front 1 Health | back 1 Your textbook refers to "a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease and infirmity" as |
front 2 Medical Model | back 2 Term is used to describe the process of medical experts becoming influential in proposing and assessing relevant public policies |
front 3 conflict perspective | back 3 Which sociological perspective would emphasize hat inequalities in healthcare have clear life-and-death consequences for some due to the unequal distribution of resources? |
front 4 holistic | back 4 Which type of medicine refers to therapies in which the health care practitioner considers the person's physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual characteristics? |
front 5 not in my backyard | back 5 The abbreviation NIMBY stands for |
front 6 human ecology | back 6 Which area of study is concerned with the interrelationships among people in their spatial setting and physical enivronment |
front 7 In comparison with men, women have lower rates of | back 7 employment in dangerous occupations; consumption of alcohol; cigarette smoking |
front 8 Family | back 8 A set of people related by blood, marriage, or adoption who share responsibility for reproducing and caring for members of society. |
front 9 polyandry | back 9 A form of polygamy when women can have more than one husband |
front 10 serial monogamy | back 10 A form of marriage in which a person can have several spouses in his or her lifetime but have only one spouse at a time. |
front 11 bilateral kinship | back 11 A kinship sustem in which both sides of a person's family are regarded as equally important |
front 12 extended family | back 12 A collection of people in which relatives in addition to parents and children--such as grandparents, aunts, or uncles--live in the same home. |
front 13 family of orientation | back 13 The family that one grows up in |
front 14 endogamy | back 14 When members of a group have a tendency to marry other members within the group. |
front 15 conflict perspective | back 15 Sociological perspective argues that the American family contributes to society injustice, denies women opportunities that are extended to men, and limits freedom in sexual expression and mate selection. |
front 16 patriarchal society | back 16 A society in which men are expected to dominate family decision making |
front 17 cohabitation | back 17 The practice of living together as a male-female couple without marrying |
front 18 Conflict theorists would view gender differences as | back 18 A reflection of the subjugation of one group, such as women, by another group, such as men |
front 19 Independent variable | back 19 A theory states that increasing a person's formal education results in increased earning over a lifetime. In this theory, "formal education is the: |
front 20 Matrix of domination | back 20 Refers to the convergence of social forces that contributes to the subordinate status of poor non- White women. |
front 21 Sexism | back 21 The ideology that one sex is superior to the other. |
front 22 Instrumentality | back 22 Used by Talcott Parsons and Robert Bales to refer to an emphasis on tasks, a focus on more distant goals, and a concern for the external relationship between one's family and other social institutions |
front 23 Institutional discrimination | back 23 Refers to the denial of opportunities and equal rights to individuals or groups that results from the normal operations of a society |
front 24 Functionalist perspective | back 24 Although it does not explicitly endorse traditional gender roles, which sociological perspective implies that dividing tasks between spouses is beneficial for the family unit. |
front 25 glass ceiling | back 25 An invisible barrier that blocks the promotion of a qualified individual in a work environment because of the individual's gender, race, or ethnicity. |
front 26 Opening a door for a female | back 26 Example of men traditionally "doing masculinity" |
front 27 Women | back 27 According to Talcott Parsons and Robert Bales, the expressive role is performed by: |
front 28 Sacred | back 28 In contrast to the natural elements of everyday life, Durkheim described he supernatural aspects of life |
front 29 Manifest functions | back 29 Giving meaning to the divine and defining the spiritual work are part of religion's: |
front 30 Functionalist perspective | back 30 Emphasizes the integrative power of education in human society |
front 31 credentialism | back 31 An increase in the lowest level of education required to enter a field |
front 32 Hidden curriculum | back 32 In the U.S., schoolchildren are fought not to speak until the teacher calls on them and to regulate their activities according to clocks or bells |
front 33 Ritual | back 33 Facing east toward Mecca while saying one's morning prayers is a characteristic of this. |
front 34 Protestant ethic | back 34 What did Weber call the self-denying approach to life practiced by members of various religions. |
front 35 ecclesia | back 35 A religious organization that is recognized as the national or official religion. |
front 36 Structural mobility | back 36 Refers to changes in society that cause large numbers of people to move up or down the class ladder. |
front 37 Cultural relativism | back 37 Marshall is exploring how the various aspects of the Lenape culture fi together, including their religion, family values, agricultural efforts, and customs, without judging those elements as being interior or superior to modern Western ways. What concept is Marshall practicing? |
front 38 Sociological imagination | back 38 Frank is examining the broad stream of events that have occurred over the past 50 years and the specific experiences of his own life. By doing so, what sociological process has Frank undertaken. |
front 39 In order for a complex society to function properly, according to Emile Durkheim, all its parts must work together as an integrated whole. He referred to this social cohesion as: | back 39 social integration |
front 40 cultural diffusion | back 40 In a four-block section of New York City, it is possible to purchase a bagel with cream cheese, eat stir-fried vegetables prepared in a wok, or dine on raw fish in a sushi bar, What does this range of culinary possibilities illustrate? |
front 41 Sapir-Whorf hypothesis | back 41 The residents of a seafaring nation have many more terms in their language that refer to the condition of the sea than do residents of a landlocked nation. This contrast illustrates: |
front 42 folkways | back 42 Swimming in the ocean while wearing a tuxedo or an evening gown would be in violation of one of our societies: |
front 43 Secondary analysis | back 43 Jose is conducting research on organized crime. Rather than interview criminals, he is examine data that someone else has collected. Jose is using what research method? |
front 44 Material culture | back 44 Symbols are the basis of this |
front 45 Functionalism | back 45 Theoretical perspective stresses that society is a whole unit, made up of interrelated parts that work together harmoniously. |
front 46 They would be classified as manifest functions | back 46 How would Robert Merton describe the intended beneficial consequences of Roosevelt's....Deal program that raised the standard of living for millions of Americans in the 1930s? |
front 47 Expressed in its social norms | back 47 Values of society are: |
front 48 mean | back 48 A number calculated by adding a series of values and then dividing by the number of values. |
front 49 Industrial revolution | back 49 The development of sociology occurred within a time of change in western society. Major structural contributions (reasons) for the development of this discipline. |
front 50 Survival of the fittest | back 50 Herbert Spencer believed that societies evolved from lower to higher forms because as generations pass, the most capable and intelligent members of society proper while the less capable die out. The term Spencer used to describe this process. |
front 51 Subculture | back 51 In the month of December, many Jewish families celebrate Chanukah, the "festival of light," during which special foods are served and families engage in ritual activity unique to their religious faith. In this context, the members of the Jewish faith represent: |
front 52 Common culture and a territory | back 52 To be classified as a society, what are the two key qualities a group of people must share: |
front 53 100 percent | back 53 If a sample is to be representative (random), what is the proportion of the population that must have the same change of getting selected into the sample? |
front 54 reliability | back 54 This term refers to the extent to which different studies come up with similar results |
front 55 Contact hypothesis | back 55 A Colombian woman and an Italian man, working together as members of a construction crew, overcome their initial prejudices and come to appreciate each other's talents and strengths. Example of: |
front 56 Stereotype | back 56 An unreliable generalization about all members of a group which does not recognize individual differences within the group. |
front 57 William I. Thomas | back 57 Sociologist observed that people resound not only to the objective features of a situation or person but also to the meaning that situation or person has for them. |
front 58 Victimless crimes | back 58 Dave, the president of a small corporation, has a wild weekend. He spends a night with a prostitute, gambles illegally, drinks excessively, and uses drugs. Some would argue he had committed various: |
front 59 Conflict perspective | back 59 Sociological perspective would be particularly concerned about studies that show that White criminal offenders receive shorter sentences than comparable Latino and African-American offenders. |
front 60 Differential association | back 60 Monica, a new student at Vally High School, become friends with a group of teenagers who us marijuana and remain seated during the singing go the National Anthem. Although Monica had never used marijuana and used to stand for the Anthem, she begins to engage in the same behavior as her new friends. Example of: |
front 61 Conformity | back 61 The most common and non-deviant adaptation in Robert Merton's anomie theory of deviance. |
front 62 Anomie | back 62 Term is used in the sociological literature to describe a loss of direction felt in a society when social control of individual behavior had become ineffective. |
front 63 Informal social control | back 63 An example: A college student interrupts the instructor during a seminar; the instructor responds with an angry glare. |
front 64 Affluent | back 64 The federal tax policies of the last four decades, especially in the 1980s and in the ten years from 2001 to 2010, have favored: |
front 65 Race | back 65 Race is defined differently by different societies |
front 66 Colonialism | back 66 Example of: At one point, the British empire controlled much of North America, including what is not the United States. |
front 67 Social Control theory | back 67 Theory developed by sociologist Travis Hirschi to emphasize that we are bonded to our family members, friends, and peers in a way that leads us to follow the mores and folkways of our society, while giving conscious though to whether we will be sanctioned if we fail to conform. |
front 68 Corporate welfare | back 68 The federal bailouts of the banking and auto industry would be considered as this. |
front 69 Feminization of poverty | back 69 Term that refers to a trend in U.S. poverty whereby most poor families are headed by women. |
front 70 Labeling theory | back 70 Sociologist studies how a reacher's attitudes toward students affects their performance. Student of similar abilities who are perceived as "teacher's pets" perform at a high level, and students who are viewed as "trouble makers" perform poorly. Illustrates this explanation of deviance. |
front 71 Class | back 71 One of the dimensions of social inequality identified by Max Weber to refer to people who have a similar level of wealth and income. |
front 72 Relativity of defiance because the same act can be either deviant or not | back 72 Stresses the labeling theory |
front 73 Proletariat | back 73 Karl Marx called those who work in the factories and other productive enterprises. |
front 74 Conceptions of deviance | back 74 Vary considerably from one culture to another |
front 75 Institutional discrimination | back 75 "Patterns of discrimination that are woven into the fabric of society" refers to: |
front 76 Innovator | back 76 Josh needs to achieve a 4.0 GPA to qualify for admission to graduate school. He fears that he will not pass the final exam in chemistry and has decided to sit next to Heather, the best student in the class, and copy her paper. Josh is considered a: |
front 77 Conflict perspective | back 77 Sociological perspective argues that competition for scarce resources results in significant political, economic, and social inequality. |
front 78 Power | back 78 Max Weber defined this as the ability to exercise one's will over others. |
front 79 Caste system | back 79 Some sociologists have suggested that in the southern U.S. in the pre-civil rights era, and African American individual was born into a status that would always be subordinate to the status of all of the White members of the community. Example of a: |
front 80 Ascribed | back 80 An 83-year old woman is placed as a small table in a dark corner of a trendy nightclub and is ignored by the staff. Her shoddy treatment is probably due to her age which is this status. |
front 81 Periphery | back 81 According to world systems analysis, poor and developing nations are on this. |
front 82 Neocolonialism | back 82 The continuing economic dependence of former colonies on foreign countries is called this. |
front 83 Developing nations have high birthrates | back 83 Developing nations have low health spending |
front 84 Industrial Revolution | back 84 Extreme inequality of resources in the world was initiated by this. |
front 85 Conflict perspective | back 85 In viewing the global economic stem as divided between nations who control wealth and this from whom capital is taken, sociologist Immanuel Wallerstein |
front 86 Multinational corporation | back 86 Mitsubishi, the world's largest company in terms of revenues, sells and builds some of its cars in the U.S. and numerous other nations around the world. This Japanese based company is an example of this. |
front 87 White collar crime | back 87 Term refers to crimes committed by people of respectable and high social status in the course of their occupations |
front 88 Functional for society | back 88 Emile Durkheim felt that deviance clarified moral boundaries and affirmed norms, promoted social unity, and change. He concluded that deviance was: |
front 89 Structural mobility | back 89 During the Great Depression thousands of people found themselves in a lower social class. What type of social mobility did this event illustrate? |
front 90 A stigma | back 90 Bill was born with a large egg-shaped birthmark on his forehead. His school buddies taunt him and some local villagers think he's Frankenstein. Bill's birthmark would be described by sociologists as: |
front 91 Status Inconsistency | back 91 When a person ranks high on some dimensions of social class and low on others, she is exhibiting: |
front 92 Ritualists | back 92 In strain theory, Merton terms people who overzealously and cruelty enforce bureaucratic regulations can be classified as this: |
front 93 Deviance | back 93 Behavior that violates the standards or expectations of a group or society |
front 94 Means of production | back 94 Marx believed that social class depends on this. |
front 95 Discrimination | back 95 The process of denying opportunities and equal rights to individuals and groups because of prejudice or for other arbitrary reasons is known as: |
front 96 Scapegoat | back 96 Term refers to a racial, ethnic, or religious minority that a member of the dominant group uses to blame for their failure to achieve desired goals. |
front 97 Those who work hardest and succeed have greatest life chances | back 97 What is the relationship between social class and life chances according to functionalist theory. |
front 98 Segregation | back 98 The intergroup strategy that involves separating minority groups from dominant groups from dominant groups so that minimal contact occurs between them. |
front 99 Children | back 99 The most likely segment of the population in the United States to experience poverty today. |
front 100 Functionalist perspective | back 100 Sociological perspective would be most likely to suggest that multinational corporations help create social stability within a society by creating jobs and global enterprise. |
front 101 Attitude is to behavior as | back 101 prejudice is to discrimination |
front 102 Race refers to biological traits | back 102 Ethnicity refers to cultural traits |
front 103 Minority group | back 103 Term for a category of people, distinguished by physical or cultural traits, who are socially disadvantaged. |
front 104 Stereotype | back 104 Term for a rigid and irrational generalization about an entire category of people. |
front 105 Frustration among those "denied" opportunities | back 105 Scapegoat theory states that prejudice is created by: |
front 106 A personality trait of certain individuals | back 106 Authoritarian personality theory states that extreme prejudice is: |
front 107 Prejudice is a matter of attitudes | back 107 discrimination is a matter of behavior |
front 108 Bias is built into the operation of social institutions | back 108 Institutional racism or discrimination refers to the fact that: |
front 109 Genocide | back 109 Term best characterizes what took place during the reign of terror known as the Holocaust |
front 110 Minorities gradually adopt patterns of the dominant category | back 110 Assimilation refers to the pattern by which: |
front 111 Segregation | back 111 Term refers to the physical and social separation of categories of people. |
front 112 McDonaldization of Society | back 112 George Ritzer maintains that the organizational features of the fast food industry have gradually seeped into many aspects of human social life. He describes this process as: |
front 113 Bureaucracy | back 113 A large organization that is ideally efficient, has a division of labor, has a hierarchy of authority, and is based on rules and procedures. |
front 114 Television news reporter | back 114 An achieved status |
front 115 Primary group | back 115 Characterized by intimate, long-term, face-to-face association and cooperation |
front 116 Role conflict | back 116 Elaine is a clinical sociologist who practices marriage and family therapy. She is also a college professor. One of her current students asks her if she can make an appointment for a therapy session. Elaine tells the student that she will refer her to a colleague because she feels that holding therapy sessions with a student might create: |
front 117 Industrial society | back 117 A society that depends on mechanization to produce its goods and services is called: |
front 118 Dyads | back 118 Type of group coalition formation is impossible. |
front 119 Reference | back 119 Groups we use as standards to evaluate ourselves. |
front 120 Secondary group | back 120 Sarah works for he American Hair and Felt Corporation. This is one of the secondary groups that Sarah may belong to. |
front 121 Socialization | back 121 The lifelong social experience by which human beings develop their potential and learn culture. |
front 122 Impression management | back 122 Bob is on his first date with Mary, whom he really likes. He tries to act in a manner that will cause her to like him, too, and to want to go out with him again. Example of: |
front 123 Cognitive development | back 123 Jean Piaget's focus was on this. |
front 124 Mead theorem | back 124 "If you define a situation as real, it is real in its consequences" |
front 125 Imagining a situation from another person's point of view | back 125 By "taking the role of the other," Mead had in mind: |
front 126 People see themselves as they think others see them | back 126 When Cooley used the term, "looking-glass self", he was referring to the fact: |
front 127 Degradation ceremony | back 127 Fred has just joined a fraternity. As part of his initiation, he has been forced to strip naked and roll in a tub of mud. This is an example of: |
front 128 Functionalist Perspective | back 128 Sociological perspective emphasizes that schools in the United States foster competition through built-in reward and punishment |
front 129 Infant mortality rate | back 129 The number of deaths to infants divided by babies born in that year multiplied by 1000. |
front 130 Multinational Corporations | back 130 Companies that operate across many national boundaries |
front 131 Modernization theory | back 131 Global stratification theory views the economic development of countries as stemming from technological change and will gradually improve the lives of those in developing countries. |
front 132 Colonialism | back 132 A system by which Western nations became wealthy by taking raw materials from colonized societies and reaping profits from products finished in the homeland. |
front 133 Peripheral countries | back 133 According to the world systems theory, those nations that are the poor, largely agricultural countries of the world. |
front 134 Poorest countries | back 134 The majority of the world's population live in: |
front 135 Borderlands | back 135 The area of common culture along the border between Mexico and the United States. |
front 136 Core nation | back 136 England, one of the nations in which industrial capitalism first developed would, according to world system theory is a |
front 137 all violations of social rules | back 137 Deviance refers to: |
front 138 Functionalist | back 138 Perspective stresses that deviance promotes social unity and social change. |
front 139 Ritualism, rebellion, and retreatism | back 139 Deviant responses to anomie as identified by Robert Merton |
front 140 Formal sanction | back 140 Being imprisoned for murder would be an example. |
front 141 crime | back 141 A specific form of deviance that involves the violation of rules that have been written into law. |
front 142 Retreatist | back 142 According to strain theory, they give up pursuit of societal goals and means by abusing alcohol or drugs. |
front 143 Stigma | back 143 Bill was born with a large egg-shaped birthmark on his forehead. His school-mates taunt him and some local villagers believe the mark is a sign of an evil spirit. Bill's birthmark would be describes as a: |
front 144 Norms; Social control | back 144 Makes social life possible by making behavior predictable |
front 145 White collar crime | back 145 Consumer fraud, bribery, and income tax evasion. |
front 146 Glass ceiling | back 146 An invisible barrier that blocks the promotion of a qualified individual in a work environment because of the individual's gender, race, or ethnicity. |
front 147 It promotes individualism and a loss of national identity | back 147 The major criticism a conflict theorist would make of the hidden curriculum. |
front 148 Functionalist perspective | back 148 Sociological perspective stresses that the teachings of religion help people adjust to life's problems and provide guidelines for daily life. |
front 149 The growing role of medicine as a major institution of social control | back 149 Medicalization of society refers to this. |
front 150 Extended family | back 150 Term describes a family in which grandparents, parents, children, and grandchildren live under one roof |
front 151 Moral community | back 151 Term Durkheim use to describe any group untied by their religious practices, whether they be Hindus dipping in the Ganges River, Buddhists bowing before a shrine, or Aztecs sacrificing a virgin to the gods. |
front 152 Brain drain | back 152 The immigration of skilled workers, professionals, and technicians to the U.S. who are desperately needed in their home countries. |
front 153 Holistic | back 153 Type of medicine refers to therapies in which the health care practitioner considers the person's physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual characteristics. |
front 154 Human ecology | back 154 Area of study concerned with the interrelationships among people in their spatial setting and physical environment. |
front 155 Ritual | back 155 Next week Anthony and Maria will attend the confirmation of their nephew. The confirmation ceremony is also known as a ritual because it helps unite people into a moral community. |
front 156 Conflict perspective | back 156 Sociologial perspective would emphasize that inequalities in healthcare have clear life-and-death consequences for some due to the unequal distribution of resources. |
front 157 Sacred | back 157 In contrast to the natural elements of everyday life, Durkheim described the supernatural aspects of life as being: |
front 158 Credentialism | back 158 An increase in the lowest level of education required to enter a field |
front 159 Social integration | back 159 Function performed by American schools stresses making students similar in their speech, appearance, and ways of thinking. |
front 160 Frank's family of orientation | back 160 When Frank was 1 year old he was "unofficially" adopted by another family on the block when his parents were killed in an auto mile accident. He lived with this family until he enlisted in the military when he was 19. How would sociologist classify the adopting family? |
front 161 Protestant ethic | back 161 What Weber called the self-denying approach to life practiced by members of various religions. |
front 162 Manifest destiny | back 162 Giving meaning to the divine and defining the spiritual world are part of religion's manifest destiny |
front 163 Functionalist perspective | back 163 Sociological perspective focuses on the meaning people attach to religious symbols, rituals, and beliefs to see how they help forge a community of like-minded people. |
front 164 endogamy | back 164 When members of a group have a tendency to marry other members within the group |
front 165 patriarchal society | back 165 A society in which men are expected to dominate family decision making |
front 166 Hidden curriculum | back 166 Process of determining which people will enter what occupations through tracking and placing select students in "ability groups" and "advanced" classes. |
front 167 Bilateral kinship | back 167 A kinship system in which both sides of a person's family regarded as equally important. |
front 168 Family | back 168 A set of people related by blood, marriage, or adoption who share the responsibility for reproducing and caring for members of society. |
front 169 Sylvia is living in a society practicing polyandry | back 169 Sylvia legally has three husbands. In view of this, which assessment most accurately applies to Sylvia: |
front 170 A cult | back 170 Another term for a new religion |
front 171 Nature versus nurture | back 171 The relative importance of cultural and biological factors in the socialization process is referred to as the debate over: |
front 172 Horticultural society | back 172 The Yanomamo, a South American culture, live in a village and spend some of their time searching for food, but they have small gardens and their primary tool is a stone ax that they use for cutting down trees to expand their gardens. The Yanomamo is an example of: |
front 173 A parent | back 173 Best example of a significant other |
front 174 Reference group | back 174 A college law enforcement major watches the behavior of television police detectives with great admiration and wants to emulate their behavior. These "detectives" could be considered: |
front 175 Looking glass self | back 175 Term Charles Horton Cooley coined to describe the process by which we develop a sense of self. |
front 176 face work | back 176 A law student fails the state bar examination, then tells his or her family, "I really didn't want to be a lawyer, anyway. I think I'll go to business school." is an example of: |
front 177 Ideal type | back 177 A construct or model that serves as a measuring rod against which specific cases can be evaluated. |
front 178 postmodern society | back 178 In the U.S., we listen to music imported from Jamaica, eat sushi and other Japanese foods, and watch movies produced in Italy. Feature of: |
front 179 Television news reporter | back 179 An achieved status |
front 180 Conflict | back 180 Theorist would argue that the mass media represents the interests of society's political and economic elites. |
front 181 role conflict | back 181 Involved when a surgeon chooses not tolerate on his own son because the personal involvement of father hood could impair his professional objectivity as a physician. |
front 182 sensorimotor | back 182 A child spends a lot of time putting objects into his mouth and touching everything in sight. This child is probably in which stage of development, according to Jean Piaget. |
front 183 master status | back 183 Ex-professional basketball star Michael Jordan occupies various statuses, including being an African American, a husband, and a father. Nevertheless, Jordan's status as a basketball star function: |
front 184 impression management | back 184 Goffman's term for the ways in which individuals, in various settings, attempt to control how others perceive them. |
front 185 McDonaldization of society | back 185 George Ritzer maintains that the organizational features of the fast food industry have gradually seeped into many aspects of human social life. He describes this process as: |
front 186 Culture | back 186 Term sociologist use to describe the language, beliefs, values, norms, behavior, and material objects shared by members of society that are also passed from one generation to the next |
front 187 Jewelry, art, hairstyles | back 187 Set of concepts best illustrates material culture |
front 188 Language | back 188 A system of symbols that can be strung together in an infinite number of ways for the purpose of communication abstract thought. |
front 189 Sapir-Whorf hypothesis | back 189 Term refers to how our language determines our consciousness and perceptions of objects and events. |
front 190 mores | back 190 The expectations or rules of behavior that develop our of a group's values. |
front 191 Value cluster | back 191 When related values overlap and reinforce one another, as with the values of hard work, education, and achievement, what term is used to describe this relationship: |
front 192 Cultural lag | back 192 Personal computers have become efficient and cost effective when looking up a medical health diagnosis. Regardless, many people refuse to utilize this type of technology support and continue to seek assistance a physician's office. Term describes this example of change in material culture, while the nonmaterial is lagging behind. |
front 193 Scientific method | back 193 The steps in the research process, including observation, hypothesis testing, etc. are parts of this. |
front 194 Field work | back 194 This research method referred to as "participant observation" is also called: |
front 195 Everyone in the population has the same chance of being included in the study; | back 195 Best describes a random sample: |
front 196 the survey | back 196 Jose is conducting research on organized crim. Rather than going undercover, he is interviewing convicted criminals that have been linked to organized crime. In view of this, what research method id Jose using? |
front 197 the mean | back 197 Term refers to the arithmetic average of a series of number |
front 198 Whether repeating the measurement yields consistent results | back 198 In the process of measurement, reliability refers to: |
front 199 Independent variable | back 199 A theory states that increasing a person's formal education results in increased earning over a lifetime. In this theory, "formal education: is the: |
front 200 Hawthorne effect | back 200 Term refers to any change in a subjects behavior cause by the awareness of being studied |
front 201 Inductive logic | back 201 A way of arriving at general conclusions from specific observations |
front 202 sociology | back 202 the systematic study of social behavior and human groups |
front 203 C. Wright Mills | back 203 Introduced the concept of the sociological imagination |
front 204 Product of people interacting in everyday situations | back 204 The basic idea of the symbolic-interaction paradigm that society is: |
front 205 The human body | back 205 Herbert Spencer described human society as having much in common with: |
front 206 Conflict theory | back 206 Karl Marx's view of the struggle between social classes inspired contemporary |
front 207 Interactionist | back 207 Erving Goffman's dramaturgical approach, which postulates that people present certain aspects of their personalities while obscuring other aspects, is a derivative of what major theoretical perspective? |
front 208 Status inconsistency | back 208 When one ranks high on one dimension of SES but lower on the other dimensions of SES, this is called: |
front 209 Conflict theorists | back 209 Theorist who see stratification as a system of domination and subordination in which those with the most resources exploit and control others. |
front 210 Most of the poor in the United States are White | back 210 Most of the poor in the United States are White |
front 211 Feminization of poverty | back 211 Term that refers to a trend in U.S. poverty whereby most poor families are headed by women. |
front 212 Structural mobility | back 212 Refers to changes in society that changes in society that cause large numbers of people to move up or down the class ladder. |
front 213 Children | back 213 Most likely segment of the population in the United States to experience poverty today: |
front 214 Social class | back 214 A large collection of people who rank closely to one another in wealth, power, and prestige. |