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1

The Latin word where “community” was derived, meaning “common” or “shared.”

Communis

1

Any activity that aims to increase the understanding, engagement, and empowerment of communities for the intention of giving services to people.

Community action

1

A community formed based on needs, ideas, interests, identity, practices, and roles in social institutions.

Nongeographical community

1

The perspective that views the community as composed of people interacting with one another, sensitive to emotions and subjective points of view.

Social science perspective

1

The field that examines biology, behavior, culture, and social interactions of humans.

Anthropology

2

It specifically talks about community sentiments where it refers to the state of its members having a feeling of belongingness.

Sense of Common Sentiments

2

The changes in the community brought about by social, cultural, and environmental experiences.

Community dynamics

2

The critical approach characterized by alterations of cultural attitudes, values, behavior, or social organization.

Social change

2

The critical approach in community dynamics that focuses on the community’s capacity to control activities and resources.

Community power relations
2

Enumerate the three types of communities based on a sociological perspective.

Urban, rural, suburban

3

This discipline studies the human mind, brain, and social behavior. This extends to interaction between people and interpersonal relationships.

Psychology

3

The institutional dimension defined as an existing establishment or physical space where members go for a certain purpose.

First dimension

3

Enumerate the five dimensions of a community

Political, Social, Economic, Geographical, Cultural

3

The field that studies production, allocation, and consumption of goods and services.

Economics

3

Briefly explain why “A community has a name” is considered a characteristic of a community.

A community has a name because having a name makes communities unique and identifiable to others.

4

The critical approach requiring leaders to lead members toward shared objectives.

Leadership

4

The key point of community action that raises awareness about communal issues.

Understanding

4

The field concerning ways of allocating power, influence, and decision-making.

Political science

4

It describes that community has multiple and continued shared goals and fulfillment of various ends.

Fulfillment of wider ends

4

Enumerate the three key points in understanding the definition of community action.

Understanding, engagement, empowerment

5

This perspective highlights volunteerism. Members of communities may involve themselves in various programs or activities.

Local and Grassroots Perspectives

5

A community where members share the same geographical vicinity such as a village, province, or neighborhood.

Geographical community

5

A network of human relationships that are connected to one another either by norms, religion, values, or identity.

Community

5

This field is the study of society, social order, social interactions, and culture. It introduces the concepts of social capital and communitarianism.

Sociology

5

It explains the connection between the individual and the community.

Communitarianism