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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP Sociology
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
clep
,
humanities
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Control of a market by a single business firm.
Social structure
Organized crime
Monopoly
Cultural transmission
2. Karl Marx's term for the capitalist class - comprising the owners of the means of production.
Role exit
Bourgeoisie
Cultural transmission
Argot
3. Commercial organizations that are headquartered in one country but do business throughout the world.
Social control
Multinational corporations
Equilibrium model
Bureaucratization
4. General practices found in every culture.
Demographic transition
Cultural universals
Subculture
Authority
5. The process by which individuals acquire political attitudes and develop patterns of political behavior.
Formal social control
Ethnography
Role taking
Political socialization
6. The average number of years a person can be expected to live under current mortality conditions.
Microsociology
Life expectancy
Content analysis
Material culture
7. A person who pursues crime as a day-to-day occupation - developing skilled techniques and enjoying a certain degree of status among other criminals.
Incest taboo
Professional criminal
Mortality rate
Social network
8. Practices required or expected of members of a faith.
Social movements
Monogamy
Religious rituals
Evolutionary theory
9. Organized workers who share either the same skill or the same employer.
Labor unions
New urban sociology
Mores
Cult
10. A two-member group.
Dyad
Relative poverty
Political socialization
Generalized others
11. A factor held constant to test the relative impact of an independent variable.
Looking-glass self
Control variable
Mortality rate
Relative poverty
12. In Karl Marx's view - a subjective awareness held by members of a class regarding their common vested interests and need for collective political action to bring about social change.
Laissez-faire
Class consciousness
Assimilation
Operational definition
13. Ogburn's term for a period of maladjustment during which the nonmaterial culture is still adapting to new material conditions.
Status
Culture lag
Protestant ethic
Deviance
14. The amount of reproduction among women of childbearing age.
Self
Demography
Resocialization
Fertility
15. An explanation of an abstract concept that is specific enough to allow a researcher to measure the concept.
Curanderismo
Operational definition
Contact hypothesis
Variable
16. In sociology - a set of statements that seeks to explain problems - actions - or behavior.
Theory
Machismo
Anomie theory of deviance
Conformity
17. The systematic - widespread withdrawal of investment in basic aspects of productivity such as factories and plants.
Experimental group
Globalization
Invention
Deindustrialization
18. The ways in which people respond to one another.
Modernization theory
Social interaction
Matriarchy
Social control
19. The physical or technological aspects of our daily lives.
Material culture
Victimless crimes
Sociocultural evolution
Total institutions
20. The respect and admiration that an occupation holds in a society.
Sociology
E-commerce
Content analysis
Prestige
21. An inclusive term encompassing all of a person's material assets - including land and other types of property.
Contact hypothesis
Law
Secondary group
Wealth
22. The feeling or perception of being in direct contact with the ultimate reality - such as a divine being - or of being overcome with religious emotion.
Religious experience
Invention
Machismo
Secularization
23. A fairly large number of people who live in the same territory - are relatively independent of people outside it - and participate in a common culture.
Society
Significant others
Rites of passage
Quantitative research
24. The process by which a person forsakes his or her own cultural tradition to become part of a different culture.
Cultural universals
Vital statistics
Income
Assimilation
25. In Harold D. Lasswell's words - 'who gets what - when - and how.'
Politics
Zero population growth (ZPG)
Status group
Contact hypothesis
26. An approach to deviance that attempts to explain why certain people are viewed as deviants while others engaging in the same behavior are not.
Labeling theory
Social epidemiology
Model or ideal minority
Bilingualism
27. Rituals marking the symbolic transition from one social position to another.
Bureaucratization
Rites of passage
Sociocultural evolution
Formal organization
28. A religious group that is the outgrowth of a sect - yet remains isolated from society.
Defended neighborhood
Negotiated order
Sociocultural evolution
Established sect
29. A principle of organizational life - originated by Laurence J. Peter - according to which each individual within a hierarchy tends to rise to his or her level of incompetence.
Stigma
Peter principle
Conformity
Questionnaire
30. A technique for measuring social class that assigns individuals to classes on the basis of criteria such as occupation - education - income - and place of residence.
Objective method
Scientific management approach
Informal economy
Classical theory
31. The act of physically separating two groups; often imposed on a minority group by a dominant group.
Control theory
Natural science
Segregation
Terrorism
32. A society in which women dominate in family decision making.
Personality
Goal displacement
Community
Matriarchy
33. A social structure that derives its existence from the social interactions through which people define and redefine its character.
Urbanism
Negotiated order
Culture lag
Negotiation
34. Governmental social control.
Folkways
Law
Objective method
Ageism
35. The denial of opportunities and equal rights to individuals and groups that results from the normal operations of a society.
Institutional discrimination
Closed system
Control group
Zero population growth (ZPG)
36. A negative attitude toward an entire category of people - such as a racial or ethnic minority.
Science
Prejudice
Power elite
Racism
37. A sociological approach that assumes that social behavior is best understood in terms of conflict or tension between competing groups.
Prevalence
Postmodern society
Self
Conflict perspective
38. Difficulties that occur when incompatible expectations arise from two or more social positions held by the same person.
Role conflict
Amalgamation
Microsociology
Intergenerational mobility
39. The practice of placing students in specific curriculum groups on the basis of test scores and other criteria.
Social interaction
Tracking
Castes
Macrosociology
40. The viewing of people's behavior from the perspective of their own culture.
Content analysis
Cultural relativism
Research design
Deviance
41. The incidence of diseases in a given population.
Hawthorne effect
Morbidity rates
Ethnic group
Negotiation
42. A face-to-face or telephone questioning of a respondent to obtain desired information.
Interview
Credentialism
Political system
Resource mobilization
43. The process by which the principles of the fast-food restaurant have come to dominate certain sectors of society - both in the United States and throughout the world.
Mass media
McDonaldization
Dyad
Glass ceiling
44. Behavior that violates the standards of conduct or expectations of a group or society.
Face-work
Deviance
Racial group
Sanctions
45. Numerous ways that people with access to the Internet can do business from their computers.
Mores
Cultural transmission
Control group
E-commerce
46. Processes of socialization in which a person 'rehearses' for future positions - occupations - and social relationships.
Anticipatory socialization
Subculture
Social institutions
Contact hypothesis
47. Two unrelated adults who have chosen to share one another's lives in a relationship of mutual caring - who reside together - and who agree to be jointly responsible for their dependents - basic living expenses - and other common necessities.
Credentialism
Domestic partnership
Culture shock
Life expectancy
48. A concept used by Charles Horton Cooley that emphasizes the self as the product of our social interactions with others.
Professional criminal
Globalization
Looking-glass self
Primary group
49. A theory of social change that holds that change can occur in several ways and does not inevitably lead in the same direction.
Labor unions
Religious experience
Multilinear evolutionary theory
Extended family
50. A term used by Parsons and Bales to refer to emphasis on tasks - focus on more distant goals - and a concern for the external relationship between one's family and other social institutions.
Profane
Instrumentality
Trained incapacity
Out-group