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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. The viewing of people's behavior from the perspective of their own culture.
Role taking
Routine activities theory
Cultural relativism
Science
2. Transfers of money - goods - or services that are not reported to the government.
Religious beliefs
Social science
Hawthorne effect
Informal economy
3. A form of marriage in which a person can have several spouses in his or her lifetime but only one spouse at a time.
Homophobia
Zero population growth (ZPG)
Serial monogamy
Matriarchy
4. Karl Marx's term for the working class in a capitalist society.
Religious beliefs
Small group
Sociobiology
Proletariat
5. A theory of deviance proposed by Edwin Sutherland that holds that violation of rules results from exposure to attitudes favorable to criminal acts.
Postindustrial city
Survey
Differential association
Bilateral descent
6. Long term trend in human societies that results from the interplay of innovation - continuity - and selection.
Closed system
Dyad
Sociocultural evolution
Opinion leader
7. Practices required or expected of members of a faith.
New social movements
Religious rituals
Sect
Stigma
8. A term used by Bowles and Gintis to refer to the tendency of schools to promote the values expected of individuals in each social class and to prepare students for the types of jobs typically held by members of their class.
Variable
Correspondence principle
Victimization surveys
Mortality rate
9. A subordinate group whose members have significantly less control or power over their own lives than the members of a dominant or majority group have over theirs.
New religious movement (NRM) or cult
Industrial society
Minority group
Growth rate
10. A view of society as ruled by a small group of individuals who share a common set of political and economic interests.
Technology
Elite model
Education
Sample
11. An increase in the lowest level of education required to enter a field.
Legal-rational authority
Defended neighborhood
Looking-glass self
Credentialism
12. Penalties and rewards for conduct concerning a social norm.
Total fertility rate (TFR)
Vested interests
Neocolonialism
Sanctions
13. Hereditary systems of rank - usually religiously dictated - that tend to be fixed and immobile.
Urbanism
Demographic transition
Castes
Life expectancy
14. A view of social interaction - popularized by Erving Goffman - under which people are examined as if they were theatrical performers.
Dramaturgical approach
Status group
Dependent variable
Castes
15. Organized collective activities to bring about or resist fundamental change in an existing group or society.
Sample
Total fertility rate (TFR)
Social movements
Sociology
16. Difficulties that occur when incompatible expectations arise from two or more social positions held by the same person.
Role conflict
Formal organization
New social movements
Population pyramid
17. Subjects in an experiment who are exposed to an independent variable introduced by a researcher.
Experimental group
Resocialization
Labeling theory
Role exit
18. A large - organized religion not officially linked with the state or government.
Denomination
Small group
Language
Ideal type
19. Changes in the social position of children relative to their parents.
Intergenerational mobility
Monopoly
Social interaction
Societal-reaction approach
20. A printed research instrument employed to obtain desired information from a respondent.
Questionnaire
Master status
Protestant ethic
Proletariat
21. The belief that one race is supreme and all others are innately inferior.
Cultural universals
Dependent variable
Racism
Political socialization
22. A sociological approach that emphasizes inequity in gender as central to all behavior and organization.
Feminist perspective
Census
Defended neighborhood
Manifest functions
23. Talcott Parsons's functionalist view of society as tending toward a state of stability or balance.
Social control
Qualitative research
Latent functions
Equilibrium model
24. The impact that a teacher's expectations about a student's performance may have on the student's actual achievements.
New religious movement (NRM) or cult
Teacher-expectancy effect
Subculture
Familism
25. The collection and distribution of information concerning events in the social environment.
Surveillance function
Single-parent families
Resource mobilization
Socialism
26. Questionnaires or interviews used to determine whether people have been victims of crime.
Random sample
Religious beliefs
Victimization surveys
Objective method
27. The maintenance of political - social - economic - and cultural dominance over a people by a foreign power for an extended period of time.
Mores
Xenocentrism
Law
Colonialism
28. A theory developed by Robert Merton that explains deviance as an adaptation either of socially prescribed goals or of the norms governing their attainment - or both.
Voluntary associations
Anomie theory of deviance
Proletariat
Industrial society
29. Commercial organizations that are headquartered in one country but do business throughout the world.
Victimization surveys
Control variable
Multinational corporations
Census
30. The denial of opportunities and equal rights to individuals and groups that results from the normal operations of a society.
Polyandry
Surveillance function
Evolutionary theory
Institutional discrimination
31. Control of a market by a single business firm.
Exploitation theory
Value neutrality
Relative poverty
Monopoly
32. 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.
Class
Gesellschaft
Generalized others
Terrorism
33. A component of formal organization in which rules and hierarchical ranking are used to achieve efficiency.
Resource mobilization
Bureaucracy
Assimilation
Megalopolis
34. A group or category to which people feel they do not belong.
Kinship
Hidden curriculum
Questionnaire
Out-group
35. The ordinary and commonplace elements of life - as distinguished from the sacred.
Validity
Machismo
Profane
Anomie theory of deviance
36. The prohibition of sexual relationships between certain culturally specified relatives.
Incest taboo
Bureaucracy
Social constructionist perspective
Role taking
37. The attempt to reach agreement with others concerning some objective.
Amalgamation
Elite model
Control theory
Negotiation
38. A society in which women dominate in family decision making.
In-group
Nisei
Familism
Matriarchy
39. The process of mentally assuming the perspective of another - thereby enabling one to respond from that imagined viewpoint.
Laissez-faire
False consciousness
Role taking
Impression management
40. A religious organization that claims to include most or all of the members of a society and is recognized as the national or official religion.
Class consciousness
Latent functions
Master status
Ecclesia
41. Japanese born in the United States who were descendants of the Issei.
Polygyny
Horizontal mobility
Creationism
Nisei
42. Reductions taken in a company's workforce as part of deindustrialization.
Power elite
Downsizing
World systems analysis
Role exit
43. Preindustrial societies in which people plant seeds and crops rather than subsist merely on available foods.
Secondary analysis
Horticultural societies
Second shift
Values
44. An explanation of an abstract concept that is specific enough to allow a researcher to measure the concept.
Operational definition
Informal economy
Amalgamation
Human ecology
45. A set of expectations of people who occupy a given social position or status.
Language
Social role
Master status
Social institutions
46. Power that has been institutionalized and is recognized by the people over whom it is exercised.
Stereotypes
Gemeinschaft
Authority
Control group
47. A city with only a few thousand people living within its borders and characterized by a relatively closed class system and limited mobility.
Multinational corporations
Role taking
Urban ecology
Preindustrial city
48. A variety of research techniques that make use of publicly accessible information and data.
Patriarchy
Natural science
Secondary analysis
Luddites
49. The process by which a person forsakes his or her own cultural tradition to become part of a different culture.
Assimilation
Narcotizing dysfunction
Concentric-zone theory
Sociological imagination
50. The way in which a society is organized into predictable relationships.
Incidence
Opinion leader
Social structure
Exploitation theory