How Society Shapes Us
Social Forces at Work
Class & Race in Society
Life Stages and Social Roles
Wild Card
100

This sociological pioneer introduced the idea of the sociological imagination.

Who is C. Wright MIlls

100

This is the smallest type of social group, characterized by close personal relationships.

What is a primary group?

100

In the U.S. Census, this category is considered an ethnicity rather than a race. 

What is Hispanic or Latino?

100

In many cultures, this traditional family structure includes a mother, father, and their biological children living together.

What is the nuclear family?

100

This crime survey includes unreported crimes, unlike FBI data that only counts what police record.

What is the National Crime Victimization Survey?

200

These are the rules and expectations by which a society guides the behavior of its members.

What are norms?

200

According to Robert Merton, this term describes someone who breaks the rules to achieve a socially approved goal.

What is an innovator?

200

This term refers to any group that holds the most power, privileges and social status in a society regardless of its size.

What is a dominant group?

200

From this perspective, ageism is reinforced through everyday interactions and labels that define older adults as less capable.

What is symbolic interactionism?

200

COIL stands for this. 

What is Collaborative Online International Learning?

300

This term refers to the lifelong process by which individuals develop a sense of self and learn the patterns of their culture through interactions with others. 

What is socialization?

300

A prison, a mental hospital or a military boot camp are all examples of this kind of organization where daily life is controlled and regulated.

What is total institution?

300

A highly educated person working in a low-paying job is an example of this concept.

What is status inconsistency?

300

This term describes the expectation that people will marry someone with similar social characteristics.

What is endogamy? 

300

This concept describes the tension people feel when they occupy two conflicting social statuses, like being a wife and a caregiver?

What is role conflict?

400

According to Erving Goffman, this type of analysis compares everyday life to a theater performance.

What is dramaturgy?

400

This term refers to a system in which a society ranks categories of people in a hierarchy.

What is social stratification?

400

Race, gender and age are examples of this kind of social status.

What is ascribed status?

400

In female-dominated professions, men often experience this advantage that helps them progress more quickly in their career. 

What is glass escalator?

400

We discussed the work of this early sociologist who argues that whiteness functions as a global standard of power and domination. 

Who is WEB DuBois?

500

There are two broad types of culture, one made up of physical objects and the other of ideas and beliefs.

What are material and nonmaterial culture?

500

A teenager skips school, then starts getting into fights and is eventually expelled. Sociologists use this term in labeling theory to describe the process where a minor deviant act progresses to more serious infractions. 

What is secondary deviance?

500

This concept describes how race and class can work together to create overlapping systems of disadvantage.

What is intersectionality?

500

This is a new sociological term that has emerged as young adults choose to live with their parents rather than a spouse or a partner.

What is adultescence?

500

This in-depth research method involves immersing oneself in a social setting for extended observation and participation. 

What is ethnography?

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