Social Movements
Collective Behavior
Marriage and Family
Anything Goes
Social Stratification
100

Social Movements vs Social Movement Organization. 

SMO is a formal organization.

Social Movement: large numbers of people who organize either to promote or resist social change.  

Social Movement Organizations: formal group that actively works to further the goals of a social movement

100

Rumors and why people believe them.

Rumors: unverified information about some topic of interest. 

3 main factors of why people believe rumors: deal with a subject that is important to an individual, replace ambiguity with some form of certainty, are attributed to a credible source.

100

Compare and contrast: patriarchy, matriarchy, egalitarian.

Patriarchy: authority is vested in males

Matriarchy: authority is vested in females

Egalitarian: divided 

100

Three basic theories with definitions.

Functionalism, Conflict, Symbolic Interactionism

100

Federal Poverty Line

The official measure of poverty. Three times the cost of food. For a family of 4 it is $32,150 yearly (2025).

200

Declining Privilege Theory.

Focuses on those who have enjoyed relatively good circumstances in life and have experienced a decline in their status and power.

200

Fad vs Fashion

Fad: temporary pattern of behavior that catches people's attention

Fashion: an enduring version

200

Family of Orientation vs Family of Procreation.

Orientation - family you grow up with

Procreation - family you will create some day

200

Panic vs Moral Panic. 

Panic: condition of being so fearful that one cannot function normally and may even flee (ex. Beverly Hills Supper Club fire).

Moral Panic: a fear gripping people that some evil threatens the wellbeing of society. Ex. MoMo

200

Four Systems of Social Stratification.

Slavery, Caste, Estate, Class

300

Proactive vs Reactive Social Movements. Example of each.

Proactive social movements: promote social change because a current condition of society is intolerable. ex. Climate Change.

Reactive social movements: resist changing conditions in society that they perceive as threatening. ex. KKK.

300

Urban Legend with an example.

Urban legends are stories with an ironic twist that sound realistic but are false.

“modern morality stories” 

300

Discuss homogamy and propinquity.

Homogamy: the tendency of people with similar characteristics to marry one another. Often occurs largely because of propinquity (spatial nearness).

300

Define "norm" and provide three examples.

Norms are expectations on how we should behave. Normal, expected, standard.

Raising hand during class, walk on right hand side, wave.

300

Describe Gilbert and Kahl's social class ladder.

(6) Capitalist, upper middle, lower middle, working, working poor, underclass

Four variables were used when creating the model - education, power, property, prestige

400

Alternative vs Redemptive Social Movements.

Main difference: Alternative seeks to alter and aspect of individuals, while redemptive seeks to change the entire individual.

Alterative social movements: seek to alter only particular aspects of people. Example: Woman’s Christian Temperance Union 1900s (goal to stop alcohol consumption)

Redemptive social movements: seek to change people totally. Example: a religious social movement such as fundamental Christianity that stresses conversion

400

Blumer's five steps to an acting crowd.

  1. A background of social unrest exists

  2. An exciting event occurs

  3. People engage in milling

  4. A common object of attention emerges

  5. Common impulses occur, Collective excitement

End result is an acting crowd.

400

Cohabitation vs Marriage.

Cohabitation: live together

Marriage: legalized recognition of a union

Main difference is commitment - cohabitation, simply move out. Marriage requires a judge to end it.

400

The work of Marx Summarized.

class conflict, proletariat, bourgeois, means of production, class consciousness, revolution

400

Working Class vs Middle Class Childrearing.

Middle - "tender house plant" - more likely to reason

Lower - "wild flowers" - more likely to use physical punishment

500

Five stages of a social movement.

1. initial unrest and agitation

2. resource mobilization

3. organization

4. institutionalization

5. decline and death

500

Five types of participants in a crowd (Turner and Killian)

  1. the ego-involved: high personal stakes

  2. the concerned: some personal interest

  3. the insecure: little concern but like the crowd

  4. the curious

  5. the exploiters: do not care but use it for their own purpose

500

Six essential functions of the family.

1. Economic Production

2. Socialization of Children

3. Care of Sick and Aged

4. Recreation

5. Sexual Control

6. Reproduction

500

 Max vs Weber on Social Stratification

Marx - relationship to the means of production.

Weber - the three p's - power, property, prestige

500

Mosca on Stratification.

Leadership can only exist if there is inequality. 

No society is equal because leaders emerge and humans are self-serving.