Ch. 10
Families
Ch. 13
Communities
Ch. 1
Aspects of Human Behavior
Ch. 7
The Physical Environment
Ch. 9
Social Institutions & Social Structure
100
An instrument used to depict a chronology of key dates and events in a family's life and can be used to locate both stressors and strengths.
What is a family time line.
100
People bound either by geography or by webs of communications, sharing common ties, and interacting with one another
What is community.
100
Patterns of groups differences refers to?
What is diversity.
100
Ease in movement through and use of an environment.
What is accessibility.
100
A set of human interactions developed by human beings to impose constraints on human interaction for the purpose of the survival and well-being of the collectivity.
What is social structure.
200
A series of crisis depletes the families resources and expose the family to increasing risk of very negative outcomes.
What is stress pileup.
200
A society that is standardized and homogenized, with no ethnic, class, regional, or local variations in human behavior
What is mass society.
200
Interconnections within personal networks are known as?
What is mesosystems.
200
Extent to which an environment facilitates personalization and conveys territorial claims to space.
What is control.
200
The social institution that helps manage the flow of information, images, and ideas is which social institution?
What is mass media.
300
An approach where the social worker focuses on relationships within the family rather than on individuals family members.
What is family system perspective.
300
Community cohesion is the same as.
What is social capital.
300
When something exists outside of a person's consciousness this is?
What is objective reality.
300
Degree to which an environment facilitates or inhibits social interaction among people.
What is sociality.
300
Patterned ways of organizing social relations in a particular sector of social life
What is social institutions.
400
An approach that looks at how families change over time and propose normative changes and tracks at different stages.
What is family life cycle perspective.
400
The second element of a community is based on size and heterogeneity of community membership.
What is community range.
400
Understanding human behavior to be the result of interactions of biological, psychological, and social systems is known as?
What is biopsychosocial approach.
400
Quality and intensity of stimulation as experienced by various sensory modalities.
What is sensory stimulation.
400
A concept endorsed by Social scientists who emphasize the capacity of humans to create their own realities and who give central roles to human actors, not social structures.
What is human agency.
500
Unexpected stressful events that can quickly drain a family's resources.
What is non-normative stressors.
500
The two types of communites within the contrasting types approach, one based on personal and traditional relationships, the other based on impersonal and contractual relationships.
What is gemeinschaft and gesellschaft communities.
500
Understanding human behavior as changing configurations of a person and environment over time is the?
What is multidimensional approach.
500
Ease with which people can conceptualize key elements and relationships within an environment and effectively find their way.
What is legibility.
500
Defining inequity as the natural, divine order and the fact that no efforts should be made to alter it.
What is conservative thesis.