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Quiz #6

Religion

Aspects of Religion

  • Religion: a social institution involving beliefs and practices based on recognizing the sacred.

  • Profane: included as an ordinary element of everyday life.

  • Sacred: set apart as extraordinary, inspiring awe and reverence.

  • Ritual: formal, ceremonial behavior.

  • Faith:  belief based on personal conviction rather than on scientific evidence.

  • Totem: an object in the natural world collectively defined as sacred.


Function of Religion

  • These are three major functions of religion in society:

    • Establishing social cohesion

    • Promoting social control

    • Providing meaning and purpose

Types of Groups

  • Church: a type of organization that is well integrated into the larger society.

  • Sect: a type of religious organization that stands apart from the larger society.

  • Cult: a religious organization that is largely outside a society’s cultural traditions.

Types of Worship

  • Animism: the belief that elements of the natural world are conscious life forms that affect humanity.

  • Monotheism: belief in a single divine power.

  • Polytheism: belief in many gods.

Basic Terms

  • Religiosity: the importance of religion in a person’s life.

  • Secularization: the historical decline in the importance of supernatural and sacred.

  • Civil Religion: a quasi-religious loyalty linking individuals in a basically secular society.

  • Fundamentalism: a conservative religious doctrine that opposes intellectualism and worldly accommodation in favor of restoring traditional otherworldly religion.

Fundamentalist Ideas

  • Take the word of sacred texts literally.

  • Reject religious pluralism.

  • Pursue the personal experience of God’s presence.

  • Oppose secular humanism.

  • Endorse conservative political goals.

Major World Religions

  • Christianity

  • Islam

  • Judaism

  • Hinduism

  • Buddhism

  • Confucianism


Population, Urbanization, & the Environment

Population Terminology

  • Demography - the study of the human population.

  • Demographic Transition Theory - A thesis that links population patterns to a society’s level of technological development.

  • Fertility - The incidence of childbearing in a country’s population.

  • Crude Birth Rate - The number of live births in a given year for every 1,000 people in a population.

  • Mortality - The incidence of death in a country’s population.

  • Crude Death Rate - The number of deaths in a given year for every 1,000 people in a population.

  • Life Expectancy - The average lifespan of a country’s population.

  • Sex Ratio - The number of males for every 100 females in a nation’s population.

  • Age-Sex Pyramid - a graphic representation of the ages and sex of a population.

Migration

  • Migration and immigration are major, controversial topics in our society.

  • Migration - The movement of people into and out of a specific territory.

Urbanization Terminology

  • Urbanization - The concentration of population into cities.

  • Metropolis - A large city that socially and economically dominates an urban area.

  • Suburbs - Urban areas beyond the political boundaries of a city.

  • Megalopolis - A vast urban region containing a number of cities and their surrounding suburbs.

Gemeinschaft V. Gesellschaft

  • Gemeinschaft - A type of social organization in which people are closely tied by kinship and tradition.

  • Gesellschaft - A type of social organization in which people come together only on the basis of individual self-interest.

Environment Terminology

  • Ecology - The study of the interaction of living organisms and the natural environment.

    • Urban Ecology - The study of the link between the physical and social dimensions of cities.

  • Natural Environment - Earth’s surface and atmosphere, including living organisms, air, water, soil, and other resources necessary to sustain life.

  • Ecosystem - A system comprised of the interaction of all living organisms and their natural environment.

  • Environmental Deficit - Profound long-term harm to the natural environment caused by humanity’s focus on short-term material influence.

Issues on Humans and The Environment

  • Environmental Sexism - Environmental patterns that place girls and women at a disadvantage and threaten their well-being.

  • Environmental Racism - patterns of development that expose poor people, especially people of color, to environmental hazards.

  • Ecologically Sustainable Culture - A way of life that meets the needs of the present generation without threatening the environmental legacy of future generations.

Health

  • Health - a state of complete, physical, mental, and social well-being.

  • Social Epidemiology - the study of how health and disease are distributed throughout a society’s population.

  • Medicine - the social institution that focuses on fighting disease and improving health.

Society’s Impact on Health

  1. Cultural patterns define health.

  2. Cultural standards of health change over time.

  3. A society’s technology affects people’s health.

  4. Social inequality affects people’s health.

Social Status Impacts on Health

  • Age

  • Class

  • Gender

  • Race

Other Social Impacts on Health

  • Smoking cigarettes and vaping

  • Eating Disorders - a physical and mental disorder that involves intense dieting or other unhealthy methods of weight control driven by the desire to be very thin.

  • Obesity

  • Opioid Epidemic

  • Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs)

  • Ethical Issues around Death

Holistic Care

  • Holistic Medicine - an approach to healthcare that emphasizes the prevention of illness and takes into account a person’s entire physical and social environment.

  • The foundations of holistic healthcare are:

    • Treat patients as people.

    • Encourage responsibility, not dependency.

    • Provide personal treatment.

Health Insurance

  • Socialized Medicine - A medical care system in which the government owns and operates most medical facilities and employs most physicians.

  • Direct-free System - A medical care system in which patients pay directly for the services of physicians and hospitals.

  • Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) - organizations that provide comprehensive medical care to subscribers for a fixed fee.

Details of Obamacare (Affordable Healthcare Act)

  • All families will pay an insurance tax

  • All families are required to pay insurance

  • People who do not buy health insurance face penalties

  • Parents can use their healthcare insurance plan for their children - up to age 26

  • Insurance companies cannot refuse coverage to any age due to preexisting conditions

Education

Terms

  • Education: The social institution through which a society provides its members with important knowledge, involving basic facts, job skills, and cultural norms and values

  • Schooling: formal instruction under the direction of specially trained teachers

Functions of Schooling

  • Socialization

  • Cultural Innovation

  • Social Integration

  • Social Placement

  • Latent functions: childcare, occupying time, fostering romantic relationships, and networking

Social Conflict and Schooling

  • School Tracking: assigning students to different types of educational programs

  • Inequality among Schools

  • Access to higher education

Problems in Schooling

  • Discipline and Violence

  • Student Passivity

  • Bureaucracy

    • Rigid Uniformity

    • Numerical Ratings

    • Rigid Expectations

    • Specialization

    • Little Individual Responsibility

  • Academic Standards

    • Functional Illiteracy: a lack of the reading and writing skills needed for everyday living

  • Dropping Out

  • Grade Inflation

Issues in the US Educational System

  • School Choice

  • Common Core

  • Homeschooling

  • Schooling people with disabilities

  • Teacher shortage

LW

Quiz #6

Religion

Aspects of Religion

  • Religion: a social institution involving beliefs and practices based on recognizing the sacred.

  • Profane: included as an ordinary element of everyday life.

  • Sacred: set apart as extraordinary, inspiring awe and reverence.

  • Ritual: formal, ceremonial behavior.

  • Faith:  belief based on personal conviction rather than on scientific evidence.

  • Totem: an object in the natural world collectively defined as sacred.


Function of Religion

  • These are three major functions of religion in society:

    • Establishing social cohesion

    • Promoting social control

    • Providing meaning and purpose

Types of Groups

  • Church: a type of organization that is well integrated into the larger society.

  • Sect: a type of religious organization that stands apart from the larger society.

  • Cult: a religious organization that is largely outside a society’s cultural traditions.

Types of Worship

  • Animism: the belief that elements of the natural world are conscious life forms that affect humanity.

  • Monotheism: belief in a single divine power.

  • Polytheism: belief in many gods.

Basic Terms

  • Religiosity: the importance of religion in a person’s life.

  • Secularization: the historical decline in the importance of supernatural and sacred.

  • Civil Religion: a quasi-religious loyalty linking individuals in a basically secular society.

  • Fundamentalism: a conservative religious doctrine that opposes intellectualism and worldly accommodation in favor of restoring traditional otherworldly religion.

Fundamentalist Ideas

  • Take the word of sacred texts literally.

  • Reject religious pluralism.

  • Pursue the personal experience of God’s presence.

  • Oppose secular humanism.

  • Endorse conservative political goals.

Major World Religions

  • Christianity

  • Islam

  • Judaism

  • Hinduism

  • Buddhism

  • Confucianism


Population, Urbanization, & the Environment

Population Terminology

  • Demography - the study of the human population.

  • Demographic Transition Theory - A thesis that links population patterns to a society’s level of technological development.

  • Fertility - The incidence of childbearing in a country’s population.

  • Crude Birth Rate - The number of live births in a given year for every 1,000 people in a population.

  • Mortality - The incidence of death in a country’s population.

  • Crude Death Rate - The number of deaths in a given year for every 1,000 people in a population.

  • Life Expectancy - The average lifespan of a country’s population.

  • Sex Ratio - The number of males for every 100 females in a nation’s population.

  • Age-Sex Pyramid - a graphic representation of the ages and sex of a population.

Migration

  • Migration and immigration are major, controversial topics in our society.

  • Migration - The movement of people into and out of a specific territory.

Urbanization Terminology

  • Urbanization - The concentration of population into cities.

  • Metropolis - A large city that socially and economically dominates an urban area.

  • Suburbs - Urban areas beyond the political boundaries of a city.

  • Megalopolis - A vast urban region containing a number of cities and their surrounding suburbs.

Gemeinschaft V. Gesellschaft

  • Gemeinschaft - A type of social organization in which people are closely tied by kinship and tradition.

  • Gesellschaft - A type of social organization in which people come together only on the basis of individual self-interest.

Environment Terminology

  • Ecology - The study of the interaction of living organisms and the natural environment.

    • Urban Ecology - The study of the link between the physical and social dimensions of cities.

  • Natural Environment - Earth’s surface and atmosphere, including living organisms, air, water, soil, and other resources necessary to sustain life.

  • Ecosystem - A system comprised of the interaction of all living organisms and their natural environment.

  • Environmental Deficit - Profound long-term harm to the natural environment caused by humanity’s focus on short-term material influence.

Issues on Humans and The Environment

  • Environmental Sexism - Environmental patterns that place girls and women at a disadvantage and threaten their well-being.

  • Environmental Racism - patterns of development that expose poor people, especially people of color, to environmental hazards.

  • Ecologically Sustainable Culture - A way of life that meets the needs of the present generation without threatening the environmental legacy of future generations.

Health

  • Health - a state of complete, physical, mental, and social well-being.

  • Social Epidemiology - the study of how health and disease are distributed throughout a society’s population.

  • Medicine - the social institution that focuses on fighting disease and improving health.

Society’s Impact on Health

  1. Cultural patterns define health.

  2. Cultural standards of health change over time.

  3. A society’s technology affects people’s health.

  4. Social inequality affects people’s health.

Social Status Impacts on Health

  • Age

  • Class

  • Gender

  • Race

Other Social Impacts on Health

  • Smoking cigarettes and vaping

  • Eating Disorders - a physical and mental disorder that involves intense dieting or other unhealthy methods of weight control driven by the desire to be very thin.

  • Obesity

  • Opioid Epidemic

  • Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs)

  • Ethical Issues around Death

Holistic Care

  • Holistic Medicine - an approach to healthcare that emphasizes the prevention of illness and takes into account a person’s entire physical and social environment.

  • The foundations of holistic healthcare are:

    • Treat patients as people.

    • Encourage responsibility, not dependency.

    • Provide personal treatment.

Health Insurance

  • Socialized Medicine - A medical care system in which the government owns and operates most medical facilities and employs most physicians.

  • Direct-free System - A medical care system in which patients pay directly for the services of physicians and hospitals.

  • Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) - organizations that provide comprehensive medical care to subscribers for a fixed fee.

Details of Obamacare (Affordable Healthcare Act)

  • All families will pay an insurance tax

  • All families are required to pay insurance

  • People who do not buy health insurance face penalties

  • Parents can use their healthcare insurance plan for their children - up to age 26

  • Insurance companies cannot refuse coverage to any age due to preexisting conditions

Education

Terms

  • Education: The social institution through which a society provides its members with important knowledge, involving basic facts, job skills, and cultural norms and values

  • Schooling: formal instruction under the direction of specially trained teachers

Functions of Schooling

  • Socialization

  • Cultural Innovation

  • Social Integration

  • Social Placement

  • Latent functions: childcare, occupying time, fostering romantic relationships, and networking

Social Conflict and Schooling

  • School Tracking: assigning students to different types of educational programs

  • Inequality among Schools

  • Access to higher education

Problems in Schooling

  • Discipline and Violence

  • Student Passivity

  • Bureaucracy

    • Rigid Uniformity

    • Numerical Ratings

    • Rigid Expectations

    • Specialization

    • Little Individual Responsibility

  • Academic Standards

    • Functional Illiteracy: a lack of the reading and writing skills needed for everyday living

  • Dropping Out

  • Grade Inflation

Issues in the US Educational System

  • School Choice

  • Common Core

  • Homeschooling

  • Schooling people with disabilities

  • Teacher shortage

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