mother is due to meet with a client. How would a sociologist explain this issue?

A) The mother is in a total institution in which she needs to fill more than one role.
B) The mother will experience resocialization as she tries to fill two roles.
C) The mother is experiencing role conflict as she tries to fill two different roles at the same time.
D) The mother will develop multiple social identities as she juggles work and home.
Question
A person describes himself as an older white male, who is a father, a son, and a doctor. What is the man doing?

A) providing his self-identity
B) discussing role conflicts
C) expressing role strain
D) acknowledging his gender roles
Question
Characteristics such as gender, social class, race, and ethnicity are a part of a person's ______.

A) socialization
B) biology
C) identity
D) personality
Question
A person's sense of who they are based on their interactions with others is called ______.

A) personal identity
B) group identity
C) cultural identity
D) self-identity
Question
Our interactions with others constantly shape and reshape ______.

A) identity
B) gender
C) language
D) biology
Question
Dana has three good friends with whom she shares everything. This could be called a(n) ______.

A) pod
B) culture
C) group
D) organization
Question
Which of these would be considered a primary group?

A) Marta and her three sisters
B) William and his sociology class
C) Marina and her work team
D) Vladimir and the citizens of his town
Question
______ organizations assign members to specific jobs and have a system to replace them when needed.

A) Informal
B) Total institution
C) Departmentalized
D) Formal
Question
Lana's company is very structured. There is a written set of rules that all must follow, and employees report to a clear hierarchy of management. The employees do not socialize with each other, but focus on their work exclusively. This is a(n) ______.

A) ideal bureaucracy
B) autocracy
C) informal organization
D) static bureaucracy
Question
Which statement about bureaucracies is true?

A) Bureaucracies are inefficient and cumbersome for formal organizations.
B) Bureaucracies are unnecessary.
C) Bureaucracies are important to informal organizations.
D) Formal organizations have a great need for bureaucracies.
Question
When formal organizations grow and become more complex, they often become ______.

A) bureaucracies
B) informal organizations
C) total institutions
D) government entities
Question
The ways in which a person behaves and reacts to others refers to ______.

A) social intelligence
B) social interaction
C) culture
D) deviant behavior
Question
Which sociological theorist is considered the pioneer of the study of social interactions in everyday contexts?

A) Erving Goffman
B) George Herbert Mead
C) Charles Horton Cooley
D) Karl Marx
Question
Which theorist created a field of study that observed the ordinary or everyday methods people use to make sense of their social interactions?

A) Erving Goffman
B) Sigmund Freud
C) George Herbert Mead
D) Harold Garfinkel
Question
Goffman used a ______ metaphor to describe how individuals' social lives consist of different performances of social roles based on the observers.

A) transformational
B) gendered
C) theatrical
D) voyeur
Question
Goffman noted that people present themselves the way they wish others to see them. What is this called?

A) setting
B) constructed reality
C) impression management
D) front stage
Question
In Goffman's work, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, Goffman noted that the ______, or the "expressive equipment" is present in each individual's performance.

A) stage
B) front
C) audience
D) script
Question
In performing your role as a student, the ______ is when you are in the classroom.

A) setting
B) appearance
C) front stage
D) back stage
Question
In describing social life and the different regions, Goffman refers to the "backstage" as an area ______.

A) where we actively perform our roles
B) where role constraint and role conflict are present
C) in which impression management exists
D) in which one no longer has to perform
Question
A high school student must give a presentation to her class. She needs a good grade, so she dresses nicely and prepares notes. How would Goffman say she used the front or the "expressive equipment" to convince her teacher she had earned a good grade?

A) She avoided eye contact during her presentation.
B) She used face-to-face interaction.
C) She remained "out of character."
D) She convinced her teacher that she was well-prepared by using notes.
Question
The field of study pioneered by Harold Garfinkel that studies the ordinary methods people use to make sense of their social interactions is called ______.

A) ethnomethodology
B) nonscientific reasoning
C) basic research
D) social symbolism
Question
The process of socialization occurs through social interactions with other members of a society.
Question
Social reproduction occurs as subsequent generations change social norms and values.
Question
Mead believed we are born with a sense of who we are, or a sense of self.
Question
Taking the role of the other is based on learning the status of the people you socialize with.
Question
Primary socialization occurs from the time we are born to when we start school.
Question
The hidden curriculum teaches children art and music.
Question
Gender socialization occurs naturally at birth.
Question
Toys are an influential form of gender socialization.
Question
Role strain refers to competing demands within a particular social role and status.
Question
The identities that others assign to us shape our social identity.
Question
Secondary groups are those groups with which we are most intimate.
Question
Formal organizations are planned secondary groups that are created with a goal in mind.
Question
Irving Goffman's approach to analyzing and explaining social interaction is a social construction approach.
Question
When Anita arrived to class the first day, she noticed that most students chose seats in the back of the room. She assumed they didn't want to be asked to interact in class. Goffman calls this defining the situation.
Question
The front stage is where people perform roles to manage impressions.
Question
How does socialization transmit from one generation to the next?
Question
Discuss how Mead proposed the development of self-consciousness.
Question
Explain the influence of peer pressure in socialization.
Question
Explain the process of gender socialization starting at birth.
Question
Differentiate between role strain and role conflict.
Question
Use an example to explain how self-consciousness relates to taking the role of the other.
Question
Discuss how work influences adults as an agent of socialization and resocialization.
Question
What are the key sources of identity? How do they help shape our social identity?
Question
Differentiate between primary groups and secondary groups. Name some of your primary and secondary groups.
Question
Compare and contrast Goffman's front stage and back stage.
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Deck 5: Understanding Socialization
1
Which of these best describes socialization?

A) the ability to follow social norms and expectations of one's society through the processes of social interaction
B) the innate ability to follow social norms and expectations of one's society
C) a concept in which one's learned social behavior remains static
D) a concept in which one's learned social behavior remains the same generation to generation
A
2
Socialization is part of the process of ______, in which individuals internalize the values and norms of a society and pass them to the next generation.

A) life course
B) social behavior
C) social reproduction
D) resocialization
C
3
When a baby is born, the parents call the child by name, dress the child in gendered clothing, and give the baby soft blankets. As the child grows older, the child will receive different toys and be expected to act differently than when a baby. This is an example of ______.

A) social existence
B) the life course
C) nurture
D) resocialization
B
4
A young woman graduates high school and moves out of her parent's house in order to attend college. While there, she learns how to cook, do laundry, and pay her own bills, none of which she did while living at home. This is an example of ______.

A) resocialization
B) nurture
C) self-consciousness
D) a lack of socialization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
How would getting married be considered an agent of resocialization?

A) Getting married requires learning new social norms.
B) Marriage is where one learns self-awareness.
C) Marriage teaches new social roles that the one must adapt to.
D) Marriage encourages people to stay in touch with their families.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Children who are raised in isolation and have few opportunities for social interaction are typically labeled as ______.

A) unintelligent
B) feral
C) resocialized
D) gendered
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Feral children present a unique opportunity for scientists to study ______.

A) the impact of nurture without the influence of nature
B) the socialization process
C) how social interaction impacts biology
D) the impact of nature without the influence of nurture
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Scientists note that ______ refers to a person's biology, while ______ is formed by cultural and social learning.

A) assimilation, accommodation
B) accommodation; assimilation
C) nurture; nature
D) nature; nurture
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
When scientists study children who have lived in isolation, these children demonstrate ______.

A) how little society and social interactions affect who we are
B) how society and social interactions affect who we are
C) how biology affects our ability to interact in socially acceptable ways
D) that these children can never learn to interact with others in socially acceptable ways
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Sociologist George Herbert Mead was influenced by which of Charles Horton Cooley's concepts?

A) deviant behavior
B) anomie theory
C) the looking-glass self
D) social conditioning
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
When an individual develops a sense of self through social interactions and is aware of how others see her or him, this person has learned ______.

A) socially acceptable behavior
B) primary socialization
C) status
D) self-consciousness
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
How would Mead explain the concept of taking the role of the other?

A) People are socialized to put themselves in the place of others.
B) People are influenced by how they perceive others see them.
C) People become aware of what others do and imitate them.
D) People become complacent and do not develop their independent selves.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Individuals who are constantly asking friends if they look okay are exhibiting ______ behavior.

A) role
B) taboo
C) deviant
D) self-conscious
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
A child enters preschool and becomes more aware of how classmates are interacting and responding to each other, which impacts how the child develops. How would Mead explain this?

A) The child is learning self-consciousness through interactions with classmates.
B) The child is developing "I-communication."
C) The child is becoming self-oriented.
D) The child is developing an awareness of symbolic interaction.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
According to Mead, when a child imitates the behavior of a parent, like pretending to fix dinner or go to work, the child is ______.

A) taking the role of the other
B) projecting parental roles
C) performing a front stage function
D) demonstrating self-consciousness
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
How would college be considered an agent of resocialization?

A) College provides the student with social norms.
B) College is where one learns self-awareness.
C) College teaches new social roles that the student must adapt to.
D) College encourages students to stay in touch with their families.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Family, peers, mass media, and schools are all examples of ______.

A) ethnomethodology
B) paradigms
C) agents of socialization
D) secondary socialization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which person is demonstrating primary socialization?

A) an adult receiving a higher paying position at work
B) a high school student learning a foreign language
C) a college student specializing in a field
D) a parent teaching a young child the alphabet
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
What is typically the first agent of socialization for children?

A) family
B) religion
C) peers
D) school
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Sociologist Annette Lareau's classic study looked at how children coming from families of different economic status spent their free time. She found that children in middle class families were more likely than lower income families to ______.

A) play and watch television in their free time
B) use media in their free time
C) have structured free time
D) have part time jobs
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
A factor that can create a negative socialization experience for a child in school is ______.

A) age
B) skin color
C) reinforcement
D) identity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
How does the hidden curriculum impact students in school?

A) It provides teachers with instructions on what to teach in each course.
B) It signifies the separate needs of each individual student.
C) It outlines which students will do better in school and which will need help.
D) It promotes obedience to authority figures and social norms.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
A boy who just started attending a new school is trying to make friends. A group of boys invite him to their house, where they offer the new kid a cigarette. Even though he has never smoked and has no desire to, he does anyway. This is an example of ______.

A) positive socialization
B) rebellion
C) group disconformity
D) peer pressure
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Much of the sociological research on peers and socialization involves ______ behaviors.

A) age-related
B) deviant
C) gender
D) race
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
A location in which a person is closed off from external influences is called a ______ institution.

A) total
B) complete
C) utopian
D) limited
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
What is an example of a total institution?

A) prison
B) school
C) home
D) summer camp
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The ongoing process of learning the social expectations of male and female behavior, roles, and appearance in one's culture refers to gender ______.

A) expression
B) fluidity
C) socialization
D) segregation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
When parents are shopping for toys for their child, how might their choices impact the child's developing gender socialization?

A) The child will develop skills appropriate for their particular gender.
B) The toys teach the child the norms, values, and beliefs of school.
C) The child will use the toys to play with friends and learn social interactions.
D) The toys selected will help to reinforce gender role expectations.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
How does gender socialization impact a female child's development?

A) Gender socialization will influence the child's sexual development.
B) The child will learn expected gender roles when parents purchase toys and clothing.
C) Gender socialization will allow the child to determine the role she will play.
D) Gender socialization will show the child that biology is the most important factor.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Which of these is an example of gender socialization?

A) Parents of a college student encourage their son to pursue a career in teaching.
B) Parents of a young girl encourage her to excel in mathematics and science.
C) A young girl wants a toy truck for her birthday, but her parents buy her a Barbie van instead.
D) A young boy loves to sing, so his parents enroll him in a drama camp for the summer.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
We experience ______ when we have competing demands within a particular social role and status.

A) role fatigue
B) role strain
C) social incompetence
D) social desire
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Due to budget cuts, a boss is forced to fire an employee who is a close friend. The boss is most likely experiencing ______.

A) role strain
B) social dissonance
C) a mixed role situation
D) role conflict
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
How do social roles develop?

A) Each person develops one social role they use for all situations.
B) People use different social roles throughout each day based on different social expectations.
C) Society assigns social roles based on socioeconomic status level.
D) Social roles are developed based on our true selves and our self-identity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
A drama student is trying to get a job as an actor. While waiting for a role, he accepts a serving job at a restaurant to pay the bills. A role is eventually offered, but it is not going to pay enough to allow him to quit his other job. While he is waiting tables, he tries to remember his lines for his acting job. How would a sociologist describe what this student is experiencing?

A) The student is experiencing role conflict as he tries to be both a waiter and an actor.
B) The student is experiencing a self-consciousness crisis as he tries to make everyone happy.
C) The student is experiencing a gender role identity conflict as he works in a female gendered job as wait staff.
D) The student is experiencing role strain as he presents different social selves to the customers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
A single mother has three young children. She works as an attorney at a small law firm. One child gets sick and needs to go to the doctor at the same time the mother is due to meet with a client. How would a sociologist explain this issue?

A) The mother is in a total institution in which she needs to fill more than one role.
B) The mother will experience resocialization as she tries to fill two roles.
C) The mother is experiencing role conflict as she tries to fill two different roles at the same time.
D) The mother will develop multiple social identities as she juggles work and home.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
A person describes himself as an older white male, who is a father, a son, and a doctor. What is the man doing?

A) providing his self-identity
B) discussing role conflicts
C) expressing role strain
D) acknowledging his gender roles
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Characteristics such as gender, social class, race, and ethnicity are a part of a person's ______.

A) socialization
B) biology
C) identity
D) personality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
A person's sense of who they are based on their interactions with others is called ______.

A) personal identity
B) group identity
C) cultural identity
D) self-identity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Our interactions with others constantly shape and reshape ______.

A) identity
B) gender
C) language
D) biology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Dana has three good friends with whom she shares everything. This could be called a(n) ______.

A) pod
B) culture
C) group
D) organization
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41
Which of these would be considered a primary group?

A) Marta and her three sisters
B) William and his sociology class
C) Marina and her work team
D) Vladimir and the citizens of his town
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42
______ organizations assign members to specific jobs and have a system to replace them when needed.

A) Informal
B) Total institution
C) Departmentalized
D) Formal
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43
Lana's company is very structured. There is a written set of rules that all must follow, and employees report to a clear hierarchy of management. The employees do not socialize with each other, but focus on their work exclusively. This is a(n) ______.

A) ideal bureaucracy
B) autocracy
C) informal organization
D) static bureaucracy
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44
Which statement about bureaucracies is true?

A) Bureaucracies are inefficient and cumbersome for formal organizations.
B) Bureaucracies are unnecessary.
C) Bureaucracies are important to informal organizations.
D) Formal organizations have a great need for bureaucracies.
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45
When formal organizations grow and become more complex, they often become ______.

A) bureaucracies
B) informal organizations
C) total institutions
D) government entities
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46
The ways in which a person behaves and reacts to others refers to ______.

A) social intelligence
B) social interaction
C) culture
D) deviant behavior
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47
Which sociological theorist is considered the pioneer of the study of social interactions in everyday contexts?

A) Erving Goffman
B) George Herbert Mead
C) Charles Horton Cooley
D) Karl Marx
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48
Which theorist created a field of study that observed the ordinary or everyday methods people use to make sense of their social interactions?

A) Erving Goffman
B) Sigmund Freud
C) George Herbert Mead
D) Harold Garfinkel
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49
Goffman used a ______ metaphor to describe how individuals' social lives consist of different performances of social roles based on the observers.

A) transformational
B) gendered
C) theatrical
D) voyeur
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50
Goffman noted that people present themselves the way they wish others to see them. What is this called?

A) setting
B) constructed reality
C) impression management
D) front stage
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51
In Goffman's work, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, Goffman noted that the ______, or the "expressive equipment" is present in each individual's performance.

A) stage
B) front
C) audience
D) script
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52
In performing your role as a student, the ______ is when you are in the classroom.

A) setting
B) appearance
C) front stage
D) back stage
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53
In describing social life and the different regions, Goffman refers to the "backstage" as an area ______.

A) where we actively perform our roles
B) where role constraint and role conflict are present
C) in which impression management exists
D) in which one no longer has to perform
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54
A high school student must give a presentation to her class. She needs a good grade, so she dresses nicely and prepares notes. How would Goffman say she used the front or the "expressive equipment" to convince her teacher she had earned a good grade?

A) She avoided eye contact during her presentation.
B) She used face-to-face interaction.
C) She remained "out of character."
D) She convinced her teacher that she was well-prepared by using notes.
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55
The field of study pioneered by Harold Garfinkel that studies the ordinary methods people use to make sense of their social interactions is called ______.

A) ethnomethodology
B) nonscientific reasoning
C) basic research
D) social symbolism
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56
The process of socialization occurs through social interactions with other members of a society.
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57
Social reproduction occurs as subsequent generations change social norms and values.
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58
Mead believed we are born with a sense of who we are, or a sense of self.
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59
Taking the role of the other is based on learning the status of the people you socialize with.
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60
Primary socialization occurs from the time we are born to when we start school.
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61
The hidden curriculum teaches children art and music.
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62
Gender socialization occurs naturally at birth.
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63
Toys are an influential form of gender socialization.
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64
Role strain refers to competing demands within a particular social role and status.
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65
The identities that others assign to us shape our social identity.
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66
Secondary groups are those groups with which we are most intimate.
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67
Formal organizations are planned secondary groups that are created with a goal in mind.
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68
Irving Goffman's approach to analyzing and explaining social interaction is a social construction approach.
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69
When Anita arrived to class the first day, she noticed that most students chose seats in the back of the room. She assumed they didn't want to be asked to interact in class. Goffman calls this defining the situation.
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70
The front stage is where people perform roles to manage impressions.
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71
How does socialization transmit from one generation to the next?
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72
Discuss how Mead proposed the development of self-consciousness.
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73
Explain the influence of peer pressure in socialization.
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74
Explain the process of gender socialization starting at birth.
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75
Differentiate between role strain and role conflict.
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76
Use an example to explain how self-consciousness relates to taking the role of the other.
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77
Discuss how work influences adults as an agent of socialization and resocialization.
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78
What are the key sources of identity? How do they help shape our social identity?
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79
Differentiate between primary groups and secondary groups. Name some of your primary and secondary groups.
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80
Compare and contrast Goffman's front stage and back stage.
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