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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP Social Sciences And History
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
clep
,
humanities
,
history
Instructions:
Answer 41 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. One of three approaches to recent sociology studies. Views society as being characterized by conflict and inequality. Questions such factors as race - gender - social class - and age and the unequal distribution of socially valued goods and rewards (
Max Weber
inductive theory
quantitative methods
conflict theory
2. Primarily concerned with acquiring objective empirical knowledge and not with the uses to which such knowledge is put. Concerned with 'what it' and not with 'what should be.'
inductive theory
Karl Marx
Max Weber
scientific perspective
3. Researcher try to understand either causal or correlational relationships between variables - either independent or dependent variables.
hypothesis
Talcott Parsons
explanatory survey
humanistic perspective
4. Personal observation and description of social life in order to explain behavior - this methods entails the loss of precision but achieves a deeper grasp of the texture of social life.
Emile Durkheim
theological stage
quantitative methods
qualitative methods
5. Studied suicide.
metaphysical stage
Emile Durkheim
stratified sampling
control group
6. Perspectives of symbolic interaction - dramaturgy - and ethnomethodology.
verstehen
metaphysical stage
conflict theory
interpretative
7. Advocated grand theory - involving the building of a theory of society based on aspects of the real world to form a society as a stable system of interrelated parts.
Talcott Parsons
Karl Marx
structural functionalism
positive stage
8. When a change in one variable causes or forces a change in another variable.
conflict theory
explanatory survey
control
causal relationship
9. Auguste Comte's belief that scientists look to the real world for an explanation of what is observed.
metaphysical stage
causal relationship
explanatory survey
Emile Durkheim
10. A type of sampling where the nth unit in a list is selected for inclusion in the sample. For example - every 50th resident listed in a phone book of a given area.
Talcott Parsons
systematic sampling
structural functionalism
causal relationship
11. A sample that is relatively accurate in reflecting the population from which it is drawn.
C. Wright Mills
representative sample
interpretative
causal relationship
12. Concerned with psychology with its emphasis on behavior and mental processes - social life - economic with its emphasis on production - distribution - and consumption of goods - political science with emphasis on political philosophy and forms of gov
social sciences
correlational relationship
interpretative
systematic sampling
13. Proceeds from the concrete observations from which general conclusions are inferred through a process of reasoning.
control
inductive theory
Auguste Comte
deductive theory
14. Proceeds from general ideas - knowledge - or understanding of the social world from which specific hypotheses are logically deduced and tested.
Max Weber
Robert Merton
survey method
deductive theory
15. Observed England's social patterns during social change in Europe (1802 - 1876).
Harriet Martineau
sociologist
causal relationship
qualitative methods
16. Believed that society follows a natural evolutionary path toward something better.
theological stage
causal relationship
sociological imagination
Herbert Spencer
17. One who focuses on a number of different levels of analysis in understanding social life - social interaction within groups - social structure.
sociologist
Talcott Parsons
experimental group
Karl Marx
18. A research method where subjects are interviewed about their opinions - beliefs - behavior - in a series of questions - to aid the researcher in collecting information about general population characteristics or collecting information about some even
survey method
control group
conflict theory
stratified sampling
19. Developed by Max Weber as a means of characterizing and interpreting by applying reason to external and inner context of specific social situations - such as the origins of Western capitalism.
verstehen
scientific perspective
causal relationship
quantitative methods
20. One that influences another variable.
positive stage
independent variable
survey method
experimental group
21. Making use of statistical and other mathematical techniques of quantification or measurement in an effort to describe and interpret observations.
quantitative methods
scientific perspective
experimental group
control
22. A group of subjects not exposed to the same condition as an experimental group.
Herbert Spencer
control group
correlational relationship
control
23. Generated from theory and tested through actual observation.
sociologist
hypothesis
Emile Durkheim
sociology
24. A group of subjects exposed to a particular condition in a study.
qualitative methods
social sciences
sociological imagination
experimental group
25. A variable that is being influenced by another variable.
dependent variable
Robert Merton
control
qualitative methods
26. A means to advance human welfare through self-realization - full development of the cultivated personality - improvement of the human social condition.
correlational relationship
conflict theory
control
humanistic perspective
27. Auguste Comte's belief that the definitive stage of all knowledge in the search for general ideas or laws. With such knowledge of how society is held together and how society changes - predictions on how people will react can be made - therefore cont
Emile Durkheim
representative sample
positive stage
correlational relationship
28. Initiated from actual observation and built into a general theory.
generalization
metaphysical stage
positive stage
Karl Marx
29. A technique of differentiating between factors that may or may not influence the relationship between variable.
Auguste Comte
Talcott Parsons
control
Robert Merton
30. Auguste Comte's belief that scientists look toward the supernatural realm of ideas for explanation of what is observed.
interpretative
structural functionalism
theological stage
random sample
31. A sample where every member of the population has the same chance of being chose for a study - and selecting as many as are thought necessary to achieve representativeness.
sociologist
explanatory survey
generalization
random sample
32. The quality of mind that seeks to expand the role of freedom - choice - and conscious decision in history by means of knowledge. Personal troubles often reflect broader social issues and problems.
verstehen
Auguste Comte
sociologist
sociological imagination
33. Sought to explain the origins of capitalism.
explanatory survey
metaphysical stage
structural functionalism
Max Weber
34. A type of sampling that uses the differences that already exist in a population as the basis for selecting a sample i.e. - male/female. The researcher can then determine the percentage of each group - then randomly select a number of persons to be st
stratified sampling
hypothesis
metaphysical stage
experimental group
35. A relationship that exists when a change in one variable coincides with - but does not cause - a change in another variable.
correlational relationship
scientific perspective
Herbert Spencer
sociology
36. The theoretical giant of communist thought whose prophecies are still hotly debated.
Karl Marx
systematic sampling
Talcott Parsons
experimental group
37. Inspired by writings of Emile Durkeim and Herbert Spencer which said the components of a society are interdependent - with each one serving a function necessary for the survival of the system as a whole.
structural functionalism
independent variable
Auguste Comte
correlational relationship
38. Coined the term sociology in 1838 to demarcate the field - its subject matter - and methods.
Herbert Spencer
generalization
Auguste Comte
humanistic perspective
39. The science or discipline that studies societies - social groups - and the relationships between people.
sociology
sociologist
causal relationship
inductive theory
40. Proposed building middle range theories from a limited number of assumptions for which hypotheses are derived. Also distinguished between manifest or intended - latent unintended - consequences of existing elements of social structure that are either
Auguste Comte
independent variable
quantitative methods
Robert Merton
41. Believed that a certain quality of mind is required in order to understand ourselves in relation to society.
C. Wright Mills
deductive theory
explanatory survey
sociologist