Preview Extract
Chapter 2: The Family in History
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Humansโ increased longevity over time is largely the result of:
A. genetic changes.
C. standard of living.
B. government policy.
D. education.
ANS: C
DIF: Easy
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Identify four broad historical trends that have changed the character of American
family life.
MSC: Remembering
2. Families began having fewer children in the nineteenth century. Which of the following was NOT a
contributor to this change?
A. widely available information about birth control
B. couples wanted fewer children
C. decreased infant death rate
D. couples learned how to prevent pregnancy
ANS: A
DIF: Medium
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Identify four broad historical trends that have changed the character of American
family life.
MSC: Understanding
3. Which of the following is NOT an important broad historic trend impacting the character of American
family life?
A. increased longevity
B. families performing more functional tasks at home
C. decreased family size
D. decline of the two-parent nuclear family
ANS: B
DIF: Medium
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Identify four broad historical trends that have changed the character of American
family life.
MSC: Remembering
4. Archaeologistsโ discovery of Stone Age family burials in Europe was sociologically significant for all
of the following reasons EXCEPT:
A. one family is the oldest-known DNA-confirmed nuclear family.
B. ancient people acknowledged a variety of family forms.
C. their remains contain bones broken by weapons.
D. family memberships were considered eternal.
ANS: C
DIF: Medium
REF: Early History
OBJ: Describe the significance of archaeological findings about prehistoric families on sociologistsโ
understanding of family arrangements throughout human history.
MSC: Evaluating
5. The pervasive element of European and American society in which men controlled all property and
had control over women and children is called:
A. sexism.
C. patriarchy.
B. matriarchy.
D. traditional society.
ANS: C
DIF: Easy
REF: Early History
OBJ: Evaluate the long-term impact of historical oppression on family life for women, African
Americans, American Indians, and other immigrant groups.
MSC: Remembering
6. Respect for elders, reliance on extended family networks, and matrilineal descent are characteristics of
which Early American groups?
A. Native Americans
C. European colonists
B. African Americans
D. Asian Americans
ANS: A
DIF: Easy
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Evaluate the long-term impact of historical oppression on family life for women, African
Americans, American Indians, and other immigrant groups.
MSC: Remembering
7. A type of family in which people are considered descendants of their mothers is called:
A. matriarchal
C. feminist
B. matrilineal
D. polygamous
ANS: B
DIF: Easy
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Evaluate the long-term impact of historical oppression on family life for women, African
Americans, American Indians, and other immigrant groups.
MSC: Remembering
8. In what way was the ideology of patriarchy reinforced by Protestant doctrine?
A. Protestant doctrine emphasized obedience to authority.
B. Marriage was modeled after Old Testament patriarchs.
C. Husbands were commanded by God to protect their wives.
D. The idea of free choice in marriage reflected the idea of a personโs relationship with God.
ANS: D
DIF: Difficult
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Understand the influence of the Christian church on the development of norms of family
life in the United States.
MSC: Evaluating
9. Which of the following represents the distant role of government in family matters during colonial
times?
A. Christian doctrine in family matters
C. heterogamy
B. stem family
D. dowry
ANS: A
DIF: Difficult
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Understand the historical role of government in defining family morality and supporting
disadvantaged families.
MSC: Analyzing
10. Colonial children were not considered innocent and were controlled through strict discipline and hard
work, due primarily to which social force?
A. economic necessity
C. poor health
B. religious belief
D. poor education
ANS: B
DIF: Medium
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Analyze the changing cultural meaning assigned to childhood, including scientific and religious
beliefs about parenting strategies.
MSC: Evaluating
11. Most colonial households were made up of:
A. nuclear families.
B. extended families.
C. fictive kin.
D. companionate marriages.
ANS: A
DIF: Easy
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Understand the evolving role of extended family and kinship networks
through U.S. history.
MSC: Remembering
12. Most African American slave children lived with:
A. grandparents.
C. one parent.
B. unrelated adults.
D. both parents.
ANS: D
DIF: Easy
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Evaluate the long-term impact of historical oppression on family life for women, African
Americans, American Indians, and other immigrant groups.
MSC: Remembering
13. It is difficult for sociologists and historians to know which parts of slave family life were African
traditions because:
A. no records were kept.
B. language and customs were suppressed.
C. this part of slave history has not been studied.
D. customs and traditions varied widely among slaves.
ANS: B
DIF: Medium
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Evaluate the long-term impact of historical oppression on family life for women, African
Americans, American Indians, and other immigrant groups.
MSC: Understanding
14. Industrialization in the United States contributed to the development of all of the following ideals
EXCEPT:
A. independence.
C. secularism.
B. separate spheres.
D. free choice.
ANS: C
DIF: Easy
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Describe the effects of the Industrial Revolution on family structure, household gender
roles, and the development of separate spheres.
MSC: Analyzing
15. As mate selection became less a matter of economics and status and more an emotional endeavor,
young people began the practice of:
A. arranged marriage.
C. cohabitation.
B. dating.
D. courtship.
ANS: D
DIF: Easy
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Evaluate the role of macro-level social forces on courtship practices during the colonial,
pre-modern, and modern periods of U.S. history.
MSC: Understanding
16. During the nineteenth century, the social construction of childhood developed in all of the following
ways EXCEPT:
A. childhood happiness was considered.
B. emotional bonds with parents were acceptable.
C. children were seen as fundamentally innocent.
D. conformity was emphasized.
ANS: D
DIF: Easy
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Analyze the changing cultural meaning assigned to childhood, including scientific and religious
beliefs about parenting strategies.
MSC: Understanding
17. The ideology that dictates that women are naturally ideal for homemaking is known as:
A. industrialization.
C. wage gap.
B. separate spheres.
D. monogamy.
ANS: B
DIF: Easy
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Describe the effects of the Industrial Revolution on family structure, household gender
roles, and the development of separate spheres.
MSC: Remembering
18. Government involvement in family life increased in the nineteenth century in all of the following ways
EXCEPT:
A. imposing Christian standards on American Indians.
B. outlawing divorce.
C. defining marriage as monogamous.
D. defining only men as real citizens.
ANS: B
DIF: Medium
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Understand the historical role of government in defining family morality and supporting
disadvantaged families.
MSC: Analyzing
19. In a male-dominated wage economy, orphans and widows were commonly:
A. cared for by extended families.
C. taken in by churches.
B. aided by an emerging welfare system.
D. homeless.
ANS: B
DIF: Easy
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Understand the historical role of government in defining family morality and supporting
disadvantaged families.
MSC: Remembering
20. African American families in the late nineteenth century had which of the following qualities?
A. greater gender equality
C. weaker extended family networks
B. stronger marriages
D. no legal recognition
ANS: A
DIF: Medium
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Evaluate the long-term impact of historical oppression on family life for women, African
Americans, American Indians, and other immigrant groups.
MSC: Understanding
21. The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 cut off new immigration from China, which resulted in:
A. unmarried Chinese men.
C. discrimination against Chinese.
B. split-household families.
D. poverty among the Chinese.
ANS: A
DIF: Easy
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Evaluate the long-term impact of historical oppression on family life for women, African
Americans, American Indians, and other immigrant groups.
MSC: Remembering
22. In the late 1800s, long periods of family separation for Latinos and Chinese immigrants contributed to
a culture of:
A. poverty.
C. familism.
B. strong religious belief.
D. divorce.
ANS: C
DIF: Medium
REF: Origins of the American Family
OBJ: Evaluate the long-term impact of historical oppression on family life for women, African
Americans, American Indians, and other immigrant groups.
MSC: Evaluating
23. The idealized โtraditionalโ nuclear family, consisting of male breadwinner and female homemaker,
was the most common arrangement:
A. throughout American history, until the 1970s.
B. beginning in the mid-twentieth century.
C. for all demographic groups.
D. only during colonial times.
ANS: B
DIF: Easy
REF: The Modern Family
OBJ: Distinguish between the idealized โtraditionalโ nuclear family and the historical reality for
American families. MSC: Remembering
24. In the early 1900s, the reasons for marriage began to change. This cultural shift is known as:
A. โreligious to personal.โ
C. โinstitution to companionship.โ
B. โeconomic to romantic.โ
D. โendogamy to exogamy.โ
ANS: C
DIF: Easy
REF: The Modern Family
OBJ: Understand the reasons that the basis for marriage has transitioned over time from economic to
emotional, and the outcomes of this transition.
MSC: Understanding
25. An extended family, guided by the authority of the father and functioning based on economic needs,
would be considered a:
A. patriarchal family.
C. practical family.
B. companionship family.
D. traditional family.
ANS: A
DIF: Medium
REF: The Modern Family
OBJ: Understand the reasons that the basis for marriage has transitioned over time from economic to
emotional, and the outcomes of this transition.
MSC: Analyzing
26. A family consisting of two parents and their children, whose priorities are personal fulfillment and
common affection, would be considered a:
A. modern family.
C. traditional family.
B. companionship family.
D. patriarchal family.
ANS: B
DIF: Medium
REF: The Modern Family
OBJ: Understand the reasons that the basis for marriage has transitioned over time from economic to
emotional, and the outcomes of this transition.
MSC: Analyzing
27. For what reasons did companionate marriage appeal to many men in growing white-collar industries?
A. for the benefits of dual incomes
B. economic benefits of fewer children
C. practical support of having a homemaker
D. as a remedy for alienation in the workplace
ANS: D
DIF: Medium
REF: The Modern Family
OBJ: Understand the reasons that the basis for marriage has transitioned over time from economic to
emotional, and the outcomes of this transition.
MSC: Analyzing
28. The 1950s brought increased motivation for young people to marry, as the result of all of the following
social forces EXCEPT:
A. government incentive.
C. cultural shifts in authority.
B. moral and religious pressure.
D. economic opportunities.
ANS: B
DIF: Medium
REF: The Modern Family
OBJ: Evaluate the role of macro-level social forces on courtship practices during the colonial,
pre-modern, and modern periods of U.S. history.
MSC: Analyzing
29. The family in the second half of the twentieth century was heavily impacted by:
A. reduced opportunity for women.
B. increased reliance on extended family for care.
C. reduction in government assistance programs.
D. reduction of the home as a place of work.
ANS: D
DIF: Easy
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Identify four broad historical trends that have changed the character of American
family life.
MSC: Analyzing
30. Between 1900 and 1965 the โindustrial revolutionโ of household technologies such as dishwashers and
microwave ovens impacted womenโs household labor in what way?
A. Women spent far fewer hours on housework.
B. Women spent even more hours on housework, but doing different things.
C. Women spent about the same amount of time on housework.
D. Housework began to be done by men.
ANS: C
DIF: Easy
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Describe the effects of the Industrial Revolution on family structure, household gender
roles, and the development of separate spheres.
MSC: Remembering
31. Over the course of the twentieth century, there was a trend in households from primarily
married-couple households toward:
A. no new dominant standard.
C. primarily single or cohabiting people.
B. non-family groupings.
D. a new standard of extended households.
ANS: A
DIF: Medium
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Identify four broad historical trends that have changed the character of American
family life.
MSC:
Understanding
32. In the late twentieth century, cultural changes in the meaning of and motivation for marriage evolved
in what way?
A. Economic pressure to stay married increased.
B. Emotional success became central to marriage success.
C. Choosing to remain single was increasingly discouraged.
D. Endogamy was strengthened.
ANS: B
DIF: Difficult
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Understand the reasons that the basis for marriage has transitioned over time from economic to
emotional, and the outcomes of this transition.
MSC: Understanding
33. Increasing physical separation of families:
A. heightened the personal value of independence.
B. reduced family diversity.
C. undermined peopleโs sense of freedom.
D. clarified the involuntary nature of modern family relationships.
ANS: A
DIF: Medium
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Understand the evolving role of extended family and kinship networks through
U.S. history.
MSC: Analyzing
34. The cultural value of independence can be observed in the context of all of the following social roles
EXCEPT:
A. worker.
C. family member.
B. citizen.
D. religious observer.
ANS: D
DIF: Medium
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Identify four broad historical trends that have changed the character of American
family life.
MSC: Analyzing
35. Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of modern grandparenting?
A. They may have longer-lasting emotional bonds with their grandchildren.
B. Due to physical distance, grandparent relationships are more voluntary.
C. They are more involved due to financial dependence on adult children.
D. They are doing more direct caregiving of grandchildren.
ANS: C
DIF: Easy
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Understand the evolving role of extended family and kinship networks through
U.S. history.
MSC: Understanding
36. Many women find themselves caring for adolescent children as well as aging parents. Social scientists
call this population:
A. caregivers.
C. the middle generation.
B. middle-aged.
D. the sandwich generation.
ANS: D
DIF: Easy
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Evaluate the long-term impact of historical oppression on family life for women, African
Americans, American Indians, and other immigrant groups.
MSC: Remembering
37. Middle-class and affluent families were the first to develop an emphasis on emotional bonds in family
life because:
A. popular culture and the media promoted this.
B. they had less need to consider the economic impact of mate selection.
C. they tend to be less religious.
D. they had more education.
ANS: B
DIF: Easy
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Understand the reasons that the basis for marriage has transitioned over time from economic to
emotional, and the outcomes of this transition.
MSC: Understanding
38. The increasing diversity of naming practices is indicative of:
A. ethnic diversity in the United States.
C. personal freedom.
B. cultural tradition.
D. individualism.
ANS: C
DIF: Medium
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Identify four broad historical trends that have changed the character of American
family life.
MSC: Understanding
39. Which of the following has NOT been a change to our understanding of childhood in the late twentieth
century?
A. Parents see their children as a project.
B. Emotional connections between parent and child are more acceptable.
C. Children are more likely to experience trauma.
D. Childhood is seen as a time of innocence.
ANS: C
DIF: Medium
REF: New Family Diversity
OBJ: Analyze the changing cultural meaning assigned to childhood, including scientific and religious
beliefs about parenting strategies.
MSC: Analyzing
40. Which of the following is NOT a major trend in the historical changes in American family life?
A. Family size has decreased.
B. The economic function of the family has been transformed.
C. Divorce rates have declined.
D. Families have become more diverse.
ANS: C
DIF: Easy
REF: The Modern Family
OBJ: Identify four broad historical trends that have changed the character of American
family life.
MSC: Evaluating
ESSAY
1. Identify two major social trends in the historical development of the American family from colonial to
modern times, explaining why they are significant.
ANS:
Students may discuss decreased family size, changing motivations for mate selection, the impact of
economic changes on family life, increased life expectancy, increased diversity, or changing gender
roles. Smaller family size is associated with a national trend toward greater individualism; individuals
are less likely over time to have extended family support and obligations. Mate selection moved from
being economically motivated to being motivated by personal fulfillment, another reflection of a focus
on individualism and personal satisfaction. The impact of changed gender roles has been pervasive.
Household division of labor has been transformed, and womenโs participation in the workforce has
given them social power they hadnโt had. For example, with economic independence, women are free
to leave unstable or unhappy marriages, surely one contributor to the gradually increased divorce rate.
DIF: Medium
REF: The Family in History
OBJ: Identify four broad historical trends that have changed the character of
American family life.
MSC: Analyzing
2. Describe what is known about prehistoric families and explain the significance of these findings for
our understanding of family in general.
ANS:
Burial practices among early humans tell us about endogamy and exogamy, family structure, the
existence of early nuclear families, and the early practice of family support in survival. We learned
about the spacing between siblings and family size. This tells sociologists more about the origins of the
nuclear family, parenting practices, and the social acknowledgment of extended family relationships.
DIF: Easy
REF: Early History
OBJ: Describe the significance of archaeological findings about prehistoric families on sociologistsโ
understanding of family arrangements throughout human history.
MSC: Understanding
3. Evaluate the role of religion, particularly the Christian church, on family norms and values in the
nineteenth century.
ANS:
In early American history, churches held the role now held by government. They determined the
validity of marriages, presided over ceremonies, and allocated power and money among family
members. Ideas on marriage and divorce based on Christian doctrine were imposed on all citizens. The
standard of monogamy, among other morals, was established into law through the power of religious
ideology.
DIF: Medium
REF: Origins of the American Family | The Emerging Modern Family
OBJ: Understand the influence of the Christian church on the development of norms of family
life in the United States.
MSC: Evaluating
4. Describe the impact of slavery on the family structure of African Americans throughout U.S. history.
ANS:
Students should address the lost customs and languages of diverse Africans brought as slaves. Social
scientists are often unsure which of the resulting cultural features of African American family life are
held over from African traditions and which are adaptations to slavery. Family lineage was difficult or
impossible to trace. Separation of parents and children was common.
After the Civil War, African American families were legally recognized, and some were reunited.
Emerging African American families were more egalitarian in gender roles and had strong extended
family and kinship networks.
DIF: Easy
REF: Origins of the American Family | The Emerging Modern Family
OBJ: Evaluate the long-term impact of historical oppression on family life for women, African
Americans, American Indians, and other immigrant groups.
MSC: Understanding
5. Analyze the impact of the Industrial Revolution on family structure, paying particular attention to
family structure, social class, and gender roles.
ANS:
Industrialization brought about an increase in individualism and a pronounced separation of the private
and public spheres. Families were no longer individual miniature economies. Students should
reference the โtraditional family,โ noting that it was not economically feasible for poor, working-class,
or minority families. Discussion of โseparate spheresโ and gendered division of labor will be
important.
DIF: Difficult
REF: Origins of the American Family | The Emerging Modern Family
OBJ: Describe the effects of the Industrial Revolution on family structure, household gender
roles, and the development of separate spheres.
MSC: Analyzing
6. Identify three specific examples of government influence over family life and describe their long-term
impact.
ANS:
Examples might include:
โข regulating marriage
โข allocating power and money within families
โข implementing mandatory โmonogamous moralityโ
โข defining obscenity (to include not only pornography but also birth control)
โข institutions for widows and orphans
โข aid to families in modern times, such as Women, Infants and Children (WIC) and Medicaid
DIF: Medium
REF: Origins of the American Family | The Emerging Modern Family
OBJ: Understand the historical role of government in defining family morality and supporting
disadvantaged families.
MSC: Understanding
7. Discuss the social construction of childhood, evaluating the experiences of children throughout U.S.
history as a reflection of broader cultural values.
ANS:
Response should indicate an understanding of the meaning of the โsocial constructionโ of childhood,
not merely describe the experiences of children throughout history. Response should explain the
economic role of children during colonial times, the view of children as having original sin, and the
changed view of childhood in later American history, wherein children are seen as innocent and
deserving of a carefree period of life.
DIF: Difficult
REF: Origins of the American Family | The Emerging Modern Family
OBJ: Analyze the changing cultural meaning assigned to childhood, including scientific and religious
beliefs about parenting strategies.
MSC: Evaluating
8. Describe the causes and consequences of the increased physical separation of extended families after
the Industrial Revolution.
ANS:
Families separated during and after the Industrial Revolution in the search for employment as farming
ceased to be the primary means of survival. Separation from extended family increased family
membersโ sense of individualism and underscored the voluntary nature of family relationships.
Students may define extended family and stem family. Another consequence of this separation is the
existence of vulnerable widows and orphansโAmericans who began to receive assistance from
government institutions, previously provided by extended families.
DIF: Medium
REF: Origins of the American Family | The Emerging Modern Family
OBJ: Understand the evolving role of extended family and kinship networks through
U.S. history.
MSC: Understanding
9. Evaluate the myths and realities of the idealized โtraditionalโ nuclear family in U.S. history.
ANS:
The main ideas to be covered here are a discussion of the makeup of a traditional family
(heterosexual, male breadwinner, female homemaker), the origins of this ideal (Industrial Revolution),
and its actual prevalence (only briefly did the majority of families take this form,
and never
was it possible for poor, working-class, or minority families). The fact that traditional families are
actually not that common is a result of economic forces and the increased social empowerment of
women.
DIF: Medium
REF: Origins of the American Family | The Emerging Modern Family
OBJ: Distinguish between the idealized โtraditionalโ nuclear family and the historical reality for
American families. MSC: Analyzing
10. Analyze the social forces and cultural values that led to changes in courtship practices between
colonial and modern times.
ANS:
Students should identify the changing courtship practices throughout U.S. history (courtship to dating)
and identify the social forces underlying that transition. Responses should address the move from
parental involvement to autonomous decision making in mate selection. The movement of religion out
of family life, in addition to the tendency toward more individualism and a view of marriage as a
source of personal fulfillment (not simply an economic transaction), contributed to these changes.
DIF: Difficult
REF: Origins of the American Family | The Emerging Modern Family
OBJ: Evaluate the role of macro-level social forces on courtship practices during the colonial,
pre-modern, and modern periods of U.S. history.
MSC: Analyzing
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