SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
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. Print and electronic instruments of communication that carry messages to often widespread audiences.
Role exit
Status
Esteem
Mass media
2. A theory of urban growth that sees growth in terms of a series of rings radiating from the central business district.
Role exit
Wealth
Bureaucracy
Concentric-zone theory
3. Changes in a person's social position within his or her adult life.
Dysfunction
Intragenerational mobility
Deviance
Protestant ethic
4. The movement of an individual from one social position to another of the same rank.
Wealth
Horizontal mobility
Bureaucratization
Proletariat
5. The notion that criminal victimization increases when there is a convergence of motivated offenders and suitable targets.
Routine activities theory
Prevalence
Societal-reaction approach
Interview
6. An aspect of the socialization process within total institutions - in which people are subjected to humiliating rituals.
Surveillance function
Laissez-faire
Deindustrialization
Degradation ceremony
7. A functionalist theory of aging introduced by Cumming and Henry that contends that society and the aging individual mutually sever many of their relationships.
Disengagement theory
Bourgeoisie
Classical theory
Total institutions
8. The process of making known or sharing the existence of an aspect of reality.
Religious experience
Discovery
White-collar crime
Dramaturgical approach
9. The social institution through which goods and services are produced - distributed - and consumed.
Economic system
Social movements
Authority
Evolutionary theory
10. 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.
Impression management
Institutional discrimination
McDonaldization
Bureaucracy
11. A set of expectations of people who occupy a given social position or status.
Affirmative action
Industrial city
Proletariat
Social role
12. A study - generally in the form of interviews or questionnaires - that provides sociologists and other researchers with information concerning how people think and act.
Organized crime
Survey
Personality
Feminist perspective
13. The feeling of surprise and disorientation that is experienced when people witness cultural practices different from their own.
Income
Culture shock
Value neutrality
Society
14. A term coined by Robert N. Butler to refer to prejudice and discrimination against the elderly.
Verstehen
Ageism
Random sample
Sect
15. A variety of research techniques that make use of publicly accessible information and data.
Ideal type
Bilingualism
Secondary analysis
Assimilation
16. The viewing of people's behavior from the perspective of their own culture.
Cultural relativism
Out-group
Sociology
Bureaucratization
17. Commercial organizations that are headquartered in one country but do business throughout the world.
Quantitative research
Multinational corporations
Minority group
Sociology
18. Veblen's term for those people or groups who will suffer in the event of social change and who have a stake in maintaining the status quo.
Slavery
Vested interests
Horizontal mobility
Denomination
19. Max Weber's term for people's opportunities to provide themselves with material goods - positive living conditions - and favorable life experiences.
Evolutionary theory
Unilinear evolutionary theory
Narcotizing dysfunction
Life chances
20. 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.
Luddites
Peter principle
Bourgeoisie
Population pyramid
21. An element or a process of society that may disrupt a social system or lead to a decrease in stability.
Dysfunction
Preindustrial city
Labeling theory
Endogamy
22. The techniques and strategies for preventing deviant human behavior in any society.
Goal displacement
Independent variable
Mass media
Social control
23. The process by which a majority group and a minority group combine through intermarriage to form a new group.
Vested interests
Vertical mobility
Dominant ideology
Amalgamation
24. A small group characterized by intimate - face-to-face association and cooperation.
Economic system
Traditional authority
Primary group
Hawthorne effect
25. The incidence of death in a given population.
Hunting-and-gathering society
Dramaturgical approach
Mortality rate
Culture shock
26. The study of an entire social setting through extended systematic observation.
Social interaction
Victimless crimes
Ethnography
Sexual harassment
27. A relatively small religious group that has broken away from some other religious organization to renew what it views as the original vision of the faith.
Sect
Macrosociology
Social institutions
New religious movement (NRM) or cult
28. An awareness of the relationship between an individual and the wider society.
Political socialization
Sociological imagination
Urban ecology
Opinion leader
29. Unconscious or unintended functions; hidden purposes.
Status group
Values
Latent functions
Objective method
30. A series of social relationships that links a person directly to others and therefore indirectly to still more people.
Feminist perspective
Control group
Technology
Social network
31. Organizations established on the basis of common interest - whose members volunteer or even pay to participate.
Out-group
Ideal type
Total fertility rate (TFR)
Voluntary associations
32. A group that - despite past prejudice and discrimination - succeeds economically - socially - and educationally without resorting to political or violent confrontations with Whites.
Iron law of oligarchy
Argot
Model or ideal minority
Genocide
33. A term used by Max Weber to refer to people who have the same prestige or lifestyle - independent of their class positions.
Triad
Luddites
Status group
Society
34. According to George Herbert Mead - the sum total of people's conscious perceptions of their own identity as distinct from others.
Bilingualism
Self
Defended neighborhood
Horticultural societies
35. A face-to-face or telephone questioning of a respondent to obtain desired information.
Science
Liberation theology
Interview
Bureaucracy
36. Long-term poor people who lack training and skills.
Polygamy
Underclass
Cultural relativism
Evolutionary theory
37. A term used by Ferdinand Tonnies to describe close-knit communities - often found in rural areas - in which strong personal bonds unite members.
Gemeinschaft
Bureaucracy
Significant others
Sect
38. A three-member group.
Triad
Castes
Egalitarian family
Society
39. Compliance with higher authorities in a hierarchical structure.
Experimental group
Matriarchy
Obedience
Extended family
40. Durkheim's term for the loss of direction felt in a society when social control of individual behavior has become ineffective.
Voluntary associations
Formal organization
Anomie
Deviance
41. The former policy of the South African government designed to maintain the separation of Blacks and other non-Whites from the dominant Whites.
Nonmaterial culture
Demography
Apartheid
Material culture
42. Talcott Parsons's functionalist view of society as tending toward a state of stability or balance.
Familism
Urban ecology
In-group
Equilibrium model
43. A densely populated area containing two or more cities and their surrounding suburbs.
Multiple-nuclei theory
Megalopolis
Contact hypothesis
Ethnocentrism
44. The belief that one race is supreme and all others are innately inferior.
Social mobility
Sociological imagination
Racism
Socialism
45. A functionalist approach that proposes that modernization and development will gradually improve the lives of people in peripheral nations.
Modernization theory
McDonaldization
Social institutions
Normal accidents
46. A term used by George Herbert Mead to refer to the child's awareness of the attitudes - viewpoints - and expectations of society as a whole that a child takes into account in his or her behavior.
Generalized others
Random sample
Formal social control
Matriarchy
47. The body of knowledge obtained by methods based upon systematic observation.
Science
Political system
Defended neighborhood
Industrial city
48. A theory of social change that holds that society is moving in a definite direction.
Vested interests
Equilibrium model
Evolutionary theory
Role strain
49. A term used by sociologists to describe the willing exchange among adults of widely desired - but illegal - goods and services.
Stratification
Cognitive theory of development
Victimless crimes
Verstehen
50. Elements beyond everyday life that inspire awe - respect - and even fear.
Health
Concentric-zone theory
Sacred
Evolutionary theory