Ch 1 - Introduction to Sociology
Ch. 2 - The Meaning of Culture
Ch. 3 - Deviance & Social Control
Ch. 4 - Social Structure
Ch. 5 - Socializing the Individual
100

The scientific/systemic study of social behavior in human groups

What is the definition of sociology?

100

The physical objects that people create and use to form groups vs abstract human creations. 

What is the difference between Material & Nonmaterial Culture?

100

The enforcing of norms through either internal or external means

What is social control? 

100

One of these occurs when fulfilling the expectations of one status makes it difficult to fulfill the expectations of another status, while the other occurs when a person has difficulty meeting multiple expectations within a single status.

What is the difference between Role Conflict & Role Strain?

100

The debate over whether personality and behavior are determined entirely by genetics or entirely by environmental factors. 

What is nature vs nurture? 

200

This man tried to apply scientific thinking to the study of social life. Often considered the "founding father of sociology".

Who was Aguste Comte?

200

Technology, Symbols, Values, Language, Norms 

What are the 5 Components of Culture? 

200

Behavior that violates important social norms, defined by society and varying across cultures and time periods.

What is deviance? 

200

Exchange, competition, conflict, cooperation, accommodation


What are the 5 types of social interaction? 

200

A study done on a girl who was isolated and deprived of social interaction during childhood, used to study how extreme neglect affects language and social development.

What was the "Genie: The Wild Child" case study?

300

Applied the idea of “survival of the fittest” to society, arguing that social problems were natural and that governments should not interfere because society would improve on its own.

Who was Herbert Spencer?

300

These are social norms that describe everyday acceptable behavior with little moral weight, versus norms that carry strong moral significance and, when broken, are seen as threatening society’s stability.

What is the difference between a Folkway & More? 

300

Functionalist Approach, Conflict Theory, and the Interactionist Perspective

What are the 3 sociological approaches to explaining deviance? 

300

A ranked organizational system that operates through division of labor, formal qualifications, rules and regulations, and clear authority and promotion structures.


What is Webers model of beurocracy? 

300

The Family, the Peer Group, the School, the Mass Media

What are the 4 agents of socialization? 

400

Historical Method, Content Analysis, Survey Method, Observation, Case Study, and Statistical Analysis

What are the 6 sociological research methods?

400

These are the three levels of cultural organization that include individual traits like helmets or rules, combined into a complex like a football game, and then into broader patterns like the NFL.

What are the components of a cultural diagram? 

400

Sanctions used to punish criminals. Used for retribution, deterrence, rehabilitation, and social protection.


What is corrections and its 4 basic functions?

400

The tendency for groups to make riskier decisions than individuals alone, and a group with beliefs viewed by most as strange or unorthodox.

What is risky shift and a cult? 

400

Sensorimoter stage (2 years), Preoperational stage (2-7 years), Concrete Operational stage (6-7 years), Formal Operational stage (12 years)

What are the 4 stages of cognitive development?