Social Networks
Stratification
Work
Neighborhoods
Education
100

This kind of social tie can be useful when looking for new information or job opportunities.

What are WEAK TIES?

100

Established patterns of beliefs, behaviors, and relationships organize social life (aka stories we tell ourselves).

What are SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS.

100

The expectation that mothers will be primary caregivers combined with mothers being given less flexibility at work is this.

What is the DOUBLE BIND?

100

The ability of your neighborhood to influence education, economic, and health outcomes is known as this. 

What are NEIGHBORHOOD EFFECTS?

100

This is what students learn in school outside of the official curriculum.

What is the HIDDEN CURRICULUM?

200

A group of people who share cultural, demographic, and social similarities are considered this.

What is HOMOGENOUS?

200

This term describes the ability to move between socioeconomic strata.

What is SOCIAL MOBILITY.

200

A man receiving increased wages or workplace advantages after becoming a father is an example of this phenomenon.

What is FATHERHOOD BONUS?

200

The HOLC's color-coded residential safety maps are an example of this historical practice of discrimination. 

What is RED-LINING?

200

Differences in academic performance between groups of students are often referred to as this.

What is the STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT GAP?

300

In a diagram of a social network, the part in the shape of a circle is called this.

What is a NODE?

300

Being born into a wealthy family is an example of this kind of status. 

What is ASCRIBED STATUS? 

300

The concept describing women's lower pay as being a product of occupational selection.

What is QUEUING?

300

These government-led public projects displaced many low-income and minority communities across the United States.

What is URBAN RENEWAL.

300

This belief system presumes schools fairly reward talent, effort, and ability without consideration of structural inequalities.

What is MERITOCRACY?

400

The ability to gain resources or advantages through relationships and social connections is known as this. 

What is SOCIAL CAPITAL?

400
This theorist conceptualized class as a combination of economic resources, power, and prestige. 

Who is MAX WEBER? 

400

Women receiving significantly lower wages compared to men and child-free women. 

What is the MOTHERHOOD WAGE PENALTY?

400

This occurs when racial prejudice, housing markets, and discrimination shape residential patterns and neighborhood opportunities.

What is PLACE STRATIFICATION?

400

Neighborhood effects often impact educational outcomes because most public schools are largely funded through these.

What are PROPERTY TAXES?

500

This concept describes how strongly a person is connected to a set of direct and indirect ties.

What is EMBEDDEDNESS?

500

This person argued that social connections and cultural knowledge hold value akin to money. 

Who is PIERRE BOURDIEU?

500

Put together, the motherhood penalty and fatherhood premium demonstrate how which social institution shapes economic opportunity?

What is FAMILY? 

500

The color that HOLC city surveyors coded the most "desirable" communities.

What is GREEN?

500

This occurs when multiple institutions, such as race and class, work together to produce unequal outcomes. 

What is SYSTEMIC INEQUALITY?