SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
Sociology
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
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. What all humans share that makes us distinct form other species and does not derive from our social environment.
labeling theory
human nature
dyad
gender socialization
2. The goal of a leader within a group
leadership types
coalititon
find nature nurture debate
status symbols
3. Illegal acts committed by affluent - 'respectable' individuals in the course of business activities
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
4. Power that is illegitimate - that people do not accept as rightly exercised over them
Coercion
tact
social order
institutional means
5. Inmates released from prison to serve the rest of their sentence under supervision in the community
find nature nurture debate
parole
Mead: the self and role taking
mass media
6. Groups' expectations for the norms of boys vs. girls
dyad
Four purposes of punishment
Conflict theory
gender roles
7. Moving people form cities to the edge of the city.
sub urbanization
dyad
deviance
social order
8. Opportunities for crimes that are woven into the texture of life
Illegitimate opportunity structures
leadership styles
social category
social order
9. Social positions earned or obtained
bonding ties
theory of social contract
bridging ties
achieved status
10. You choose to have a government to constrain disruptive individual choices - for an orderly society and benefits provided
tact
Retribution
theory of social contract
social category
11. The people who join together to reach a goal
subsistence economy
secondary groups
sub urbanization
discretion
12. A system of providing goods and services
group cohesion
recidivism
economy
surplus
13. Social unity based on consensus of values and norms or conformity - and dependence on traditional family
Retribution
hunting and gathering
anticipatory socialization
mechanical solidarity
14. A group's usual and customary social arrangements - on which its members depend and on which they base their lives
secondary relationships
social aggregate
social order
leadership types
15. Life through drama or stage 'eyes'
out-groups
three parts of the self
dramaturgy
authoritarion leadership
16. The ability to get your way - even over the resistance of others
dyad
surplus
role exit
power
17. Based on harnessing machines powered by fuel
groupthink
primary deviance
industrial society
role exit
18. Deviance becomes part of one's lifestyle or self-image because the person accepts the label of 'deviant'
master status
out-groups
secondary deviance
4 social revolutions and key inventions
19. Inmates released from prison to serve the rest of their sentence under supervision in the community
total institutions
social structure
in-groups
parole
20. ID - Ego - super ego
three parts of the self
feeling rules
gesellschaft
anticipatory socialization
21. The web of relationships that joins a person to other people and groups
restitution
crime
social order
social networking
22. The people who join together to reach a goal
social revolution
organic solidarity
recidivism
secondary groups
23. The way society sets children onto different courses in their way of life due to male/ female
embarrassment
gender socialization
anomie
status
24. How self is developed in the three stages; imitation stage - play stage - game stage
Mead: the self and role taking
Understand and recognize Solomon Asch's experiment on group conformity
looking glass self
identification
25. Ways in which people express their leadership
tact
leadership styles
bridging ties
expressive leaders
26. Also called 'societal protection' protecting the public by preventing a criminal from doing a crime again either through imprisonment or execution
democratic leadership
feeling rules
Incapacitation
conformity
27. ID - Ego - super ego
sub urbanization
agrarian society
out-groups
three parts of the self
28. The alignment of some members of a group against others
coalititon
status symbols
sub urbanization
service work
29. A) The elite group members make up the laws b) The elite group members structure society so that they have more opportunities than others c) Discretion benefits the elite in all parts of the criminal justice system d) The oppressed must organize to r
Conflict theory
Four purposes of punishment
Rehabilitation
urbanization
30. Exacting moral vengeance by inflicting suffering on an offender comparable to that caused by the offense ('An eye for an eye')
labeling theory
Retribution
group cohesion
emotion work
31. Large movement of people from country to city
the particular other
urbanization
reference groups
The effect of group size: As the group grows larger
32. Where all things are equal. (rights - beliefs ect.)
human nature
dramaturgy
egalitarian
Retribution
33. Leaving a role
discretion
role exit
theories deviance
Deterrence
34. A group with three members
role taking
total institutions
theory of social contract
triad
35. The alignment of some members of a group against others
groupthink
looking glass self
coalititon
mass media
36. Efforts to manage behavior to create a publicly observable and appropriate display of emotion (self control)
studied non-observance
emotion work
peer group
out-groups
37. Group decisions that are made without objective thought
leadership styles
Deterrence
primary groups
groupthink
38. The death penalty
(Merton's) Strain Theory
leadership styles
social loafing
capital punishment
39. Direct contact with clients - customers - patients or students by workers.
economy
The effect of group size: As the group grows larger
parole
service work
40. To much stuff
gemeinschaft
societal transformation
social interaction
surplus
41. Hunting an gathering society - pastoral society - horticultural society - agrarian society - industrial society - post-industrial society
4 social revolutions and key inventions
6 types of societies
networking
role
42. A type of economy where you live off the land
secondary deviance
subsistence economy
Conflict theory
labeling theory
43. An individual adopts the beliefs or actions of a group and makes them his or her own
re-socialization
probation
internalization
a right of passage
44. Based on information services and high technology
secondary relationships
status set
post-industrial society
find nature nurture debate
45. The institutions and processes responsible for enforcing criminal law (e.g. police - courts and correctional system.
societal transformation
Five major tasks of groups (and societies)
social interaction
criminal justice system
46. Impersonal relationships that involve only limited parts of one's personality
social loafing
Differential Association
secondary relationships
social revolution
47. We learn deviance from social ties with a deviant group or subculture
Deterrence
crowd
expressive leaders
Differential Association
48. A self concept based on our perceptions of how others may have judged us
social loafing
primary groups
Rehabilitation
looking glass self
49. Two or more people who interact with one another and identify with one another
social groups
democratic leadership
leader
cultural goal
50. Informal culture taught in school in preparation for later in life
hidden curriculum
White-collar ('occupational') crime
triad
Illegitimate opportunity structures