Deck 12: Life at Home: Families and Relationships

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Question
Until recently,South Korea had laws in place banning marriage between people who belonged to the same clan.This means that they practiced

A) polyandry.
B) exogamy.
C) endogamy.
D) plural families.
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Question
Today,who do average Americans have in mind when they think of their families?

A) an uncle or aunt
B) a brother or sister
C) any person in their ethnic group
D) a cousin
Question
What is an individual saying when he or she describes someone who is related to him or her biologically as "not really kin"?

A) The relative has not exercised his or her rights or fulfilled his or her obligations as a family member.
B) The relative is part of the extended rather than the nuclear family.
C) The relative does not belong to the relevant voluntary associations.
D) The relative has died.
Question
Which of the following seems to make people,in general,more likely to define a group as a family?

A) the size of the group in question
B) the presence of children
C) the ages of group members
D) the socioeconomic class of the people involved
Question
How does the U.S.Census Bureau define "family"?

A) people who are emotionally or materially interdependent
B) people who share a household
C) parents living with minor children
D) two or more individuals related by blood, marriage, or adoption who share a household
Question
How did the Industrial Revolution change the common meaning of family?

A) It stopped mattering whether children were present.
B) Family no longer exclusively referred to people who shared a household.
C) It shifted the meaning from nuclear family to extended family.
D) It shifted the meaning from extended family to nuclear family.
Question
What do sociologists call the tendency to marry someone from a different background?

A) exogamy
B) endogamy
C) homogamy
D) out-group orientation
Question
Family friends who are referred to as "Aunt" or "Uncle" are examples of

A) the Full House effect.
B) homogamy.
C) fictive kin.
D) extended families.
Question
What do sociologists call the tendency to marry someone of a similar background?

A) heterogamy
B) in-group orientation
C) endogamy
D) exogamy
Question
According to conflict theory,how does the nuclear family facilitate exploitation?

A) through the use of nannies and domestic workers
B) by making geographic mobility possible
C) through a sexual division of labor within the home
D) by exploiting the working class whose products it consumes
Question
Functionalists view the family as responsible for the reproduction of society in what way?

A) It produces and socializes children.
B) It is the fundamental planning mechanism for society.
C) It is the most important unit of consumption.
D) It is the basic unit of the household and the smallest building block of a society.
Question
In what would a symbolic interactionist studying the family be MOST interested?

A) the inequalities associated with men's negligible role in raising and caring for infants
B) the diminished role the family plays in teaching children important skills
C) the way gift giving within an extended family makes some bonds more important than others
D) the way increasing divorce rates are making it harder for families to function and to socialize children
Question
In Japan,some are worried about the effect that the rise in one-child families is having on the foundation of Japanese society.On what sort of theoretical perspective on the family is this concern based?

A) structural functionalist
B) symbolic interactionist
C) life course theory
D) historical materialist
Question
Given the history of the family,what sort of changes do you think would be most likely to make the extended family more relevant again?

A) changes in America's travel and transportation services
B) changes in the economy that make people less likely to move away from their hometowns to get a job
C) changes in divorce laws that make it harder for couples to separate
D) changes in religion that cause adults to reevaluate how they relate to their parents
Question
Which theoretical perspective would lead you to consider the broader social effects of the division of labor between men and women in the household?

A) symbolic interactionism
B) queer theory
C) conflict theory
D) structural functionalism
Question
Why do the authors of your textbook reject definitions of family that depend on particular types of people (like parents)and specific types of ties (like marriage)?

A) They believe that the nuclear family remains the most important prototype for a family.
B) They want the definition to be broad enough to encompass a variety of living arrangements.
C) They believe that in the future more families will consist of two sets of parents with children.
D) They argue that it is important to limit the definition of families so that families can be discussed with clarity.
Question
What feature of the nuclear family,as opposed to the extended family,makes it uniquely qualified to serve the needs of an industrial economy?

A) It has more emotional resources on which to draw in times of trouble.
B) It makes geographic mobility much easier.
C) It is capable of retaining more knowledge about child rearing and household labor.
D) It functions better as a unit of economic production.
Question
In the United States today,very few people marry outside of their own socioeconomic classes,suggesting that there is a high degree of

A) endogamy.
B) exogamy.
C) polyandry.
D) polygamy.
Question
What form does the family take in contemporary society according to symbolic interactionists Jay Gubrium and Jim Holstein?

A) "The family" does not exist; rather, family is a fluid, adaptable set of concepts and practices.
B) The family is the unit that raises children.
C) The family is based on legal and economic structures.
D) The family is the institution for the socialization of children.
Question
A heterosexual couple living in the same household and raising children is defined as a(n)________ family.

A) nontraditional
B) nuclear
C) extended
D) broken
Question
According to the text,________ is one of several reasons people live their lives unmarried.

A) the bohemian lifestyle
B) an inability to find a mate
C) the single lifestyle
D) fear of infidelity
Question
How could new technologies like the Internet decrease the importance of propinquity in mate selection while preserving or even increasing the importance of homogamy?

A) by bringing people together from all over the world based on similar interests or backgrounds
B) by making it obvious to most people that their best chance for marital satisfaction may be with a type of person they have never met before
C) by masking some of the characteristics of potential mates until the two people have met
D) by allowing social networking sites to connect individuals to more and more residents of their hometowns
Question
Unmarried adults who are romantically involved and live together under the same roof are participating in

A) cohabitation.
B) sinful behavior.
C) premarital bliss.
D) the honeymoon phase.
Question
Between 1960 and 2014,demographers noticed what type of change in the numbers of unwed individuals living with their romantic partners?

A) a very slight increase
B) a sharp increase
C) a sharp decrease
D) no change
Question
What sort of laws prohibited the mixing of racial groups through marriage,cohabitation,or sexual contact?

A) reconstruction
B) common
C) anti-miscegenation
D) Jim Crow
Question
When was the last antimiscegenation law struck down in the United States?

A) 1865
B) 1895
C) 1917
D) 1967
Question
Propinquity refers to

A) a fixed set of beliefs.
B) the tendency to seek people with similar backgrounds.
C) the desire for the exotic and the foreign.
D) geographic proximity.
Question
The increasing number of Americans who move out of state to attend college will decrease the importance of ________,assuming that students start new romantic relationships in school.

A) homogamy
B) monogamy
C) exogamy
D) propinquity
Question
According to Kathryn Edin and Maria Kefalas,which of the following is a reason young women of low socioeconomic status have children?

A) They want to gain access to welfare benefits.
B) They do not have access to adequate birth control.
C) They are poorly educated.
D) A baby is a symbol of belonging and motherhood can lead to respect from one's community.
Question
American ideology focuses on the importance of marriage and family values and assumes that the family is at the center of almost everyone's life.How does this compare to the way people really live?

A) Marriage remains central to people's lives, but family values are less important than in the past.
B) Family values remain very important, but many more people are choosing not to get married than those who did so in the past.
C) Both marriage and the family are central to the lives of the majority of Americans in much the same way they were in the distant past.
D) Increasingly, both marriage and the family are less central to the lives of average Americans.
Question
How have Americans' attitudes changed,if they have it all,regarding whether marrying someone of a different race is good for society?

A) Americans are much more accepting of interracial marriage than they were in the past.
B) Americans are a little more accepting of interracial marriage than they were in the past.
C) Americans are about as accepting of interracial marriage as they were in the past.
D) Americans are less accepting of interracial marriage than they were in the past.
Question
Jennifer Mitchell,an adoption social worker,uses a rigorous screening process for potential adoptive parents.She frequently asks

A) if prospective parents enjoy outdoor recreation.
B) if prospective parents engage in a healthy eating routine.
C) prospective parents about their hopes for the future.
D) prospective parents about their sexual preferences.
Question
Jill has become nervous that her marriage may end in divorce since she grew up with divorced parents.One fact that might reassure her is that the rate of ________ has decreased.

A) custody battles
B) intergenerational divorce
C) stable marriages
D) child visitation
Question
Although Geoffrey Greif points out that "more fathers are rearing children alone following separation and divorce than ever before," which of the following is true about single fathers?

A) Single fathers are still only about 15 percent of all single parents.
B) Many states have laws against giving sole custody to fathers following a divorce.
C) Most of these fathers move back in with their parents so that their children live with grandparents.
D) Soon there will be more single fathers than single mothers.
Question
JDate is a website that helps Jewish men and women,especially those who are not practicing Jews or who live in areas where there are not many other Jews,form romantic relationships.What do Jewish people who use this website care about?

A) religious purity
B) homogamy
C) propinquity
D) polyandry
Question
A woman in North Carolina was found guilty of "lewd and lascivious association" because she lived with her boyfriend.Her behavior is also known as

A) cohabitation.
B) noncustodial parenting.
C) symbolic interactionism.
D) homogamy.
Question
According to the text,what are the major factors involved in forming relationships and selecting mates?

A) personal chemistry
B) the unique individual characteristics of the individuals involved
C) the tendency to choose mates who are similar in class, race, ethnicity, and age
D) the desire to find a mate who comes from a radically different background
Question
What would a music critic call "musical miscegenation" if he or she used the term "miscegenation" metaphorically?

A) the way white country music and black blues music come together to make rock and roll
B) the way pop stars become disconnected from their roots
C) the way the press treats pop superstars and the effect this has on contemporary music
D) the role the piano has played in twentieth-century jazz
Question
JDate,a dating website for Jewish people,is sometimes used by non-Jews who are interested in dating Jews.These non-Jews are practicing

A) monogamy.
B) exogamy.
C) homogamy.
D) polyandry.
Question
Before World War II,the United States had no interstate highway system,and traveling to different parts of the country was difficult.This means that ________ must have been even more important in determining mate selection.

A) exogamy
B) economic considerations
C) schools
D) propinquity
Question
What is it called when individuals must care for both their own children and their elderly parents?

A) the sandwich generation effect
B) elderly caregiving
C) extended family care
D) dual workloads
Question
As an agent of socialization,who does the family influence?

A) only children
B) everyone
C) women
D) the elderly
Question
What happens to marital satisfaction when small children are present in the household?

A) It goes up.
B) It goes down.
C) It goes up for the first child but down for every child after that.
D) It goes up for newlyweds but down for older married couples.
Question
How is custody of minor children usually handled in divorce cases?

A) Fathers are now slightly more likely than mothers to receive custody.
B) Mothers always receive custody.
C) Mothers receive custody in a disproportionate number of cases.
D) Mothers and fathers are about equally likely to receive custody.
Question
The physical and legal responsibility for the everyday life and routines of children is called

A) custody.
B) good parenting.
C) visitation.
D) child support.
Question
Which of the following is a strategy that some middle- and upper-class women have used to balance the demands of work and home?

A) hiring other women to do domestic work
B) demanding that their husbands complete most chores
C) doing more of certain chores
D) demanding the abolition of housework
Question
Tasks designed to achieve a tangible goal like washing the dishes or taking out the trash are called

A) instrumental tasks.
B) expressive tasks.
C) female tasks.
D) the second shift.
Question
Reading children bedtime stories is an important task in many families.What part of reading the bedtime story is an instrumental task?

A) making bedtime fun and keeping everyone happy
B) staying entertained as a parent by reading the children books you like
C) getting children into pajamas, tucked into bed, and then to sleep
D) sharing a moment with a child and developing shared interests
Question
Who is more likely to return home after a full day of paid labor and put in a "second shift" at home taking care of domestic work?

A) women
B) men
C) young people
D) older people
Question
To whom has Hochschild's concept of the "Supermom" always been applicable?

A) upper-class mothers
B) middle-class parents
C) working-class mothers
D) the homeless
Question
What does Arlie Hochschild call mothers who accept the dual workloads of paid labor at work and unpaid labor at home without any help?

A) instrumental leaders
B) Supermoms
C) dual mothers
D) revolutionary moms
Question
Why are remarriage rates lower today than they were in the 1960s?

A) Divorced people tend to have a series of short relationships instead of getting remarried.
B) There has been an increase in cohabitation among unmarried couples.
C) Divorce rates have dropped slightly.
D) People tend to divorce at later ages, so they are less likely to remarry.
Question
Arlie Hochschild's study of two-income families found that women were much more likely than men to do the majority of the unpaid labor inside the home even after a full day's work outside the home.What term do sociologists use to describe this extra labor?

A) women's work
B) the female burden
C) the double standard
D) the second shift
Question
How are children of divorced parents today different from children of divorced parents in the 1970s?

A) Children of divorced parents today are more likely to get divorced themselves than were children whose parents divorced in the 1970s.
B) Children of divorced parents today are more likely to be divorced multiple times than were children whose parents divorced in the 1970s.
C) Children of divorced parents today are more likely to get married than were children whose parents divorced in the 1970s.
D) Children of divorced parents today are considerably less likely to divorce than were children whose parents divorced in the 1970s.
Question
Some women accept the burdens of the "second shift" in order to avoid conflict with their husbands or children.How does this affect them?

A) It increases their confidence and self-esteem.
B) It increases their efficiency.
C) It makes them unhappy and emotionally numb.
D) It improves their self-reported level of marital satisfaction.
Question
Under what circumstances is a father more likely than a mother to be awarded custody of his minor children following a divorce?

A) when he lives in a rural area
B) when he lives in a politically conservative area
C) when the children are younger than twelve
D) when he makes substantially more money than his ex-wife
Question
There are strategies available to help ease the burden of the second shift,but they are mainly
Available to

A) people with extended families.
B) young couples.
C) newlyweds.
D) wealthier families.
Question
How does the birth of children tend to change the gendered division of labor within the household?

A) It gets fathers more involved.
B) It brings the extended family into the household more.
C) It makes the division of labor more traditionally split along gender lines.
D) It has no influence on the gendered division of labor.
Question
Which of the following strategies does Arlie Hochschild claim some women use to help balance working a paid job and being responsible for the home?

A) no longer caring that there are dirty clothes all over the floor
B) divorcing husbands who refuse to help
C) forcing their children to take over the majority of the housework
D) throwing away clothing when they find it on the floor to teach their husbands a lesson
Question
What kind of task is calling a family member to wish him or her a happy birthday?

A) family
B) expressive
C) operative
D) instrumental
Question
What is the term for the range of behaviors that abusers use to gain and maintain control over their victims?

A) manipulation
B) passive aggression
C) domestic abuse
D) symbolic violence
Question
The family is created and sustained through interactional work.
Question
Why are child and elder abuse likely to go unreported?

A) Few authority figures care enough to investigate abuse.
B) Neither kind of abuse is perceived as a serious problem in America today.
C) Most child and elder abuse is done carefully so as to make it hard to prove in court.
D) The victims are relatively powerless.
Question
Judith Stacey's Brave New Families explored the ways families adapted to meet the challenges of a postmodern society by creating innovative family structures that looked very different from the "traditional" family.Which of the following would you think was the full title of Stacey's book?

A) Brave New Families: Gender, Love, and Property
B) Brave New Families: The Quest for Intimacy
C) Brave New Families: Creating a Safe Legal Haven for Families with Special Needs
D) Brave New Families: Stories of Domestic Upheaval in Late-Twentieth-Century America
Question
Which of the following statements is LEAST likely to come from a perpetrator of domestic violence?

A) "She deserved it."
B) "I really want to change."
C) "I just lose control."
D) "I have anger management problems."
Question
What is one common reason why victims of domestic abuse stay in abusive relationships?

A) They are waiting for someone to save them.
B) They do not feel responsible for their own abuse.
C) They do not have the resources to get away.
D) The abusive partner treats them well all the time.
Question
Sometimes child welfare agencies are called to investigate a child who never seems to have clean clothing and is very skinny.The suspicion would be that the child is a victim of

A) neglect.
B) incest.
C) violence.
D) eldest child syndrome.
Question
Which of the following things is a child likely to convince a parent to do?

A) switch to a different political party
B) start reading more literature
C) quit smoking cigarettes
D) learn about new cultures
Question
How do rates of intimate partner violence differ across racial groups?

A) They are higher among whites than in other racial groups.
B) They are about equal across racial groups.
C) They are lower among Asian Americans than in other racial groups.
D) They are higher among non-English-speaking individuals than among English speakers.
Question
A person is MOST likely to be murdered by

A) a family member.
B) a law enforcement officer.
C) a drug dealer or a drug user.
D) someone seeking to rob him or her.
Question
The radio played a news story about the murder of a twenty-five-year-old woman,married,with one child.Who would you expect the police to investigate for the crime first?

A) a serial killer
B) her husband or boyfriend
C) a gang member being initiated into a street gang
D) a burglar who she surprised in the act
Question
What is the main reason abusive partners resort to intimate partner violence?

A) They have anger management problems.
B) They have problems outside the relationship that drive them over the edge.
C) They are generally violent in all aspects of their lives.
D) They desire power over their victims.
Question
How do most abusive relationships look at the beginning?

A) The signs of violence are there from the start.
B) Violence usually begins as soon as the relationship starts, if not before.
C) There is tension and a "walking on eggshells" feeling from day one.
D) The abusive partner is charming, attentive, and thoughtful.
Question
Which of the following was true of parenting in the nineteenth century and earlier?

A) Fathers were far more likely to have the final say in decisions about their children.
B) Mothers often valued other mothers' opinions about child rearing over the opinions of their own children's fathers.
C) The extended family was less important in terms of instrumental support.
D) Members of the community had far less influence than they do today.
Question
In societies across the globe,men and women have always performed different tasks to help the family function,and these roles have always been considered unequal.
Question
Most young people face similar financial pressures while in their twenties,but considerably more men move back in with their parents than women.What is one reason for this?

A) Men care more about saving money than women do.
B) Women lose more independence when they move back home than men do.
C) Men have stronger relationships with their parents than women do.
D) Women are more likely than men to have serious emotional conflicts with their mothers.
Question
What term applies to a child who leaves home at eighteen but later returns for at least a short period of time?

A) emotionally stunted
B) boomerang kid
C) adult minor
D) sandwich kid
Question
A husband who keeps all of his family's money in his bank account and gives his wife a weekly allowance might be considered guilty of domestic abuse.
Question
Today,many college graduates find themselves unable to afford the costs of living on their own and,at least temporarily,live with their parents again.What good news about families can we take from this trend?

A) It allows parents to have more of a say in their children's romantic lives.
B) That so many children are willing to live with their parents again suggests that they have closer relationships with parents than previous generations did.
C) College students today are taking less time to finish college and moving past the "student" phase of their lives more quickly than in the past.
D) By living with their parents, these college graduates save money and demonstrate fiscal responsibility in ways that the past generation did not.
Question
What sort of actions do abusive partners take to keep their partners in the relationship?

A) keep up a constant stream of threats
B) stop the cycle of abuse and truly reform
C) periodically enter a cycle of loving contrition
D) seek psychological help
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Deck 12: Life at Home: Families and Relationships
1
Until recently,South Korea had laws in place banning marriage between people who belonged to the same clan.This means that they practiced

A) polyandry.
B) exogamy.
C) endogamy.
D) plural families.
B
2
Today,who do average Americans have in mind when they think of their families?

A) an uncle or aunt
B) a brother or sister
C) any person in their ethnic group
D) a cousin
B
3
What is an individual saying when he or she describes someone who is related to him or her biologically as "not really kin"?

A) The relative has not exercised his or her rights or fulfilled his or her obligations as a family member.
B) The relative is part of the extended rather than the nuclear family.
C) The relative does not belong to the relevant voluntary associations.
D) The relative has died.
A
4
Which of the following seems to make people,in general,more likely to define a group as a family?

A) the size of the group in question
B) the presence of children
C) the ages of group members
D) the socioeconomic class of the people involved
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
How does the U.S.Census Bureau define "family"?

A) people who are emotionally or materially interdependent
B) people who share a household
C) parents living with minor children
D) two or more individuals related by blood, marriage, or adoption who share a household
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
How did the Industrial Revolution change the common meaning of family?

A) It stopped mattering whether children were present.
B) Family no longer exclusively referred to people who shared a household.
C) It shifted the meaning from nuclear family to extended family.
D) It shifted the meaning from extended family to nuclear family.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
What do sociologists call the tendency to marry someone from a different background?

A) exogamy
B) endogamy
C) homogamy
D) out-group orientation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Family friends who are referred to as "Aunt" or "Uncle" are examples of

A) the Full House effect.
B) homogamy.
C) fictive kin.
D) extended families.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
What do sociologists call the tendency to marry someone of a similar background?

A) heterogamy
B) in-group orientation
C) endogamy
D) exogamy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
According to conflict theory,how does the nuclear family facilitate exploitation?

A) through the use of nannies and domestic workers
B) by making geographic mobility possible
C) through a sexual division of labor within the home
D) by exploiting the working class whose products it consumes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Functionalists view the family as responsible for the reproduction of society in what way?

A) It produces and socializes children.
B) It is the fundamental planning mechanism for society.
C) It is the most important unit of consumption.
D) It is the basic unit of the household and the smallest building block of a society.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
In what would a symbolic interactionist studying the family be MOST interested?

A) the inequalities associated with men's negligible role in raising and caring for infants
B) the diminished role the family plays in teaching children important skills
C) the way gift giving within an extended family makes some bonds more important than others
D) the way increasing divorce rates are making it harder for families to function and to socialize children
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
In Japan,some are worried about the effect that the rise in one-child families is having on the foundation of Japanese society.On what sort of theoretical perspective on the family is this concern based?

A) structural functionalist
B) symbolic interactionist
C) life course theory
D) historical materialist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Given the history of the family,what sort of changes do you think would be most likely to make the extended family more relevant again?

A) changes in America's travel and transportation services
B) changes in the economy that make people less likely to move away from their hometowns to get a job
C) changes in divorce laws that make it harder for couples to separate
D) changes in religion that cause adults to reevaluate how they relate to their parents
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Which theoretical perspective would lead you to consider the broader social effects of the division of labor between men and women in the household?

A) symbolic interactionism
B) queer theory
C) conflict theory
D) structural functionalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Why do the authors of your textbook reject definitions of family that depend on particular types of people (like parents)and specific types of ties (like marriage)?

A) They believe that the nuclear family remains the most important prototype for a family.
B) They want the definition to be broad enough to encompass a variety of living arrangements.
C) They believe that in the future more families will consist of two sets of parents with children.
D) They argue that it is important to limit the definition of families so that families can be discussed with clarity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
What feature of the nuclear family,as opposed to the extended family,makes it uniquely qualified to serve the needs of an industrial economy?

A) It has more emotional resources on which to draw in times of trouble.
B) It makes geographic mobility much easier.
C) It is capable of retaining more knowledge about child rearing and household labor.
D) It functions better as a unit of economic production.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
In the United States today,very few people marry outside of their own socioeconomic classes,suggesting that there is a high degree of

A) endogamy.
B) exogamy.
C) polyandry.
D) polygamy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
What form does the family take in contemporary society according to symbolic interactionists Jay Gubrium and Jim Holstein?

A) "The family" does not exist; rather, family is a fluid, adaptable set of concepts and practices.
B) The family is the unit that raises children.
C) The family is based on legal and economic structures.
D) The family is the institution for the socialization of children.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
A heterosexual couple living in the same household and raising children is defined as a(n)________ family.

A) nontraditional
B) nuclear
C) extended
D) broken
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
According to the text,________ is one of several reasons people live their lives unmarried.

A) the bohemian lifestyle
B) an inability to find a mate
C) the single lifestyle
D) fear of infidelity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
How could new technologies like the Internet decrease the importance of propinquity in mate selection while preserving or even increasing the importance of homogamy?

A) by bringing people together from all over the world based on similar interests or backgrounds
B) by making it obvious to most people that their best chance for marital satisfaction may be with a type of person they have never met before
C) by masking some of the characteristics of potential mates until the two people have met
D) by allowing social networking sites to connect individuals to more and more residents of their hometowns
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23
Unmarried adults who are romantically involved and live together under the same roof are participating in

A) cohabitation.
B) sinful behavior.
C) premarital bliss.
D) the honeymoon phase.
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24
Between 1960 and 2014,demographers noticed what type of change in the numbers of unwed individuals living with their romantic partners?

A) a very slight increase
B) a sharp increase
C) a sharp decrease
D) no change
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25
What sort of laws prohibited the mixing of racial groups through marriage,cohabitation,or sexual contact?

A) reconstruction
B) common
C) anti-miscegenation
D) Jim Crow
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26
When was the last antimiscegenation law struck down in the United States?

A) 1865
B) 1895
C) 1917
D) 1967
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27
Propinquity refers to

A) a fixed set of beliefs.
B) the tendency to seek people with similar backgrounds.
C) the desire for the exotic and the foreign.
D) geographic proximity.
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28
The increasing number of Americans who move out of state to attend college will decrease the importance of ________,assuming that students start new romantic relationships in school.

A) homogamy
B) monogamy
C) exogamy
D) propinquity
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29
According to Kathryn Edin and Maria Kefalas,which of the following is a reason young women of low socioeconomic status have children?

A) They want to gain access to welfare benefits.
B) They do not have access to adequate birth control.
C) They are poorly educated.
D) A baby is a symbol of belonging and motherhood can lead to respect from one's community.
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30
American ideology focuses on the importance of marriage and family values and assumes that the family is at the center of almost everyone's life.How does this compare to the way people really live?

A) Marriage remains central to people's lives, but family values are less important than in the past.
B) Family values remain very important, but many more people are choosing not to get married than those who did so in the past.
C) Both marriage and the family are central to the lives of the majority of Americans in much the same way they were in the distant past.
D) Increasingly, both marriage and the family are less central to the lives of average Americans.
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31
How have Americans' attitudes changed,if they have it all,regarding whether marrying someone of a different race is good for society?

A) Americans are much more accepting of interracial marriage than they were in the past.
B) Americans are a little more accepting of interracial marriage than they were in the past.
C) Americans are about as accepting of interracial marriage as they were in the past.
D) Americans are less accepting of interracial marriage than they were in the past.
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32
Jennifer Mitchell,an adoption social worker,uses a rigorous screening process for potential adoptive parents.She frequently asks

A) if prospective parents enjoy outdoor recreation.
B) if prospective parents engage in a healthy eating routine.
C) prospective parents about their hopes for the future.
D) prospective parents about their sexual preferences.
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33
Jill has become nervous that her marriage may end in divorce since she grew up with divorced parents.One fact that might reassure her is that the rate of ________ has decreased.

A) custody battles
B) intergenerational divorce
C) stable marriages
D) child visitation
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34
Although Geoffrey Greif points out that "more fathers are rearing children alone following separation and divorce than ever before," which of the following is true about single fathers?

A) Single fathers are still only about 15 percent of all single parents.
B) Many states have laws against giving sole custody to fathers following a divorce.
C) Most of these fathers move back in with their parents so that their children live with grandparents.
D) Soon there will be more single fathers than single mothers.
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35
JDate is a website that helps Jewish men and women,especially those who are not practicing Jews or who live in areas where there are not many other Jews,form romantic relationships.What do Jewish people who use this website care about?

A) religious purity
B) homogamy
C) propinquity
D) polyandry
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36
A woman in North Carolina was found guilty of "lewd and lascivious association" because she lived with her boyfriend.Her behavior is also known as

A) cohabitation.
B) noncustodial parenting.
C) symbolic interactionism.
D) homogamy.
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37
According to the text,what are the major factors involved in forming relationships and selecting mates?

A) personal chemistry
B) the unique individual characteristics of the individuals involved
C) the tendency to choose mates who are similar in class, race, ethnicity, and age
D) the desire to find a mate who comes from a radically different background
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38
What would a music critic call "musical miscegenation" if he or she used the term "miscegenation" metaphorically?

A) the way white country music and black blues music come together to make rock and roll
B) the way pop stars become disconnected from their roots
C) the way the press treats pop superstars and the effect this has on contemporary music
D) the role the piano has played in twentieth-century jazz
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39
JDate,a dating website for Jewish people,is sometimes used by non-Jews who are interested in dating Jews.These non-Jews are practicing

A) monogamy.
B) exogamy.
C) homogamy.
D) polyandry.
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40
Before World War II,the United States had no interstate highway system,and traveling to different parts of the country was difficult.This means that ________ must have been even more important in determining mate selection.

A) exogamy
B) economic considerations
C) schools
D) propinquity
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41
What is it called when individuals must care for both their own children and their elderly parents?

A) the sandwich generation effect
B) elderly caregiving
C) extended family care
D) dual workloads
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42
As an agent of socialization,who does the family influence?

A) only children
B) everyone
C) women
D) the elderly
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43
What happens to marital satisfaction when small children are present in the household?

A) It goes up.
B) It goes down.
C) It goes up for the first child but down for every child after that.
D) It goes up for newlyweds but down for older married couples.
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44
How is custody of minor children usually handled in divorce cases?

A) Fathers are now slightly more likely than mothers to receive custody.
B) Mothers always receive custody.
C) Mothers receive custody in a disproportionate number of cases.
D) Mothers and fathers are about equally likely to receive custody.
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45
The physical and legal responsibility for the everyday life and routines of children is called

A) custody.
B) good parenting.
C) visitation.
D) child support.
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46
Which of the following is a strategy that some middle- and upper-class women have used to balance the demands of work and home?

A) hiring other women to do domestic work
B) demanding that their husbands complete most chores
C) doing more of certain chores
D) demanding the abolition of housework
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47
Tasks designed to achieve a tangible goal like washing the dishes or taking out the trash are called

A) instrumental tasks.
B) expressive tasks.
C) female tasks.
D) the second shift.
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48
Reading children bedtime stories is an important task in many families.What part of reading the bedtime story is an instrumental task?

A) making bedtime fun and keeping everyone happy
B) staying entertained as a parent by reading the children books you like
C) getting children into pajamas, tucked into bed, and then to sleep
D) sharing a moment with a child and developing shared interests
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49
Who is more likely to return home after a full day of paid labor and put in a "second shift" at home taking care of domestic work?

A) women
B) men
C) young people
D) older people
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50
To whom has Hochschild's concept of the "Supermom" always been applicable?

A) upper-class mothers
B) middle-class parents
C) working-class mothers
D) the homeless
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51
What does Arlie Hochschild call mothers who accept the dual workloads of paid labor at work and unpaid labor at home without any help?

A) instrumental leaders
B) Supermoms
C) dual mothers
D) revolutionary moms
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52
Why are remarriage rates lower today than they were in the 1960s?

A) Divorced people tend to have a series of short relationships instead of getting remarried.
B) There has been an increase in cohabitation among unmarried couples.
C) Divorce rates have dropped slightly.
D) People tend to divorce at later ages, so they are less likely to remarry.
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53
Arlie Hochschild's study of two-income families found that women were much more likely than men to do the majority of the unpaid labor inside the home even after a full day's work outside the home.What term do sociologists use to describe this extra labor?

A) women's work
B) the female burden
C) the double standard
D) the second shift
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54
How are children of divorced parents today different from children of divorced parents in the 1970s?

A) Children of divorced parents today are more likely to get divorced themselves than were children whose parents divorced in the 1970s.
B) Children of divorced parents today are more likely to be divorced multiple times than were children whose parents divorced in the 1970s.
C) Children of divorced parents today are more likely to get married than were children whose parents divorced in the 1970s.
D) Children of divorced parents today are considerably less likely to divorce than were children whose parents divorced in the 1970s.
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Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
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55
Some women accept the burdens of the "second shift" in order to avoid conflict with their husbands or children.How does this affect them?

A) It increases their confidence and self-esteem.
B) It increases their efficiency.
C) It makes them unhappy and emotionally numb.
D) It improves their self-reported level of marital satisfaction.
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Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
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56
Under what circumstances is a father more likely than a mother to be awarded custody of his minor children following a divorce?

A) when he lives in a rural area
B) when he lives in a politically conservative area
C) when the children are younger than twelve
D) when he makes substantially more money than his ex-wife
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57
There are strategies available to help ease the burden of the second shift,but they are mainly
Available to

A) people with extended families.
B) young couples.
C) newlyweds.
D) wealthier families.
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Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
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58
How does the birth of children tend to change the gendered division of labor within the household?

A) It gets fathers more involved.
B) It brings the extended family into the household more.
C) It makes the division of labor more traditionally split along gender lines.
D) It has no influence on the gendered division of labor.
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Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
59
Which of the following strategies does Arlie Hochschild claim some women use to help balance working a paid job and being responsible for the home?

A) no longer caring that there are dirty clothes all over the floor
B) divorcing husbands who refuse to help
C) forcing their children to take over the majority of the housework
D) throwing away clothing when they find it on the floor to teach their husbands a lesson
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Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
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60
What kind of task is calling a family member to wish him or her a happy birthday?

A) family
B) expressive
C) operative
D) instrumental
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61
What is the term for the range of behaviors that abusers use to gain and maintain control over their victims?

A) manipulation
B) passive aggression
C) domestic abuse
D) symbolic violence
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62
The family is created and sustained through interactional work.
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63
Why are child and elder abuse likely to go unreported?

A) Few authority figures care enough to investigate abuse.
B) Neither kind of abuse is perceived as a serious problem in America today.
C) Most child and elder abuse is done carefully so as to make it hard to prove in court.
D) The victims are relatively powerless.
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64
Judith Stacey's Brave New Families explored the ways families adapted to meet the challenges of a postmodern society by creating innovative family structures that looked very different from the "traditional" family.Which of the following would you think was the full title of Stacey's book?

A) Brave New Families: Gender, Love, and Property
B) Brave New Families: The Quest for Intimacy
C) Brave New Families: Creating a Safe Legal Haven for Families with Special Needs
D) Brave New Families: Stories of Domestic Upheaval in Late-Twentieth-Century America
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65
Which of the following statements is LEAST likely to come from a perpetrator of domestic violence?

A) "She deserved it."
B) "I really want to change."
C) "I just lose control."
D) "I have anger management problems."
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66
What is one common reason why victims of domestic abuse stay in abusive relationships?

A) They are waiting for someone to save them.
B) They do not feel responsible for their own abuse.
C) They do not have the resources to get away.
D) The abusive partner treats them well all the time.
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67
Sometimes child welfare agencies are called to investigate a child who never seems to have clean clothing and is very skinny.The suspicion would be that the child is a victim of

A) neglect.
B) incest.
C) violence.
D) eldest child syndrome.
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68
Which of the following things is a child likely to convince a parent to do?

A) switch to a different political party
B) start reading more literature
C) quit smoking cigarettes
D) learn about new cultures
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69
How do rates of intimate partner violence differ across racial groups?

A) They are higher among whites than in other racial groups.
B) They are about equal across racial groups.
C) They are lower among Asian Americans than in other racial groups.
D) They are higher among non-English-speaking individuals than among English speakers.
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70
A person is MOST likely to be murdered by

A) a family member.
B) a law enforcement officer.
C) a drug dealer or a drug user.
D) someone seeking to rob him or her.
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Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
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71
The radio played a news story about the murder of a twenty-five-year-old woman,married,with one child.Who would you expect the police to investigate for the crime first?

A) a serial killer
B) her husband or boyfriend
C) a gang member being initiated into a street gang
D) a burglar who she surprised in the act
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72
What is the main reason abusive partners resort to intimate partner violence?

A) They have anger management problems.
B) They have problems outside the relationship that drive them over the edge.
C) They are generally violent in all aspects of their lives.
D) They desire power over their victims.
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Unlock for access to all 104 flashcards in this deck.
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73
How do most abusive relationships look at the beginning?

A) The signs of violence are there from the start.
B) Violence usually begins as soon as the relationship starts, if not before.
C) There is tension and a "walking on eggshells" feeling from day one.
D) The abusive partner is charming, attentive, and thoughtful.
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74
Which of the following was true of parenting in the nineteenth century and earlier?

A) Fathers were far more likely to have the final say in decisions about their children.
B) Mothers often valued other mothers' opinions about child rearing over the opinions of their own children's fathers.
C) The extended family was less important in terms of instrumental support.
D) Members of the community had far less influence than they do today.
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75
In societies across the globe,men and women have always performed different tasks to help the family function,and these roles have always been considered unequal.
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76
Most young people face similar financial pressures while in their twenties,but considerably more men move back in with their parents than women.What is one reason for this?

A) Men care more about saving money than women do.
B) Women lose more independence when they move back home than men do.
C) Men have stronger relationships with their parents than women do.
D) Women are more likely than men to have serious emotional conflicts with their mothers.
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77
What term applies to a child who leaves home at eighteen but later returns for at least a short period of time?

A) emotionally stunted
B) boomerang kid
C) adult minor
D) sandwich kid
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78
A husband who keeps all of his family's money in his bank account and gives his wife a weekly allowance might be considered guilty of domestic abuse.
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79
Today,many college graduates find themselves unable to afford the costs of living on their own and,at least temporarily,live with their parents again.What good news about families can we take from this trend?

A) It allows parents to have more of a say in their children's romantic lives.
B) That so many children are willing to live with their parents again suggests that they have closer relationships with parents than previous generations did.
C) College students today are taking less time to finish college and moving past the "student" phase of their lives more quickly than in the past.
D) By living with their parents, these college graduates save money and demonstrate fiscal responsibility in ways that the past generation did not.
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80
What sort of actions do abusive partners take to keep their partners in the relationship?

A) keep up a constant stream of threats
B) stop the cycle of abuse and truly reform
C) periodically enter a cycle of loving contrition
D) seek psychological help
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