Theorists
Research
Culture
3 Paradigms
Ethical Concerns
100

Who made General Study of Literary Remains?

Ma Tuan-Lin wrote this encyclopedia 

100

What is the Hawthorne effect?

This occurs when people change their behavior because they know they are being watched

100

What is culture? 

This is comprised of shared values, beliefs, norms, rules, and languages

100

What are paradigms? 

These are philosophical and theoretical frameworks used within a discipline to formulate theories, generalizations, and the experiments performed in support of them 

100

Who maintains a code of ethics?

The American Sociological Association (ASA) maintains this

200

Who published The Study of Sociology

Herbert Spencer published this

200

What occurs in an experiment? 

Researchers investigate relationships to test a hypothesis

200

What is popular culture? 

This culture refers to the pattern of cultural experiences. 

200

What are examples of social institutions?

Government, education, family, healthcare, religion, and the economy. 

200

What made the Tuskegee Experiment unethical? 

This study did not tell participants their diagnosis. 

300

Who are the six early major European theorists 

Harriet Martieau, August Comte, Herbert Spencer, Georg Simmel. Emile Durkheim, Max Weber

300

What is secondary data analysis? 

This is analyzing data that is the completed work of other researchers 

300

What is ethnocentrism? 

Judging and evaluating another culture based on one’s own cultural norms. 

300

Who is a structural functionalist. 

Robert Mertin had this paradigm 

300

What was unethical about the Miligram Experiement

This study caused extreme emotional distress

400

Who studied social solidarity? 

Emile Durkheim studied this 

400

What is nonreactive research? 

This research does not involve direct contact with subjects

400

Why do cultures continuously change? 

New items are added to material cultures everyday 

400

What did Emilie Durkheim apply to Spencer’s theory?

To explain how societies change and survive over time

400

What was the Stanford prison experiment?

Students were put in the roles of prisoners and guards, and were required to play their assigned tole accordingly. 

500

The 1896-1897 study of the African American community in Philadelphia.

This is the study by W. E. B. Du Bois that was groundbreaking. 

500

What is a population? 

This is the people who are the focus of a study
500

What are norms? 

These are behaviors that reflect compliance with what cultures and societies have defined as good, right, and important

500

What is functionalism? 

This paradigm sees society as a structure with interrelated parts designed to meet the needs of the individuals in that society. 
500

What is value neutrality?

This is a practice of remaining impartial.