In _____, children learn to consider the roles of several people simultaneously.
What is game stage?
100
The process of adopting new norms, values, attitudes, and behaviors
What is resocialization?
100
agent of socialization where children are taught to be less dependent emotionally on their parents
What is school?
100
The _____ is the part of the self created through socialization and which accounts for predictability and conformity.
What is "me"?
200
the film chosen for the Ch. 4 film analysis
What is Elf?
200
the cultural process of learning to participate in a group life
What is socialization?
200
The _____ informally and unofficially teaches discipline, order, cooperation, and conformity in preparation for life.
What is hidden curriculum?
200
_____ is the process of voluntarily preparing, in advance, for new norms, values, and attitudes.
What is anticipatory socialization?
200
In _____, the child copies, without understanding, the physical and verbal behavior of a significant other
What is imitation stage?
300
Groups whose norms and values are used to guide behavior – the group with whom you identify
What are reference groups?
300
Agent of socialization that provides images of achievement, success, activity, works, equality, and democracy
What is mass media?
300
The child’s _____ is about the same age and has the same interests.
What is peer group?
300
The _____ informally and unofficially teaches discipline, order, cooperation, and conformity in preparation for life.
What is hidden curriculum?
300
The idea of _____ is your image of yourself as being separate from other people.
What is self-concept?
400
the theoretical perspective that views socialization as a way for the powerful to stay powerful is this
What is conflict theory?
400
In _____, residents are separated from the rest of society, not free to manage their own lives.
What are total institutions?
400
One example of non-experimental evidence of socialization is _____ who was discovered in the 1930s after spending her life shut in a dark room with her deaf and mute mother.
Who is Isabelle?
400
the theoretical perspective that views socialization as a way to stabilize society is this
What is functionalism?
400
The process in which people give up old norms, values, attitudes, and behaviors, often meaning the destruction of old self-concepts, is this
What is desocialization?
500
One example of non-experimental evidence of socialization is _______ who was discovered in the 1930s after being locked in the attic by her mother and grandfather, fed only milk, and was so abused that she was unable to recover.
Who is Anna?
500
the people whose judgments are most important to our self-concept are called these
What are significant others?
500
_____ is a way of learning based on ideas of other’s judgments of us.
What is looking-glass self?
500
the theoretical perspective that views media as a way for children to learn the meaning of values is this
What is symbolic interactionism?
500
One example of non-experimental evidence of socialization is _______ who was discovered in the 1970s after being locked in a room by her parents for over ten years.