Sociology Chapter 1 Quiz 100%

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
What is purpose of a sociological perspective?
answer
Helps you understand the way social life is viewed in the field of sociology
question
Define social sciences / what do they study?
answer
Study humans and the social worlds they create
question
What is sociology?
answer
Sociology is the systematic and scientific study of human social behavior
question
Define a society
answer
Societies are sizable numbers of people who share a common culture. They contain intricately structured arrangements of relations among people
question
Define a culture
answer
A culture is a society's total way of life that is learned, shared and is taught by one generation to another. It includes the shared values and rules for everyday life shared by a group of people
question
Define a social structure
answer
Social structures are made up of the relatively stable patterns of social interaction that characterize social life
question
What is globalization?
answer
Globalization refers to the increasing interdependence of people around the world. It refers to the many processes that cause the lives of people to be connected
question
Describe the micro-level of sociology
answer
Micro-level refers to social relations that involve direct interaction with others, mostly in small-group settings
question
Describe the macro-level of sociology
answer
The macro-level of sociology deals with relationships of large-scale social phenomena. It allows for the analysis of larger social patterns
question
Define an institution
answer
Institutions are established ways to provide for a societies' basic needs. Major areas of social activity include families, the work place, political systems, religion, and educational spheres
question
What is a tradition?
answer
Traditions are the time-honored beliefs and ways of living that are passed from generation to generation
question
Who coined the term 'sociological imagination'?
answer
C. Wright Mills
question
Describe the sociological imagination
answer
Refers to a deep understanding of the relationship between personal troubles and larger social issues
question
What is critical thinking? (3 parts) & is the ___ for ____
answer
Critical thinking is the ability to question common assumptions, identify and weigh appropriate evidence, and reach conclusions. It is the catalyst for the social imagination
question
Who was August Comte?
answer
Comte was a French sociologist, came up with the term 'sociology'. Advanced the idea of positivism, which is a scientific approach to the study of society, based on empirical evidence and facts rather than speculation, belief, or opinion
question
Who was Harriet Martineau?
answer
British sociologist, responsible for translating the French works of Comte into English. Also wrote first books on sociological research methods
question
Who was Karl Marx?
answer
German sociologist / inspired the state socialist systems and Communism through his /conflict theory / said that poverty serves to protect the interest of the wealthy, economy is the foundation of society
question
Who introduced/What is conflict theory?
answer
Karl Marx, asserts that social life consists of conflicts between groups / organization and changes in society can be explained by the conflicts inherent to these social relations
question
What did Karl Marx emphasize?
answer
He emphasized the importance of economics in shaping social life and the study of structured inequality, especially social classes
question
Two primary social classes, according to Marx
answer
(1) The bourgeoisie (capitalists) who own means of production, and (2) the proletariat, who are the workers
question
What is communism?
answer
The collective ownership of the means of production, in contrast to private ownership
question
Who was Emile Durkheim?
answer
French sociologist, laid out rules for empirically researching human behavior and social relations Social stability versus individual freedom, said that suicides occur when there is an imbalance between regulation and freedom
question
What is social solidarity? (other term?)
answer
Or social solidarity - refers to the link that connects individuals with a group
question
What is mechanical social solidarity? / Example
answer
Common characteristics bring people together / The cohesion that results from people sharing similar beliefs and being very much like each other Example: hunter/gatherer society, small group
question
What is organic social solidarity?
answer
the cohesion that results from economic interdependence Example: coworkers
question
Who was Max Weber?
answer
German sociologist, recognized the potential danger of a sociologist's own values and opinions biasing research, so he called for sociologists to be value-free in their work
question
Who expanded on Marx / What did they assert?
answer
Max Weber, said that there are really three classes: class, status or prestige, and power
question
Max Weber asserted that
answer
meanings and interpretations used are crucial to understanding social realty, value-free view of society, actions' meanings (subjective) versus social causes (objective)
question
What are social facts?
answer
Behaviors / patterns in a group, not necessarily among individuals by themselves
question
Who likened society to a living organism?
answer
Herbert Spencer
question
What was Parsons focused on?
answer
Traditional roles
question
What is (structural) functionalism?
answer
identifies social structures, analyses consequences on harmony and stability of society / manifest and latent functions are important for use in analysis
question
What is conflict theory?
answer
Marx / Based on competition, benefit and losses in situations, competition > consensus because the result of competition is positive change generally
question
What is symbolic interaction theory?
answer
Analyzes subjective meanings of interaction, processes through which communication & shared symbolic meaning develop /Explains how and why people have perspective of rationalization, i.e. a prostitute 'doing their job' and 'providing a service' for the common good
question
The steps of investigating a theory result in a continuous loop called...
answer
the wheel of science
question
The movement from data to theory is called...
answer
induction
question
The movement from theory to hypothesis to data is called...
answer
deduction
question
Describe survey research
answer
Researcher asks large number of people same set of questions; describes trends, differentials from random samples, but not good for describing contexts of human behavior or for establishing casual relationships
question
Describe participant observation
answer
Researcher observes or interviews in depth a small number of individuals. Excellent source of fine detail about interaction, subjective meanings. Relies on nonrepresentative samples, and researchers interpretations of the data
question
Describe content analysis
answer
Refers to the systematic study of written documents, inexpensive and researcher cannot bias data as it is already collected. Limited by existing documents, and relies on researcher's own interpretations of the data
question
What is a trend?
answer
how a behavior/pattern has changed over time
question
What is a differential?
answer
Describes how a trend varies from group to group
question
what is longitudinal research?
answer
Data over a period of time
question
What is a spurious relationship?
answer
Correlation, NOT causation
question
What is the social desirability bias?
answer
When subjects of research sugar coat the truth to appear nicer, more wealthy, etc
question
What is replication?
answer
Replication is the repeat of a study with different researchers and participants/ to test results of previous study
question
Who was Merton?
answer
Focused on roles, preferred term of \"equilibrium\" over \"stability\", similar views to Parsons, also set standard for social expectations
question
Who was Herbert Spencer?
answer
Saw society as an organism; always adapts to fit it's environment
question
Who was George Herbert Mead?
answer
Pioneer of the symbolic interactionist social theory
question
What is operationalizing?
answer
Deciding exactly how to measure a given variable
question
What is a theory?
answer
Set of ideas that explain observed patterns on a broader level
question
Order of wheel of science?
answer
Theory -> Hypothesis -> Data -> Observation -> Theory . . .
question
What is egotistic suicide?
answer
When one becomes isolated, feels no place, self-centered and 'cut off', therefore \"destroys himself\"
question
What is altruistic suicide?
answer
Happens when there is over-integration between an individual and a group
question
What is anomic suicide?
answer
Takes place when sudden event occurs, social equilibrium is broken, such as winning the lottery, sudden bankruptcy, etc
question
What is fatalistic suicide?
answer
When overregulation in society causes one to become suicidal - such a servant or a slave
question
What are the two main types of suicide?
answer
Anomic (sudden event) and Fatalistic (overregulation, servant, etc)
question
Durkheim claimed that...
answer
Suicide was not the result of psycho-pathic tendency, heredity, climate, poverty, unhappy love, personal factors, etc, the force is far above the individual
question
In a study what are three important factors?
answer
variables, operational definitions, and sampling
question
Name the functionalists that we study
answer
Comte, Spencer, Parsons, Durkheim, and Martineau
question
Name the conflict theorists that we study
answer
Marx, Weber (between conflict and interaction \"action theory\"), DuBois and Addams
question
DuBois was mainly known for what?
answer
His \"color line\", which asserts that races have to make huge 'jumps' in social norms in order to be equal; and that generally this jump is not practical and will never occur across the entire group(s)
question
Who's studies mainly involved women?
answer
Addams
question
What is interactionism?
answer
Generalized, no notable sociologists, language, symbols, meaning, and interaction and important
question
Manifest functions are . . .
answer
Intended or recognized
question
Latent functions are . . .
answer
neither intended nor recognized, 'the invisible hand' of social structure
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New