Sociology Final Exam Review 2015 Answers

Unit I Sociological Perspectives

Case Study- Type of study is intensive study of a single group, incident or community

Closed Ended Questions- Type of questioning requires the participant to answer using a limited, predetermined set of responses

Compte - Sociologist who was concerned with improving social conditions in society and is the “father of sociology”

Emile Durkheim- Sociologist believed human behavior is explained by social factors rather than psychological factors

Harriet Martineau- Sociologist believed women’s lack of economic power kept them dependent on society

Herbert Spencer- Sociologist explained social stability by comparing it to the human body

Interview - A survey method in which a researcher asks questions and records answers

Jane Addams- Sociologist won the Nobel Peace Prize for her role in the Women’s Social Reforms in America

Karl Marx- Sociologist identified two classes in society

Max Weber- Sociologist developed a theory which human beings act on the basis of own understanding of the situation

Open Ended Questions- Type of questioning requires the participant to answer in his or her own words

Social Darwinism- Term for natural social selection which leads to the survival of the fittest in society

Sociology- The science of studying society

Survey- A research method in which people respond to questions

Verstehen- Term for understanding social behavior by putting yourself in the place of others

WEB Dubois- Sociologist focused on social policies which treated blacks as inferior in society

Unit II Culture and Society

“I”- The term for the part of the self that accounts for unlearned, spontaneous acts

“Me”- The term for the part of the self formed through socialization

Counter Culture- Type of group is a subculture who deliberately and consciously opposes certain central belied or attitudes of the dominant culture

Cultural Universals- Traits that exist in all cultures

Culture-Term for the total way of life in a society

Desocialization- The process of giving up old norms, values, beliefs, and attitudes

Ethnocentrism- Term for judging others in terms of ones own cultural standards

Instincts- Genetically inherited patterns of behavior

Law- The term for a norm that is formally defined and enforced by officials

Material Culture- Concrete, tangible objective of culture

Nonmaterial Culture- Ideas, knowledge, and beliefs that influence people’s behavior

Reflexes- Biologically inherited, automatic reactions to physical stimuli

Resocialization- The process of adopting new norms, values, beliefs and attitudes

Role- An expected behavior

Role Performance- The term for the actual behavior of an individual in a role

Social Solidarity- The degree to which a society is unified

Society- The term for a group of people who live in a defined territory and participate in common culture

Subculture- Type of group is part of the dominant culture but differs from it in some important aspect

Values- Broad ideas about what is good or desirable in society

Unit III Socialization, Groups, and Stratification

Class Consciousness- Identification with the goals and interests of a social class

Coercion- An interaction in which individuals or groups are forced to behave a particular way

Conformity- Behavior that matches the group’s expectations

Group Think- self deceptive thinking that is based on conforming to the group’s beliefs and created by group pressure to conform

In Group- Type of group demands intense loyalty

Looking Glass Self- An image of yourself based on what you believe others think of you

Reference Group- Type of group has norms which guide behavior and which you identify with the most.

Self Concept- An image of you as having an identity separate from others

Social Class- segment of society whose members hold similar amounts of resources and share values, norms, and identifiable lifestyle

Social Exchange- A voluntary action performed in the expectation of getting a reward in reward

Social Interaction- The process of influencing each other as people relate

Social Mobility- The movement of individuals or groups between social classes

Socialization- The process of learning to participate in a group

Status- A position a person occupies within a social structure

Stratification- A ranking of people or groups according to their unequal access to scarce resources

Unit IV Deviance

Anomie- Feeling of being disconnected by society

Conflict Perspective Theory- looks at deviance in terms of social inequality and power

Control Theory- Theory states that compliance with social norms requires strong bonds between individuals and society

Crime- Term for an act committed in violation of the law

Deviant-Term for a person who breaks significant norms

Differential Association Theory- states individuals learn deviance in proportion to the number of deviant acts they are exposed to

Innovation- Strain theory, when people find illegal ways to succeed they are using what

Internal Social Control-Causes someone to do something because it is the right thing to do

Labeling Theory- states that society creates deviance by identifying particular members as deviants

Norms- Rules which define appropriate and inappropriate behavior

Sanctions- Rewards or punishments that encourage conformity to social norms

Stigma- Undesirable trait or label which is used to characterize an individual

Strain Theory- deviance is likely to occur when a gap exists between cultural goals the ability to achieve these by legitimate means

Victim Discounting- Process of reducing the seriousness of the crime based on a persons status in society

Unit V Stereotyping and Racism

Alienation- Term refers to an individual’s estrangement form tradition community and others in general

Discrimination- Term for treating people differently based on ethnicity, race, religion, and culture

Prejudice- Widely held negative attitudes towards a group and its individual members

Scapegoat- Term for singling out any party for unmerited negative treatment or blame

Stereotype- Distorted, exaggerated, or oversimplified image applied to a category of people

Unit VI Family

Blended Family- Family is formed when at least one or both parents have children from previous marriages or relationships

Cohabitated Family- Family involves a marriage-like arrangement without the legal obligations of formal marriage

Endogamy- Term describes a marriage within ones own group as required by social norms

Exogamy- practice of marrying outside ones group

Extended Family- family has two or more adult generations of the same family whose members share common house holds

Family- Term for a group of people related by marriage, blood, or adoption

Homogamy- Term for the free choice of who to marry

Matrilocal- Pattern in which married couples live with or near the wives parents

Monogamy- Term for a marriage consisting of one man and one woman at a time

Nuclear Family- Family structure is composed of parents and children

Patrilocal- Term for the pattern in which married couples live with or near the husband’s parents

Polygamy- Term for the marriage of one man to two or more woman at the same time

Same Sex Family- Family involves two people of the same sex raise a child together

Single Parent Family- Family involves an unwed or divorced parent raising a child

Unit VII Education

Charter Schools- Public schools that are operated like private schools and run by public teachers and administrators

Cognitive Ability- Capacity for thinking abstractly

Cultural Bias- Unfair measurement of the cognitive abilities of people in the same social categories

Educational Equality- Condition in which schooling produces the same results for minority children as it does for other children

For Profit Schools- Schools which run by private companies on government funds

Formal Schooling- Education that is provided and regulated by society

Magnet Schools- Public schools that focus on particular disciplines or areas

Tracking- School districts place students in programs according to their academic ability levels

Voucher System- System in which public school funds may be used to support public, private or religious schools

Unit VIII Social Change

Collectivity- Collection of people who do not normally interact and who do not share clearly defined norms

Contagion Theory- states that members of crowds stimulate each other to higher and higher levels of emotion and irrational behavior

Convergence Theory- states that crowds are formed by people who deliberately congregate with like minded others

Diffusion- Process by which one culture or society borrows from another culture or society

Emergent Norm Theory- states that norms develop to guide crowd behavior

Fad- Unusual behavior or pattern that spreads rapidly and disappears quickly

Mass Hysteria- Collective anxiety created by the acceptance of one or more false beliefs

Mob- Emotional crowd ready to use violence for a specific purpose

Reformative Movement- involves the attempt to make limited changes in society

Resource Mobilization Theory- social movements focuses on the use of resources to achieve goals

Revolutionary Movement- involves attempts to change the total structure of society

Riot- Episode of largely random destruction and violence carried out by a crowd

Rumor- Widely circulating pieces of information that are not verified as being true or false

Social Change- New societal behaviors with important long term consequences

Social Movement- involves a goal to promote or prevent social change

Urban Legend- Moralistic tale which focuses on current concerns and fears of the city or suburb dwellers

Value Added Theory- states that holding certain conditions must exist for social movements to occur