Solution Manual for Essentials of Sociology A Down-To-Earth Approach, 13th Edition
Preview Extract
Test Bank
For
Essentials of Sociology
Thirteenth Edition
James M. Henslin
Prepared by
Joyce D. Meyer, JCSW, former instructor of sociology, Social Sciences
and Human Services Department, Parkland College, Champaign, Illinois
______________________________________________________________________________
Copyright ยฉ 2019 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the United States of
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ISBN-10: 0134896092
ISBN-13: 9780134896090
CONTENTS
Chapter 1
The Sociological Perspective
1
Chapter 2
Culture
19
Chapter 3
Socialization
38
Chapter 4
Social Structure and Social Interaction
56
Chapter 5
Social Groups and Formal Organizations
74
Chapter 6
Deviance and Social Control
93
Chapter 7
Global Stratification
112
Chapter 8
Social Class in the United States
130
Chapter 9
Race and Ethnicity
149
Chapter 10
Gender and Age
168
Chapter 11
Politics and the Economy
186
Chapter 12
Marriage and Family
204
Chapter 13
Education and Religion
223
Chapter 14
Population and Urbanization
242
Chapter 15
Social Change and the Environment
261
Chapter 1: The Sociological Perspective
Multiple-Choice Questions
TB_Q1.1.1
The __________ perspective emphasizes the social contexts in which people live.
a. societal
b. sociological
c. natural sciences
d. ethnocentric
Answer: b. sociological
Learning Objective: LO 1.1 Explain why both history and biography are essential for the
sociological perspective.
Topic/Concept: The Sociological Perspective
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q1.2.2
__________ is the study of society and human behavior.
a. Positivism
b. Science
c. Psychology
d. Sociology
Answer: d. Sociology
Learning Objective: LO 1.2 Trace the origins of sociology, from tradition to Max Weber.
Topic/Concept: Origins of Sociology
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q1.2.3
__________ is credited as being the founder of sociology.
a. Auguste Comte
b. W. E. B. Du Bois
c. Karl Marx
d. Jane Addams
Answer: a. Auguste Comte
Learning Objective: LO 1.2 Trace the origins of sociology, from tradition to Max Weber.
Topic/Concept: Origins of Sociology
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q1.2.4
Ben is a sociologist applying the scientific method to the social world. Even though his
methods are more modern, as a sociologist he knows that studying the social world in this
way originated with __________.
a. Auguste Rodin
b. Auguste Comte
c. Emile Weber
d. Emile Durkheim
Answer: b. Auguste Comte
Learning Objective: LO 1.2 Trace the origins of sociology, from tradition to Max Weber.
Topic/Concept: Origins of Sociology
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q1.2.5
The __________ uses objective, systematic observations to test theories.
a. naturalistic method
b. commonsense method
c. scientific method
d. research-free technique
Answer: c. scientific method
Learning Objective: LO 1.2 Trace the origins of sociology, from tradition to Max Weber.
Topic/Concept: Origins of Sociology
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.2.6
Karl Marx believed that __________ was the most relevant factor in history.
a. democracy
b. communism
c. reconciliation
d. class conflict
Answer: d. class conflict
Learning Objective: LO 1.2 Trace the origins of sociology, from tradition to Max Weber.
Topic/Concept: Origins of Sociology
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.2.7
Durkheimโs concept of __________ refers to how much people are tied to their social groups.
a. social integration
b. revolution
c. conflict theory
d. religion
Answer: a. social integration
Learning Objective: LO 1.2 Trace the origins of sociology, from tradition to Max Weber.
Topic/Concept: Origins of Sociology
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.2.8
As Durkheim was able to do when he studied suicide, sociologists can __________.
a. prove prior research has been inaccurate
b. predict what is likely to happen based on their research
c. insist on a tenured professorship
d. question authority
Answer: b. predict what is likely to happen based on their research
Learning Objective: LO 1.2 Trace the origins of sociology, from tradition to Max Weber.
Topic/Concept: Origins of Sociology
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.2.9
According to Max Weber, the key factor in society is __________.
a. economics
b. politics
c. religion
d. tradition
Answer: c. religion
Learning Objective: LO 1.2 Trace the origins of sociology, from tradition to Max Weber.
Topic/Concept: Origins of Sociology
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.3.10
When did sociology first take root in the United States?
a. the middle of the eighteenth century
b. the late nineteenth century
c. the middle of the twentieth century
d. the early twenty-first century
Answer: b. the late nineteenth century
Learning Objective: LO 1.3 Trace the development of sociology in North America, and
explain the tension between objective analysis and social reform.
Topic/Concept: Sociology in North America
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q1.3.11
Why do women not figure more prominently among early sociologists?
a. There were no early female sociologists.
b. Once sociology became a recognized academic discipline, men in academic positions
decided that women engaged in social reform were not legitimate sociologists.
c. In no field has sexism been more evident than in sociology.
d. The field of sociology seemed neither rigorous enough nor relevant enough to attract
women.
Answer: b. Once sociology became a recognized academic discipline, men in academic
positions decided that women engaged in social reform were not legitimate sociologists.
Learning Objective: LO 1.3 Trace the development of sociology in North America, and
explain the tension between objective analysis and social reform.
Topic/Concept: Sociology in North America
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.3.12
The work of W. E. B. Du Bois, an African American, __________.
a. was recognized as an important part of the foundations of sociology from the earliest times
b. has been completely ignored until the present
c. was rejected by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP)
d. is recognized as important by contemporary sociologists
Answer: d. is recognized as important by contemporary sociologists
Learning Objective: LO 1.3 Trace the development of sociology in North America, and
explain the tension between objective analysis and social reform.
Topic/Concept: Sociology in North America
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.3.13
W. E. B. Du Bois __________.
a. was primarily a novelist
b. collected and interpreted the work of others rather than making original contributions
c. became a revolutionary Marxist and moved to Ghana
d. had the good fortune to grow up in an era virtually free of racism
Answer: c. became a revolutionary Marxist and moved to Ghana
Learning Objective: LO 1.3 Trace the development of sociology in North America, and
explain the tension between objective analysis and social reform.
Topic/Concept: Sociology in North America
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.3.14
Early sociologist and social reformer Jane Addams __________.
a. fought against the American Civil Liberties Union
b. won the Nobel Peace Prize
c. married W. E. B. Du Bois
d. never joined the American Sociological Society
Answer: b. won the Nobel Peace Prize
Learning Objective: LO 1.3 Trace the development of sociology in North America, and
explain the tension between objective analysis and social reform.
Topic/Concept: Sociology in North America
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.3.15
Talcott Parsons was influential in __________.
a. shifting sociology from reform to theory
b. warning Americans about the power elite
c. developing concrete models for social change
d. shifting sociology from theory to reform
Answer: a. shifting sociology from reform to theory
Learning Objective: LO 1.3 Trace the development of sociology in North America, and
explain the tension between objective analysis and social reform.
Topic/Concept: Sociology in North America
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.3.16
Perhaps ahead of the times, __________ warned of the dangers of the coalescing interests of
the top leaders of business, politics, and the military.
a. Talcott Parsons
b. Ernest Burgess
c. Jane Addams
d. C. Wright Mills
Answer: d. C. Wright Mills
Learning Objective: LO 1.3 Trace the development of sociology in North America, and
explain the tension between objective analysis and social reform.
Topic/Concept: Sociology in North America
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.3.17
Who is the audience for basic sociology?
a. only those who deal with the most intimate policy matters
b. only those who deal with the most intricate policy questions
c. anyone and everyone
d. natural scientists as opposed to social scientists
Answer: c. anyone and everyone
Learning Objective: LO 1.3 Trace the development of sociology in North America, and
explain the tension between objective analysis and social reform.
Topic/Concept: Sociology in North America
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.3.18
Pure sociologists analyze some aspect of society to __________.
a. make changes in the world
b. gain knowledge for its own sake
c. solve problems for the betterment of society
d. get grants for their departments
Answer: b. gain knowledge for its own sake
Learning Objective: LO 1.3 Trace the development of sociology in North America, and
explain the tension between objective analysis and social reform.
Topic/Concept: Sociology in North America
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.3.19
__________ harnesses the sociological perspective for the public good.
a. Basic sociology
b. Experimental sociology
c. Classical sociology
d. Public sociology
Answer: d. Public sociology
Learning Objective: LO 1.3 Trace the development of sociology in North America, and
explain the tension between objective analysis and social reform.
Topic/Concept: Sociology in North America
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.4.20
In __________, symbols are the key to understanding how we look at the world and
communicate with each other.
a. functional analysis
b. symbolic interactionism
c. conflict theory
d. order theory
Answer: b. symbolic interactionism
Learning Objective: LO 1.4 Explain the basic ideas of symbolic interactionism, functional
analysis, and conflict theory.
Topic/Concept: Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.4.21
Applying symbolic interactionism, as divorce became more common, divorce became
__________.
a. more stigmatized
b. a symbol of failure
c. associated with new beginnings
d. a symbol of success
Answer: c. associated with new beginnings
Learning Objective: LO 1.4 Explain the basic ideas of symbolic interactionism, functional
analysis, and conflict theory.
Topic/Concept: Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q1.4.22
Charles was studying symbolic interactionism in his sociology class. Charles was surprised to
find that sociologists who take this viewpoint think that having love as the central reason for
people to get married __________.
a. prevents spouses from blaming each other
b. actually may cause a weakening of the marriage
c. makes divorce all but impossible
d. actually may cause a strengthening of the marriage
Answer: b. actually may cause a weakening of the marriage
Learning Objective: LO 1.4 Explain the basic ideas of symbolic interactionism, functional
analysis, and conflict theory.
Topic/Concept: Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q1.4.23
Robert Merton would say negative results of peopleโs actions are __________.
a. functions
b. dysfunctions
c. latent functions
d. balancing functions
Answer: b. dysfunctions
Learning Objective: LO 1.4 Explain the basic ideas of symbolic interactionism, functional
analysis, and conflict theory.
Topic/Concept: Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.4.24
__________ operates at the microsociological level.
a. Symbolic interactionism
b. Functional analysis
c. Anthropology
d. Conflict theory
Answer: a. Symbolic interactionism
Learning Objective: LO 1.4 Explain the basic ideas of symbolic interactionism, functional
analysis, and conflict theory.
Topic/Concept: Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.4.25
In __________, the focus is on the struggle for scarce resources by different groups in
society.
a. functional analysis
b. classical sociology
c. conflict theory
d. symbolic interactionism
Answer: c. conflict theory
Learning Objective: LO 1.4 Explain the basic ideas of symbolic interactionism, functional
analysis, and conflict theory.
Topic/Concept: Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.5.26
Common sense __________.
a. is never true
b. has always been false
c. may or may not be true
d. has finally caught up with sociology
Answer: c. may or may not be true
Learning Objective: LO 1.5 Explain why common sense canโt replace sociological research.
Topic/Concept: Doing Sociological Research
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q1.6.27
What is the first step in the research model?
a. reviewing the literature
b. sharing the results
c. beginning the case study
d. choosing the subject matter
Answer: d. choosing the subject matter
Learning Objective: LO 1.6 Know the eight steps of the research model.
Topic/Concept: A Research Model
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.6.28
A(n) __________ predicts a relationship between or among variables.
a. research design
b. literature review
c. hypothesis
d. aggregate
Answer: c. hypothesis
Learning Objective: LO 1.6 Know the eight steps of the research model.
Topic/Concept: A Research Model
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q1.6.29
Sharon had spent months carrying out her sociological experiments. She had collected a ton
of data. What was Sharonโs next step?
a. Analyze the results.
b. Generate more hypotheses.
c. Select another topic.
d. Share the results.
Answer: a. Analyze the results.
Learning Objective: LO 1.6 Know the eight steps of the research model.
Topic/Concept: A Research Model
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q1.6.30
__________ is a precise way to measure a variable.
a. Reliability
b. Validity
c. The hypothesis
d. An operational definition
Answer: d. An operational definition
Learning Objective: LO 1.6 Know the eight steps of the research model.
Topic/Concept: A Research Model
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q1.7.31
Which of the following is a research method?
a. ensuring validity
b. operationalizing the definition
c. divining an answer
d. using unobtrusive measures
Answer: d. using unobtrusive measures
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.7.32
__________ is the extent to which an operational definition measures what it is intended to
measure.
a. A variable
b. Validity
c. Hypothesis
d. Reliability
Answer: b. Validity
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q1.7.33
Reliability refers to __________.
a. consistency of results
b. secondary analysis
c. how close the data we gathered comes to proving what we want to prove
d. the way in which a researcher measures a variable
Answer: a. consistency of results
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.7.34
The __________ is made up of people who are in the portion of the population being studied.
a. sample
b. control group
c. respondent
d. average
Answer: a. sample
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.7.35
When you select a sample for a sociological study, your aim is to get __________.
a. everyone in the population
b. your friends to be the sample
c. a representative sample
d. a different individual to answer each item on the questionnaire
Answer: c. a representative sample
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.7.36
In a __________, everyone in the target population has the same chance of being included in
the study.
a. stratified random sample
b. random sample
c. sample of any sort
d. survey
Answer: b. random sample
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q1.7.37
__________ are the people who respond to a survey.
a. Researchers
b. Respondents
c. Interviewers
d. Populations
Answer: b. Respondents
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q1.7.38
Which of the following is an example of an open-ended question?
a. Should public officials who accept bribes be jailed?
b. In your opinion, should public officials who accept bribes be required to perform
community service?
c. Should public officials who have been convicted for accepting bribes be registered in a
public list in the same manner that sex offenders are registered?
d. What do you think should be done to a public official who accepts bribes?
Answer: d. What do you think should be done to a public official who accepts bribes?
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q1.7.39
To get people to answer in their own words, interviewers often use __________ questions.
a. structured
b. controlled
c. open-ended
d. closed-ended
Answer: c. open-ended
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.7.40
Survey questions that provide options for answers are considered __________.
a. closed-ended questions
b. unstructured
c. open-ended questions
d. unfair
Answer: a. closed-ended questions
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.7.41
It is difficult to __________ from participant observation research.
a. generalize
b. establish rapport
c. understand alternative lifestyles
d. get a feel for the real life of the respondents
Answer: a. generalize
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.7.42
In secondary analysis, researchers analyze data collected by __________.
a. artificial intelligence
b. their own interviews
c. others
d. the subjects themselves
Answer: c. others
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q1.7.43
The subjects exposed to an independent variable in an experiment are in the __________.
a. experimental group
b. population
c. sources of potential bias
d. control group
Answer: a. experimental group
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.7.44
The independent variable causes a change in the __________.
a. control group
b. dependent variable
c. other independent variables in the study
d. generalizability of the experiment
Answer: b. dependent variable
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.7.45
__________ means that two or more variables are present together.
a. Control group
b. An unobtrusive measure
c. Correlation
d. Secondary analysis
Answer: c. Correlation
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.7.46
The best method of sociological research to use __________.
a. is a survey
b. depends on the type of question
c. is an experiment
d. is document analysis
Answer: b. depends on the type of question
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.8.47
In sociological research, gender __________.
a. plays no role
b. excludes female subjects from most contemporary social research
c. bias must be guarded against
d. always leads to interviewer bias
Answer: c. bias must be guarded against
Learning Objective: LO 1.8 Explain how gender is significant in sociological research.
Topic/Concept: Gender in Sociological Research
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.9.48
Plagiarism in sociological research __________.
a. is acceptable in controlled experimental studies
b. is probably unavoidable
c. violates research ethics
d. is acceptable in document studies
Answer: c. violates research ethics
Learning Objective: LO 1.9 Explain why it is vital for sociologists to protect the people they
study and discuss the two cases that are presented.
Topic/Concept: Ethics in Sociological Research
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.9.49
Professional handling of confidential sociological field notes entails __________.
a. publishing them only in professional journals
b. burning the notes once the researcher has had time to draw conclusions from them
c. publishing them online, so that anyone can read them
d. protecting respondents
Answer: d. protecting respondents
Learning Objective: LO 1.9 Explain why it is vital for sociologists to protect the people they
study and discuss the two cases that are presented.
Topic/Concept: Ethics in Sociological Research
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q1.10.50
Technological breakthroughs have enabled people to communicate, trade, and travel much
more freely; the resultant erosion of what were once more impermeable national boundaries
is known as __________.
a. conflict theory
b. globalization
c. social understanding
d. focusing on the macro level
Answer: b. globalization
Learning Objective: LO 1.10 Explain how research versus social reform and globalization are
likely to influence sociology.
Topic/Concept: Trends Shaping the Future of Sociology
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Essay Questions
TB_Q1.2.51: Very broadly, where did Weber believe that capitalism was more likely to
flourish?
Feedback: Max Weber believed that religion was the main force in social change. He thought
that Roman Catholicism encouraged followers to hold on to traditional ways. He also
believed the Protestant belief system encouraged change. Weber compared the extent of
capitalism in Roman Catholic and Protestant countries and found capitalism more advanced
in the latter.
Learning Objective: LO 1.2 Trace the origins of sociology, from tradition to Max Weber.
Topic/Concept: Origins of Sociology
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.3.52: Describe the three historical phases of sociology.
Feedback: A tension between social reform and social analysis runs through sociologyโs
history. First phase: main purposeโto improve society; timeโorigins until the 1920s.
Second phase: main purposeโto develop abstract knowledge; timeโfrom the 1920s until the
1960s. Third phase: main purposeโto seek ways to apply sociological research findings;
timeโfrom the 1960s to the present.
Learning Objective: LO 1.3 Trace the development of sociology in North
America, and explain the tension between objective analysis and social reform.
Topic/Concept: Sociology in North America
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.4.53: Discuss feminists and conflict theory.
Feedback: Marx used conflict theory to examine conflict between capitalists and workers.
Many feminists look at conflict between men and women in the same way: historical
inequalities, contemporary inequalities, global inequalities. Not all feminists employ conflict
theory.
Learning Objective: LO 1.4 Explain the basic ideas of symbolic interactionism, functional
analysis, and conflict theory.
Topic/Concept: Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.6.54: What are the eight steps of the research model?
Feedback: The eight steps of the research model (in chronological order) are
1.
Select a topic.
2.
Define the problem.
3.
Review the literature.
4.
Formulate a hypothesis.
5.
Choose a research method.
6.
Collect the data.
7.
Analyze the results.
8.
Share the results.
Learning Objective: LO 1.6 Know the eight steps of the research model.
Topic/Concept: A Research Model
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q1.7.55: What are the three necessary conditions for causation?
Feedback: The three necessary conditions necessary to establish causation are
1.
Correlation
2.
Temporal priority
3.
No spurious correlation
Learning Objective: LO 1.7 Know the main elements of the seven research methods.
Topic/Concept: Research Methods (Designs)
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
Chapter 2: Culture
Multiple-Choice Questions
TB_Q2.1.1
The language, beliefs, values, norms, behaviors, and objects passed from one generation to
the next make up a groupโs __________.
a. identity
b. ethnocentrism
c. culture
d. material culture
Answer: c. culture
Learning Objective: LO 2.1 Explain what culture is, how culture provides orientations to life,
and what practicing cultural relativism means.
Topic/Concept: What Is Culture?
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q2.1.2
__________ would be part of material culture.
a. Hairstyles
b. Language
c. Beliefs
d. Values
Answer: a. Hairstyles
Learning Objective: LO 2.1 Explain what culture is, how culture provides orientations to life,
and what practicing cultural relativism means.
Topic/Concept: What Is Culture?
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.1.3
Nonmaterial culture refers to a groupโs __________.
a. art
b. weapons
c. ways of thinking and doing
d. eating utensils
Answer: c. ways of thinking and doing
Learning Objective: LO 2.1 Explain what culture is, how culture provides orientations to life,
and what practicing cultural relativism means.
Topic/Concept: What Is Culture?
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.1.4
One thing that can be said about material culture is that __________.
a. it is โnaturalโ
b. it includes gestures
c. it includes a peopleโs language
d. there is nothing โnaturalโ about it
Answer: d. there is nothing โnaturalโ about it
Learning Objective: LO 2.1 Explain what culture is, how culture provides orientations to life,
and what practicing cultural relativism means.
Topic/Concept: What Is Culture?
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.1.5
Who is ethnocentric?
a. everyone
b. westerners over 50, but not under 50
c. just those easterners who live in the Carolinas
d. older people only
Answer: a. Everyone
Learning Objective: LO 2.1 Explain what culture is, how culture provides orientations to life,
and what practicing cultural relativism means.
Topic/Concept: What Is Culture?
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.1.6
To try to understand a culture on its own terms is called __________.
a. ethnocentrism
b. cultural relativism
c. folklore
d. cultural education
Answer: b. cultural relativism
Learning Objective: LO 2.1 Explain what culture is, how culture provides orientations to life,
and what practicing cultural relativism means.
Topic/Concept: What Is Culture?
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q2.1.7
Which of the following statements about cultural relativism is true?
a. It has not been criticized by social scientists.
b. Cultural relativism has come under attack because it can lead to acceptance of practices
like genital cutting and wife beating.
c. Sociologists accept all cultures, without judgment.
d. Cultural relativism encourages cultural smugness.
Answer: b. Cultural relativism has come under attack because it can lead to acceptance of
practices like genital cutting and wife beating.
Learning Objective: LO 2.1 Explain what culture is, how culture provides orientations to life,
and what practicing cultural relativism means.
Topic/Concept: What Is Culture?
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.1.8
After a fairly short plane ride from New York City, Irving found himself on a dusty road with
goats, chickens, and motor scooters rather than cars. Food, clothing, and carpets were being
sold by street vendors, some of whom worked from a cloth spread on the ground, in no order
that he could recognize. Irving was likely experiencing __________.
a. ethnocentrism
b. culture shock
c. a step back into history
d. contact with people who shared none of his values
Answer: b. culture shock
Learning Objective: LO 2.1 Explain what culture is, how culture provides orientations to life,
and what practicing cultural relativism means.
Topic/Concept: What Is Culture?
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q2.2.9
Another term for nonmaterial culture that sociologists use is __________.
a. material culture
b. symbolic culture
c. gestural culture
d. culture shock
Answer: b. symbolic culture
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.2.10
An advantage of knowing a cultureโs gestures is __________.
a. they are closely tied to the language
b. that although most gestures are recognized as universal, differences occasionally occur
between cultures
c. being able to communicate with simplicity
d. that they will enable you to completely understand the culture
Answer: c. being able to communicate with simplicity
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.2.11
The main way people communicate is through __________.
a. gestures
b. intermarriage
c. language
d. artwork
Answer: c. language
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.2.12
The basis of culture is __________.
a. customs
b. heredity
c. language
d. sociology
Answer: c. language
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.2.13
The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis states that __________.
a. languages are universal
b. some languages, such as English, are superior to others
c. perception and language are unrelated
d. language has ways of looking at the world embedded within it
Answer: d. language has ways of looking at the world embedded within it
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.2.14
Peopleโs __________ have to do with what they think is appropriate in life.
a. values
b. mores
c. taboos
d. folkways
Answer: a: values
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.2.15
A term for rules of behavior is __________.
a. culture
b. norms
c. moral holidays
d. sanctions
Answer: b. norms
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q2.2.16
When you break norms, you receive __________.
a. positive sanctions
b. a day in class
c. negative sanctions
d. hugs and kisses
Answer: c. negative sanctions
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q2.2.17
Paul loved to party at Mardi Gras, even if he was not involved in making a float or anything
else. The atmosphere on the street was just so different, so easy. He had a great time. At such
a __________, the rules were loosened.
a. culture-free event
b. police-free event
c. free-for-all
d. moral holiday
Answer: d. moral holiday
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q2.2.18
When someone is jogging on the left side of the sidewalk and you, running faster, overtake
that person on his or her right, this runs counter to a __________ in the United States.
a. taboo
b. more
c. tradition
d. folkway
Answer: d. a folkway
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q2.2.19
If you kill another person, you have violated a societyโs __________.
a. mores
b. incidental values
c. folkways
d. ethnocentrism
Answer: a. mores
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q2.2.20
Even just the thought of the violation of a __________ fills us with revulsion.
a. taboo
b. more
c. parking regulation
d. folkway
Answer: a. taboo
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.3.21
A distinct world within the overarching culture is a __________.
a. superculture
b. subculture
c. miniculture
d. monoculture
Answer: b. subculture.
Learning Objective: LO 2.3 Distinguish between subcultures and countercultures.
Topic/Concept: Many Cultural Worlds
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.3.22
How many subcultures does U.S. society contain?
a. five
b. almost ninety
c. hundreds
d. thousands
Answer: d. thousands
Learning Objective: LO 2.3 Distinguish between subcultures and countercultures.
Topic/Concept: Many Cultural Worlds
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q2.3.23
Some of the values and norms of a __________ place it at odds with the dominant culture.
a. subculture
b. core culture
c. counterculture
d. sociologistsโ group
Answer: c. counterculture
Learning Objective: LO 2.3 Distinguish between subcultures and countercultures.
Topic/Concept: Many Cultural Worlds
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.3.24
Harold got up early and cleaned and polished his motorcycle, while Fabienne packed a picnic
lunch. Their destination was a park on a lake about 50 miles away, where they would meet
some friends who also liked to ride motorcycles on weekends. They soon got underway,
driving safely on the highway at the speed limit and enjoying the trip while they listened to
National Public Radio.
About halfway to their destination, Harold and Fabienne were overtaken by a
speeding clump of about 10 motorcycles ridden by people with swastikas on the backs of
their jackets. Several of the group appeared to be completely nude under their jackets, which
was legal in their state due to an anachronistic law that said you could not disrobe outdoors,
but that did not address the situation where you were already disrobed when you arrived
outdoors.
In all likelihood, Harold and Fabienne could be termed members of a motorcycleenthusiast __________, and the cyclists who passed them could be termed members of a
motorcycle-enthusiast __________.
a. culture; subculture
b. subculture; counterculture
c. subculture; culture
d. counterculture; subculture
Answer: b. subculture; counterculture
Learning Objective: LO 2.3 Distinguish between subcultures and countercultures.
Topic/Concept: Many Cultural Worlds
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q2.4.25
A society made up of many different groups is called a(n) __________.
a. pluralistic society
b. fragmented society
c. anachronous society
d. ungovernable aggravation
Answer: a. pluralistic society
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q2.4.26
Sociologists call the values held by most of the groups in a society __________.
a. core values
b. taboos
c. habitual values
d. universal values
Answer: a. core values
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.4.27
The core value of education has __________.
a. been easily pursued in the United States because college students are uninhibited
b. changed to the point where nowadays a college education is thought to be a reasonable aim
for most students in the United States
c. not been held by most Americans since the 1960s
d. changed over the years, until today a college education is considered an appropriate goal
only for a small number of Americans
Answer: b. changed to the point where nowadays a college education is thought to be a
reasonable aim for most students in the United States
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.4.28
Most Americans feel that the only proper basis for marriage is __________.
a. parental approval
b. economics
c. mutual respect
d. romantic love
Answer: d. romantic love
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.4.29
โIn God We Trustโ appears on money in the United States. This reflects the core value of
__________.
a. group superiority
b. religiosity
c. education
d. freedom
Answer: b. religiosity
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q2.4.30
If you study hard to get a degree so you can get a good job and afford a nice home and car,
you could be said to be bound up in __________.
a. a confused approach to life
b. a value contradiction
c. a value cluster pertaining to success
d. the value of democracy
Answer: c. a value cluster pertaining to success
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q2.4.31
A __________ exists between the value of group superiority and the values of freedom,
democracy, and equality.
a. continuity
b. folkway
c. taboo
d. value contradiction
Answer: d. value contradiction
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.4.32
Which statement about the origin of values is true?
a. Essentially, values โjust happen.โ
b. Values are unrelated to context in society.
c. Values emerge out of the conditions that exist in a society.
d. Individuals invent their own values.
Answer: c. Values emerge out of the conditions that exist in a society.
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.4.33
Values are like lenses through which we see the world __________.
a. in a nutshell
b. as it ought to be
c. with great clarity
d. like it is
Answer: b. as it ought to be
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q2.4.34
The __________ culture refers to the values, norms, and goals that a group considers worth
aiming for.
a. real
b. concrete
c. ideal
d. fantasy
Answer: c. ideal
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q2.4.35
The human potential movement exemplifies the emerging __________ value.
a. self-fulfillment
b. aging population
c. leisure
d. acceptance
Answer: a. self-fulfillment
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.4.36
The term โreal cultureโ refers to __________.
a. the norms and values that people aspire to follow
b. historical culture
c. universal culture
d. the norms and values that people actually follow
Answer: d. the norms and values that people actually follow
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.5.37
__________ refer(s) to values, norms, or other cultural traits found everywhere.
a. Cultural universals
b. Global culture
c. Natural selection
d. Folkways
Answer: a. Cultural universals
Learning Objective: LO 2.5 Explain what cultural universals are and why they do not seem to
exist.
Topic/Concept: Cultural Universals
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q2.5.38
Which statement about incest is true?
a. No society permits general incest for all its members.
b. All societies agree on what incest is.
c. The marriage of brothers and sisters is forbidden by all societies.
d. The marriage of fathers and daughters is forbidden by all societies.
Answer: a. No society permits general incest for all its members.
Learning Objective: LO 2.5 Explain what cultural universals are and why they do not seem to
exist.
Topic/Concept: Cultural Universals
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.6.39
Sociobiologists believe that __________.
a. biology is a basic cause of human behavior
b. the key to human behavior is culture
c. as a result of natural selection, biology no longer plays a role in human behavior
d. the key to human behavior is religion
Answer: a. biology is a basic cause of human behavior
Learning Objective: LO 2.6 Explain why most sociobiologists consider genes to be an
inadequate explanation of human behavior.
Topic/Concept: Sociobiology and Human Behavior
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB Q2.6.40
__________ said that sociobiology will eventually absorb sociology.
a. Charles Darwin
b. Edward Wilson
c. William Ogburn
d. Benjamin Whorf
Answer: b. Edward Wilson
Learning Objective: LO 2.6 Explain why most sociobiologists consider genes to be an
inadequate explanation of human behavior.
Topic/Concept: Sociobiology and Human Behavior
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q2.6.41
Sociobiology emphasizes __________.
a. the influence of genes on human behavior
b. classical sociology
c. conflict theory
d. sociologically informed genetics
Answer: a. the influence of genes on human behavior
Learning Objective: LO 2.6 Explain why most sociobiologists consider genes to be an
inadequate explanation of human behavior.
Topic/Concept: Sociobiology and Human Behavior
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.7.42
Basically, technology is associated with __________.
a. culture
b. history
c. tools
d. sociology
Answer: c. tools
Learning Objective: LO 2.7 Explain how technology changes culture and what cultural lag
and cultural leveling are.
Topic/Concept: Technology in the Global Village
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.7.43
The term โnew technologyโ refers to __________.
a. anything invented in the last five years
b. emerging technology that impacts social life in a major way
c. twenty-first-century technology
d. an established technology that has changed the course of history
Answer: b. emerging technology that impacts social life in a major way
Learning Objective: LO 2.7 Explain how technology changes culture and what cultural lag
and cultural leveling are.
Topic/Concept: Technology in the Global Village
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.7.44
Cultural diffusion is a __________.
a. group of people adopting things they find desirable from another culture
b. one-way โstreetโ from the West to other parts of the world
c. change in โthinkingโ but not โdoingโ
d. distraction from technology
Answer: a. a group of people adopting things they find desirable from another culture
Learning Objective: LO 2.7 Explain how technology changes culture and what cultural lag
and cultural leveling are.
Topic/Concept: Technology in the Global Village
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.7.45
__________ refers to one part of a culture changing while other parts remain behind.
a. Cultural reluctance
b. Cultural lag
c. Ethnocentrism
d. Culture shock
Answer: b. Cultural lag
Learning Objective: LO 2.7 Explain how technology changes culture and what cultural lag
and cultural leveling are.
Topic/Concept: Technology in the Global Village
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
TB_Q2.7.46
When there is culture change, a groupโs __________ usually changes first.
a. material culture
b. sociobiology
c. nonmaterial culture
d. counterculture
Answer: a. material culture
Learning Objective: LO 2.7 Explain how technology changes culture and what cultural lag
and cultural leveling are.
Topic/Concept: Technology in the Global Village
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.7.47
How is our nine-month school year a living example of cultural lag?
a. Material culture never caught up with nonmaterial culture.
b. The length of the school year was determined by the farming culture of the late 1800s.
c. The school year was not lengthened to nine months until the mid-1900s.
d. The length of the school year was based on one-room schools, which have all but vanished.
Answer: b. The length of the school year was determined by the farming culture of the late
1800s.
Learning Objective: LO 2.7 Explain how technology changes culture and what cultural lag
and cultural leveling are.
Topic/Concept: Technology in the Global Village
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Apply What You Know
TB_Q2.7.48
What is the concern about artificial intelligence?
a. It is science fiction.
b. It may enable computers to replace human culture.
c. It seems too good to be true.
d. It is an extension of Google Glass.
Answer: c. It may enable computers to replace human culture.
Learning Objective: LO 2.7 Explain how technology changes culture and what cultural lag
and cultural leveling are.
Topic/Concept: Technology in the Global Village
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.7.49
In cultural leveling, __________.
a. cultures become more and more dissimilar to one another
b. the least advanced culture dominates
c. culture is leveled or destroyed, as in a blast
d. cultures become more and more similar to one another
Answer: d. cultures become more and more similar to one another
Learning Objective: LO 2.7 Explain how technology changes culture and what cultural lag
and cultural leveling are.
Topic/Concept: Technology in the Global Village
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
TB_Q2.7.50
It would be fair to say that in the cultural leveling process taking place today, __________.
a. traditional cultures have all but disappeared
b. certain qualities are lost forever
c. sociobiology is at work
d. we are producing a more distinctive, less bland way of life
Answer: b. certain qualities are lost forever
Learning Objective: LO 2.7 Explain how technology changes culture and what cultural lag
and cultural leveling are.
Topic/Concept: Technology in the Global Village
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
Essay Questions
TB_Q2.1.51: What are the positive and negative sides of ethnocentrism?
Feedback: PositiveโEthnocentrism creates in-group loyalties. NegativeโEthnocentrism can
lead to discrimination against people whose ways differ from our own.
Learning Objective: LO 2.1 Explain what culture is, how culture provides orientations to life,
and what practicing cultural relativism means.
Topic/Concept: What Is Culture?
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.2.52: Give at least three effects of language on human life.
Feedback: Any three of these five effects: Language allows human experience to be
cumulative. It provides a social or shared past. It provides a social or shared future. It allows
shared perspectives. It allows shared, goal-directed behavior.
Learning Objective: LO 2.2 Know the components of symbolic culture: gestures, language,
values, norms, sanctions, folkways, mores, and taboos; also explain the Sapir-Whorf
hypothesis.
Topic/Concept: Components of Symbolic Culture
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.4.53: List at least five core values of U.S. society.
Feedback: Any five: achievement and success; individualism; hard work; efficiency and
practicality; science and technology; material comfort; freedom; democracy; equality; group
superiority; education; religiosity; romantic love
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.4.54: Identify four interrelated core values emerging as a value cluster in the United
States today.
Feedback: The four interrelated core values emerging in the United States today are leisure,
self-fulfillment, physical fitness, and youthfulness.
Learning Objective: LO 2.4 Discuss the major U.S. values and explain value clusters, value
contradictions, value clashes, how values are lenses of perception, and ideal versus real
culture.
Topic/Concept: Values in U.S. Society
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
TB_Q2.7.55: What is the sociological significance of technology?
Feedback: Technology sets the framework for a groupโs nonmaterial culture. It influences
how people think and how people relate to one another. An example is in gender relations,
where the tradition of men dominating women is being challenged.
Learning Objective: LO 2.7 Explain how technology changes culture and what cultural lag
and cultural leveling are.
Topic/Concept: Technology in the Global Village
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Analyze It
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