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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. A view of social interaction - popularized by Erving Goffman - under which people are examined as if they were theatrical performers.
Classical theory
Dramaturgical approach
Modernization
Xenocentrism
2. In a legal sense - a process that allows for the transfer of the legal rights - responsibilities - and privileges of parenthood to a new legal parent or parents.
Adoption
Validity
Religious experience
Questionnaire
3. A status that dominates others and thereby determines a person's general position within society.
Liberation theology
Societal-reaction approach
Master status
Rites of passage
4. The ways in which people respond to one another.
Social interaction
Ascribed status
Sociobiology
Content analysis
5. Max Weber's term for objectivity of sociologists in the interpretation of data.
Mass media
Horizontal mobility
Nuclear family
Value neutrality
6. In everyday speech - a person's typical patterns of attitudes - needs - characteristics - and behavior.
Xenocentrism
Social structure
Personality
Social interaction
7. The ordinary and commonplace elements of life - as distinguished from the sacred.
Profane
Personality
Anticipatory socialization
Power
8. The standards of acceptable behavior developed by and for members of a profession.
Patriarchy
Code of ethics
Counterculture
Social control
9. A sociological approach that emphasizes the way that parts of a society are structured to maintain its stability.
Social institutions
Functionalist perspective
Trained incapacity
Crime
10. A social system in which the position of each individual is influenced by his or her achieved status.
Scientific method
Open system
Informal social control
Ethnic group
11. Social control carried out by people casually through such means as laughter - smiles - and ridicule.
Religious experience
Vested interests
Informal social control
Resource mobilization
12. A social position 'assigned' to a person by society without regard for the person's unique talents or characteristics.
Negotiation
Ascribed status
Polyandry
Social interaction
13. Changes in the social position of children relative to their parents.
Second shift
Horizontal mobility
Intergenerational mobility
New urban sociology
14. A variety of research techniques that make use of publicly accessible information and data.
Fertility
Secondary analysis
Morbidity rates
Evolutionary theory
15. Governmental social control.
Norms
Negotiation
Manifest functions
Law
16. The practice of placing students in specific curriculum groups on the basis of test scores and other criteria.
Looking-glass self
Tracking
Slavery
Values
17. A term used by sociologists to refer to any of the full range of socially defined positions within a large group or society.
Status
Gender roles
Evolutionary theory
Contact hypothesis
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.
Vested interests
Defended neighborhood
Bilingualism
Bureaucracy
19. A society whose economic system is primarily engaged in the processing and control of information.
Multilinear evolutionary theory
Obedience
Invention
Postindustrial society
20. Norms governing everyday social behavior whose violation raises comparatively little concern.
Role strain
Population pyramid
Demography
Folkways
21. Collective conceptions of what is considered good - desirable - and proper--or bad - undesirable - and improper--in a culture.
Culture lag
Defended neighborhood
Institutional discrimination
Values
22. The process through which religion's influence on other social institutions diminishes.
Secularization
New religious movement (NRM) or cult
Assimilation
Formal social control
23. Continuing dependence of former colonies on foreign countries.
Operational definition
Neocolonialism
Role strain
Unilinear evolutionary theory
24. Ogburn's term for a period of maladjustment during which the nonmaterial culture is still adapting to new material conditions.
Activity theory
Rites of passage
Culture lag
Bilateral descent
25. The process of making known or sharing the existence of an aspect of reality.
Validity
Discovery
Polygyny
Profane
26. The deliberate - systematic killing of an entire people or nation.
Agrarian society
Tracking
Genocide
Social control
27. An increase in the lowest level of education required to enter a field.
Credentialism
Questionnaire
Symbols
Stratification
28. The ability to exercise one's will over others.
Power
Social science
Triad
Ethnography
29. The process of denying opportunities and equal rights to individuals and groups because of prejudice or other arbitrary reasons.
Informal economy
Serial monogamy
Discrimination
Pluralist model
30. A printed research instrument employed to obtain desired information from a respondent.
Relative poverty
Questionnaire
Total fertility rate (TFR)
Secondary group
31. A term used by C. Wright Mills for a small group of military - industrial - and government leaders who control the fate of the United States.
Sociological imagination
Nuclear family
Power elite
E-commerce
32. The relationship between a condition or variable and a particular consequence - with one event leading to the other.
Subculture
Census
Iron law of oligarchy
Causal logic
33. A component of formal organization in which rules and hierarchical ranking are used to achieve efficiency.
Bilingualism
New urban sociology
Morbidity rates
Bureaucracy
34. A political philosophy promoted by many younger Blacks in the 1960s that supported the creation of Black-controlled political and economic institutions.
Life chances
Sexism
Black power
Scientific management approach
35. Any number of people with similar norms - values - and expectations who interact with one another on a regular basis.
Exploitation theory
Latent functions
Group
Normal accidents
36. A legal strategy based on claims that racial minorities are subjected disproportionately to environmental hazards.
Scientific method
Values
Surveillance function
Environmental justice
37. The belief that one race is supreme and all others are innately inferior.
Exploitation theory
False consciousness
Invention
Racism
38. A systematic - organized series of steps that ensures maximum objectivity and consistency in researching a problem.
Scientific method
Ethnography
Gender roles
Power elite
39. Karl Marx's term for the working class in a capitalist society.
Culture
Sacred
Proletariat
Urban ecology
40. An inclusive term encompassing all of a person's material assets - including land and other types of property.
Relative poverty
Victimless crimes
Wealth
Disengagement theory
41. Transfers of money - goods - or services that are not reported to the government.
Role strain
Questionnaire
Exploitation theory
Informal economy
42. Reductions taken in a company's workforce as part of deindustrialization.
Significant others
Downsizing
Role conflict
Endogamy
43. The denial of opportunities and equal rights to individuals and groups that results from the normal operations of a society.
Dyad
Creationism
Institutional discrimination
Stigma
44. The process of discarding former behavior patterns and accepting new ones as part of a transition in one's life.
Resocialization
Human ecology
Coalition
Incidence
45. 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.
Class consciousness
Closed system
Polygamy
Issei
46. Rebellious craft workers in nineteenth-century England who destroyed new factory machinery as part of their resistance to the industrial revolution.
Homophobia
Luddites
Matrilineal descent
New religious movement (NRM) or cult
47. The German word for 'understanding' or 'insight'; used by Max Weber to stress the need for sociologists to take into account people's emotions - thoughts - beliefs - and attitudes.
Professional criminal
Deviance
Verstehen
Ageism
48. A group small enough for all members to interact simultaneously - that is - to talk with one another or at least be acquainted.
Social interaction
Small group
Expressiveness
Megalopolis
49. Specialized language used by members of a group or subculture.
Argot
Anomie
Politics
Crime
50. The average number of children born alive to a woman - assuming that she conforms to current fertility rates.
Total fertility rate (TFR)
Politics
Cognitive theory of development
Gesellschaft