Deck 1: Thinking About Social Problems
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Deck 1: Thinking About Social Problems
1
Sampling is an important consideration in survey research.
True
2
Symbolic interactionist theory is a macro perspective.
False
3
According to the textbook, what is a social problem?
A) a social condition that interferes with the functioning of society
B) a social condition that results in conflict among segments of society
C) a social condition that a segment of society views as harmful to
D) a social condition that requires immediate government intervention
A) a social condition that interferes with the functioning of society
B) a social condition that results in conflict among segments of society
C) a social condition that a segment of society views as harmful to
D) a social condition that requires immediate government intervention
C
4
Clients and their customers, and employers and their employees, are examples of which types of groups?
A) primary groups
B) secondary groups
C) manifest groups
D) latent groups
A) primary groups
B) secondary groups
C) manifest groups
D) latent groups
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5
Queer theory has strong ties to feminist work, but also corrects the pervasive assumption that heterosexuality is both natural and a historical.
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6
A latent function is a consequence that is intended and commonly recognized.
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7
The dependent variable is the variable that the researcher wants to explain.
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8
The dependent variable is the variable that is expected to explain change in the independent variable.
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9
Which category has two types, primary and secondary?
A) institutions
B) statuses
C) social groups
D) norms
A) institutions
B) statuses
C) social groups
D) norms
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10
Some theorists believe that drug abuse is a social problem only if it is perceived by society to diminish the quality of human life. Which of the following is the focus of this perspective?
A) the human element
B) the objective element
C) the subjective element
D) the variability element
A) the human element
B) the objective element
C) the subjective element
D) the variability element
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11
According to the textbook, which element of a social problem refers to the real existence of a social condition?
A) objective
B) subjective
C) symbolic
D) human
A) objective
B) subjective
C) symbolic
D) human
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12
Control groups are always exposed to the influence of the independent variable.
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13
Surveys always utilize a control group.
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14
A person's master status is the status that is considered the most significant in the person's social identity.
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15
Which of the following is an element of social structure?
A) institutions
B) folkways
C) mores
D) norms
A) institutions
B) folkways
C) mores
D) norms
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16
Which of the following is an ascribed status?
A) race
B) university graduate
C) parent
D) hockey coach
A) race
B) university graduate
C) parent
D) hockey coach
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17
A major strength of participant observation is that its findings are always highly generalizable.
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18
Every individual occupies numerous statuses simultaneously.
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19
Labelling theory suggests that resolving social problems sometimes involves changing the meanings and definitions attributed to people and situations.
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20
In sociology, the term "status" refers to a position a person occupies within a social group.
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21
What are folkways, laws, and mores three types of?
A) sanctions
B) norms
C) values
D) master statuses
A) sanctions
B) norms
C) values
D) master statuses
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22
Which of the following is a good example of a more?
A) speeding
B) abortion
C) drug trafficking
D) sexual harassment
A) speeding
B) abortion
C) drug trafficking
D) sexual harassment
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23
According to the textbook, your classmates may be best described as being which of the following?
A) a master status
B) a primary group
C) a secondary group
D) a role set
A) a master status
B) a primary group
C) a secondary group
D) a role set
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24
Which of the following are language and gestures both examples of?
A) mores
B) folkways
C) symbols
D) roles
A) mores
B) folkways
C) symbols
D) roles
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25
According to the textbook, how are beliefs usually characterized?
A) They are explanations about what is assumed to be
True.
B) They can be good and bad.
C) They can be right or wrong.
D) They can be desirable and undesirable.
A) They are explanations about what is assumed to be
True.
B) They can be good and bad.
C) They can be right or wrong.
D) They can be desirable and undesirable.
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26
Which of the following describes a master status?
A) one that is highly valued by society
B) one that a person is born into
C) one that is difficult to achieve
D) one that is significant in a person's social identity
A) one that is highly valued by society
B) one that a person is born into
C) one that is difficult to achieve
D) one that is significant in a person's social identity
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27
Which of the following is characterized by impersonal and formal interaction?
A) primary groups
B) secondary groups
C) tertiary groups
D) social groups
A) primary groups
B) secondary groups
C) tertiary groups
D) social groups
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28
Which of the following are a police badge and the peace sign examples of?
A) mores
B) folkways
C) symbols
D) ascribed statuses
A) mores
B) folkways
C) symbols
D) ascribed statuses
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29
Which of the following is an achieved status?
A) senior citizen
B) French-Canadian
C) woman
D) university professor
A) senior citizen
B) French-Canadian
C) woman
D) university professor
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30
A person is fined for failure to dispose of trash properly. Which type of sanction is this an example of?
A) positive formal
B) positive informal
C) negative formal
D) negative informal
A) positive formal
B) positive informal
C) negative formal
D) negative informal
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31
According to the textbook, a role is a set of rights, obligations, and expectations. Which of the following is a role associated with?
A) a norm
B) an identity
C) a status
D) a master status
A) a norm
B) an identity
C) a status
D) a master status
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32
A person receives a citizen's award for organizing a neighbourhood recycling program. What is this an example of?
A) positive formal sanction
B) positive informal sanction
C) negative formal sanction
D) negative informal sanction
A) positive formal sanction
B) positive informal sanction
C) negative formal sanction
D) negative informal sanction
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33
Who developed the term "sociological imagination"?
A) Karl Marx
B) Talcott Parsons
C) Robert Merton
D) C. Wright Mills
A) Karl Marx
B) Talcott Parsons
C) Robert Merton
D) C. Wright Mills
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34
Which of the following are associated with sanctions?
A) norms
B) roles
C) statuses
D) beliefs
A) norms
B) roles
C) statuses
D) beliefs
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35
What type of expressions of disapproval are informal sanctions?
A) weak
B) strong
C) spontaneous
D) institutionalized
A) weak
B) strong
C) spontaneous
D) institutionalized
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36
Which of the following can be central to the development of social problems?
A) mores
B) folkways
C) laws
D) values
A) mores
B) folkways
C) laws
D) values
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37
What are norms that are formalized and backed by political authority?
A) roles
B) folkways
C) statuses
D) laws
A) roles
B) folkways
C) statuses
D) laws
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38
Which of the following statements best describes a role?
A) Every status involves one role.
B) Roles guide our behaviour.
C) Roles stay fixed throughout our lifetime.
D) Roles are only a part of the structure of some societies.
A) Every status involves one role.
B) Roles guide our behaviour.
C) Roles stay fixed throughout our lifetime.
D) Roles are only a part of the structure of some societies.
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39
What does the "sociological imagination" refer to?
A) the ability to see the connections between our personal lives and the social world we live in
B) the ability to envision a world without social problems
C) the ability to see the positive aspects of social problems
D) the ability to understand social problems by putting ourselves in the shoes of those who are suffering because of social problems
A) the ability to see the connections between our personal lives and the social world we live in
B) the ability to envision a world without social problems
C) the ability to see the positive aspects of social problems
D) the ability to understand social problems by putting ourselves in the shoes of those who are suffering because of social problems
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40
Which of the following is defined as two or more people who have a common identity, interact, and form a social relationship?
A) institution
B) role set
C) social group
D) tertiary encounter
A) institution
B) role set
C) social group
D) tertiary encounter
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41
According to the social disorganization view of social problems, where does one of the solutions to social problems lie?
A) slowing the pace of social change
B) reducing social inequality
C) reducing government interface into our lives
D) increasing educational opportunities
A) slowing the pace of social change
B) reducing social inequality
C) reducing government interface into our lives
D) increasing educational opportunities
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42
Which of the following sees social problems as resulting from the breakdown of or inadequacies in the family, religious, economic, educational, and political institutions?
A) symbolic interactionist perspective
B) social pathology model
C) Marxist conflict perspective
D) non-Marxist conflict perspective
A) symbolic interactionist perspective
B) social pathology model
C) Marxist conflict perspective
D) non-Marxist conflict perspective
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43
Which perspective is largely based on the works of Herbert Spencer, Émile Durkheim, Talcott Parsons, and Robert Merton?
A) symbolic interactionist
B) conflict
C) structural-functionalist
D) feminist
A) symbolic interactionist
B) conflict
C) structural-functionalist
D) feminist
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44
When is a society in a state of "anomie"?
A) When norms are weak or in conflict with each other.
B) When the major social institutions reinforce the same cultural values.
C) When there are more secondary groups than primary groups.
D) When individuals experience more negative than positive sanctions.
A) When norms are weak or in conflict with each other.
B) When the major social institutions reinforce the same cultural values.
C) When there are more secondary groups than primary groups.
D) When individuals experience more negative than positive sanctions.
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45
Which of the following causes of social conflict do Marxist conflict theories focus on?
A) weak social norms
B) economic inequalities
C) social disorganization
D) class inequality
A) weak social norms
B) economic inequalities
C) social disorganization
D) class inequality
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46
Which of the following perspectives can trace its origins to the works of Karl Marx?
A) social disorganization
B) conflict
C) structural-functionalist
D) social pathology
A) social disorganization
B) conflict
C) structural-functionalist
D) social pathology
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47
Which of the following is a latent function of the educational institution?
A) to transmit knowledge to youth
B) to transmit skills to youth
C) to offer a place for young adults to meet
D) to impart knowledge necessary to secure a job
A) to transmit knowledge to youth
B) to transmit skills to youth
C) to offer a place for young adults to meet
D) to impart knowledge necessary to secure a job
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48
Who was the sociologist responsible for developing the concepts of manifest and latent functions?
A) Ralf Dahrendorf
B) Robert Merton
C) Charles Horton Cooley
D) Erving Goffman
A) Ralf Dahrendorf
B) Robert Merton
C) Charles Horton Cooley
D) Erving Goffman
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49
What does Karl Marx call workers who earn wages?
A) bourgeoisie
B) proletariat
C) captors
D) automatons
A) bourgeoisie
B) proletariat
C) captors
D) automatons
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50
Solutions to social problems include increasing the understanding that conflicting groups have of each other's views, resolving differences through negotiation or mediation, or agreeing to disagree. Which view of social problems does the preceding sentence describe?
A) social pathology
B) social disorganization
C) Marxist conflict
D) non-Marxist conflict
A) social pathology
B) social disorganization
C) Marxist conflict
D) non-Marxist conflict
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51
Which of the following causes of social conflict do non-Marxist conflict theories focus on?
A) weak social norms
B) economic inequalities
C) competing values and interests
D) social disorganization
A) weak social norms
B) economic inequalities
C) competing values and interests
D) social disorganization
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52
According to Marxist conflict theory, which of the following refers to actual harm and/or risk of harm inflicted on consumers, workers, and the general public as a result of decisions by business executives or managers?
A) anomie
B) corporate violence
C) social pathology
D) hegemony
A) anomie
B) corporate violence
C) social pathology
D) hegemony
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53
Which perspective argues that a society needs to have cohesion in its different parts?
A) symbolic interactionism
B) conflict theory
C) feminist theory
D) structural-functionalism
A) symbolic interactionism
B) conflict theory
C) feminist theory
D) structural-functionalism
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54
What does Cooley call the reflection of ourselves that we see by observing how others view us?
A) looking-glass self
B) reflective self
C) conscious self
D) impressionistic self
A) looking-glass self
B) reflective self
C) conscious self
D) impressionistic self
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55
Which perspective sees society as a system of interconnected parts that work together in harmony to maintain a state of balance and social equilibrium for the whole?
A) conflict
B) structural-functionalist
C) symbolic interactionist
D) constructionist
A) conflict
B) structural-functionalist
C) symbolic interactionist
D) constructionist
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56
Which perspective views society as comprising different groups and interests competing for power and resources?
A) essentialist
B) symbolic interactionist
C) structural-functionalist
D) conflict
A) essentialist
B) symbolic interactionist
C) structural-functionalist
D) conflict
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57
Meeting a potential spouse might be which type of function of religion?
A) manifest
B) latent
C) regressive
D) societal
A) manifest
B) latent
C) regressive
D) societal
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58
Which types of consequences are called manifest functions?
A) neither functional nor dysfunctional
B) unintended and often hidden
C) both functional and dysfunctional
D) intended and commonly recognized
A) neither functional nor dysfunctional
B) unintended and often hidden
C) both functional and dysfunctional
D) intended and commonly recognized
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59
What aspect of people's lives does alienation refer to?
A) powerlessness and meaninglessness
B) communication and technology
C) innovation and advancement
D) work and education
A) powerlessness and meaninglessness
B) communication and technology
C) innovation and advancement
D) work and education
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60
Which types of consequences are called latent functions?
A) neither functional nor dysfunctional
B) unintended and often hidden
C) both functional and dysfunctional
D) intended and commonly recognized
A) neither functional nor dysfunctional
B) unintended and often hidden
C) both functional and dysfunctional
D) intended and commonly recognized
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61
Which of the following might one use in rehearsing for a job interview?
A) symbols
B) the looking-glass self
C) labelling theory
D) postmodern perspectives
A) symbols
B) the looking-glass self
C) labelling theory
D) postmodern perspectives
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62
Which of the following research methods involves the serious disadvantages of cost and lack of privacy and anonymity?
A) questionnaires
B) interviews
C) secondary data research
D) experiments
A) questionnaires
B) interviews
C) secondary data research
D) experiments
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63
A researcher wants to explain the relationship between age and crime. Crime is which kind of variable?
A) independent
B) dependent
C) primary
D) secondary
A) independent
B) dependent
C) primary
D) secondary
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64
Which research method involves randomly assigning participants to one of two groups?
A) experiments
B) field research
C) surveys
D) secondary analysis
A) experiments
B) field research
C) surveys
D) secondary analysis
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65
What is a hypothesis?
A) a statement of fact
B) a conclusion based on research
C) a subjective opinion
D) a prediction or educated guess
A) a statement of fact
B) a conclusion based on research
C) a subjective opinion
D) a prediction or educated guess
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66
In which kind of research is selecting a representative sample important?
A) experimental
B) field
C) survey
D) secondary data
A) experimental
B) field
C) survey
D) secondary data
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67
Which of the following is a good example of the type of social problem that a feminist would be likely to study?
A) immigration
B) the economy
C) workplace harassment
D) unruly crowd behaviour
A) immigration
B) the economy
C) workplace harassment
D) unruly crowd behaviour
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68
Which theoretical perspective reflects micro-sociology?
A) symbolic interactionism
B) structural-functionalism
C) Marxist conflict
D) non-Marxist conflict
A) symbolic interactionism
B) structural-functionalism
C) Marxist conflict
D) non-Marxist conflict
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69
Which research variable must always precede the variable that the researcher is trying to explain?
A) independent
B) dependent
C) control
D) secondary
A) independent
B) dependent
C) control
D) secondary
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70
Which theorist is most often identified with queer theory?
A) Mead
B) Martineau
C) Devor
D) Durkhein
A) Mead
B) Martineau
C) Devor
D) Durkhein
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71
Which theory is referred to by some critics as "jargon-heavy" and a "conspiracy to destroy culture"?
A) postmodern
B) symbolic interactionism
C) conflict
D) non-Marxist conflict
A) postmodern
B) symbolic interactionism
C) conflict
D) non-Marxist conflict
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72
Max Weber argued that in order to understand human behaviour, social scientists must use an approach called Verstehen. What does this German term mean?
A) wisdom
B) empathy
C) scientific method
D) statistical analysis
A) wisdom
B) empathy
C) scientific method
D) statistical analysis
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73
Which of the following suggestions did Herbert Blumer, a noted symbolic interactionist, contribute to the study of social problems?
A) that they develop in stages
B) that they are basically lifelong afflictions
C) that they continue on because the wealthy prosper from them
D) that they were cyclical in nature
A) that they develop in stages
B) that they are basically lifelong afflictions
C) that they continue on because the wealthy prosper from them
D) that they were cyclical in nature
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74
Which perspective suggests that our identity, or sense of self, is shaped by social interaction?
A) social disorganization
B) social pathology
C) structural-functionalism
D) symbolic interactionism
A) social disorganization
B) social pathology
C) structural-functionalism
D) symbolic interactionism
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75
For which of the following variables is an operational definition most important?
A) income
B) age
C) marital status
D) job satisfaction
A) income
B) age
C) marital status
D) job satisfaction
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76
Which of the following theorists is often referred to as the first feminist sociologist?
A) Blumer
B) Thomas
C) Lyotard
D) Martineau
A) Blumer
B) Thomas
C) Lyotard
D) Martineau
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77
Which of the following statements is central to feminist theory?
A) Labelling something as a social problem makes it so.
B) Resolving social problems sometimes involves changing meanings.
C) The experiences of women's lives are missing in traditional sociology.
D) It is important to observe how our identity is shaped by social interaction.
A) Labelling something as a social problem makes it so.
B) Resolving social problems sometimes involves changing meanings.
C) The experiences of women's lives are missing in traditional sociology.
D) It is important to observe how our identity is shaped by social interaction.
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78
Which term refers to a measurable event, characteristic, or property that differs or is subject to change?
A) hypothesis
B) strategy
C) variable
D) sample
A) hypothesis
B) strategy
C) variable
D) sample
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79
Which type of group is often used in experiments?
A) sample
B) control
C) competency
D) polling
A) sample
B) control
C) competency
D) polling
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80
What is the greatest strength of the experimental method?
A) Its research findings are highly generalizable.
B) It provides evidence for causal relationships.
C) It is affordable
D) It is not very time consuming.
A) Its research findings are highly generalizable.
B) It provides evidence for causal relationships.
C) It is affordable
D) It is not very time consuming.
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