Sociology Key Concepts: Socialization, Theories, and Research Methods

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75 Terms

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Achieved status

status that results from your efforts

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Agency

acting on your own will

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Agents of socialization

individuals, groups, and organizations that influence your sense of self and help you learn the ways of being a member of society

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Ascribed status

status assigned by society without regard for the person's unique talents, efforts, characteristics

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Audit studies

research methods where trained 'auditors' interact with a real-world system or service to discreetly measure behaviors or discrimination

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Beliefs

subjective attitudes or ideas that an individual accepts as true serving as mental models for understanding the world and guiding actions even without full justification or evidence

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Boundary work

creating and maintaining symbolic boundaries to limit group membership and access to resources

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Bureaucracies

system of government in which important decisions are made by state officials rather than elected officials

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Confirmation bias

tendency to search for, interpret, favor, and recall information in a way that confirms or supports one's prior beliefs or values

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Conflict theory

sociological framework suggesting society is characterized by inherent conflict due to competition for limited resources, power, and status

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Conspicuous consumption

gaining prestige by exhibiting valuable cultural goods

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Content analysis

analysis of existing sources, focusing on key themes and patterns

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Cultural appropriation

members of a dominant culture adopting cultural goods of other cultural groups for profit

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Cultural capital

non-economic cultural resources attuned to a particular sphere of social life

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Culture jamming

efforts to raise awareness around issues of hegemony through informal and often illegal guerilla marketing campaigns

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Dependent variable

variable that changes in response to another

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Experiments

research method in which the environment is controlled to isolate the effect of one factor or characteristic

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Feudalism

land ownership, hierarchical structure of kings, lords, vassals, and serfs bound by reciprocal obligations of land for military service and labor for protection

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Folkways

unwritten everyday social customs or informal norms that dictate the expected though not necessarily morally binding behaviors in society, things people do that will not get a strong reaction

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Functionalism

(macro sociology) views society as a complex system of interconnected parts, or institutions that work together to promote stability and solidarity

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Generalized other

values and norms of the larger culture that guide your actions

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Globalization

integration of political and economic systems: has brought about intercultural communication and an exchange of ideas and values

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Habitus

a learned disposition, based within the particular social world a person inhabits

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Hypothesis

statement about how variables are expected to relate to each other

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Independent variable

variable that causes a change in another

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Industrial Revolution

the rapid development in the late 1700s and throughout the 1800s of manufacturing and industry, enabled by technological changes in machinery and power sources

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Informed consent

consent after knowing all of the information

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Me

I=self that is thinking, Me=the one being thought about

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Life chances

opportunities to provide yourself with material goods, positive living conditions, and favorable life experiences

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Looking-glass self

the way our perception of how others see us affect our sense of self

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Macro-sociology

analysis of large-scale social structures and forces

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Material culture

physical goods, not necessarily essentials, often placed within an economic system

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McDonaldization

Ritzer's term for the increased rationalization and globalization of culture

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Micro-sociology

analysis of individual identities and interactions

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Mores

the essential or characteristic customs and conventions of a community and people will react strongly if u break them

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Non-participant observation

a research method where the researcher observes a subject or group from a distance, without actively participating in their activities, often described as a 'fly on the wall' approach

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Norms

rules and expectations by which a group guides the behavior of its members

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Participant observation

research method in which researcher spends time among a group, observing and participating in their daily lives

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Qualitative data

non-numerical data

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Quantitative data

data in the form of numbers that reflect amounts

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Reflexivity

process of evaluating our position in the social world the rules we are expected to follow and the resources we have or can acquire

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Regulations

formal rules, norms, and mechanisms of social control by which society guides behavior and maintains order

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Research ethics

provides moral guideline to protect research participants from harm and ensure and integrity of the research process by adhering to principles like informed consent confidentiality and anonymity

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Resocialization

socialization process by which we adopt new norms and identities

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Role conflict

inconsistency between two or more roles

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Roles

expectations associated with statuses; they shape how the person is supposed to behave and how others are supposed to behave towards them

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Self-concept

thoughts and feeling we have of ourselves as physical, social, and emotional beings

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Social desirability bias

problems introduced to data when respondents give answers they believe are socially acceptable

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Social groups

two or more people with similar values and expectations who interact with one another on a regular basis

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Social networks

series of social relationships that link a person directly to other individuals and indirectly to even more people

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Social structure

the set of social statuses, roles, groups, networks, and institutions that organize and influence the way people go about their lives

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Socialization

experiences that give us an identity and that teach us how to be members of society

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Sociological imagination

perspective in which we think about our own personal experience in relation to a larger set of social forces that influence every aspect of our lives

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Sociology

the study of how societies are organized and how the organization of a society influences the behavior of people living in it

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Status

a person or group's socially determined positions within a larger group or society

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Structure of opportunity

the organized framework of relationships, roles, and statuses that shape social interactions and activities

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Subcultures

a group that uses alternative symbolic and material culture goods to distinguish themselves from the wider society

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Surveys

gathering data by asking people sets of questions

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Symbolic culture

aspect of culture that includes beliefs, values, norms, and language

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Symbolic interactionism

the study of human interaction by focusing on the words and gestures that people use and the meanings they create about the world : 3 assumptions (people act on meaning, meaning does not depend on object, meanings are not fixed)

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Total institutions

institutions that exert near-total control over members' lives and engage in resocialization

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Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment

observes effects of untreated syphilis in AA men

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Values

shared cultural conceptions of what is good, desirable, proper, or important within a society

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Charles Horton Cooley

the looking glass SELF, we learn to see ourselves as others see us

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Wright Mills

Cant understand the individual without the society and vice versa; looked into how culture, structures, policies, economics, politics, media, popular culture, etc. of the society we live in shape our individual actions/decisions.

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Emilie Durkheim

Functionalism, mechanical vs organic solidarity, analogy or the body, self sufficient, social institutions play a key role in keeping a society stable

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George Herbert Mead

Developing the I vs Me, self-concept, generalized other.

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Harriet Martineau

Translated and spread the work of Auguste Comte who coined the term 'sociology', spoke out against slavery.

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Ida Wells Barnett

Documented extent of lynching, debunked idea that black men were lynched for terrible crimes, instead argued that lynching was done to keep African Americans from challenging the white power structure.

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Jane Addams

Social work, 1st woman to win Nobel Peace Prize, socially engaged scholarship Hull House helping women and children.

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Karl Marx

Studies history, economics, politics, philosophy, and psychology, and spent most of his career writing about capitalism and changing economic relations it brought about. Defined by relations with others, competitive drives social change

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Max Weber

Emphasized methodological individualism, the world needed to focus on the individual. Symbolic interactionalism

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Pierre Bourdieu

Social structures and individual agency (boundary work, symbolic boundaries, habitus, culture capital).

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W.E.B. DuBois

Racism is number 1 problem.

Methodology, Philadelphia Nego and Atlanta group

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Triangulation

Not one research method is perfect but multiple can bounce off others and make them stronger.