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Socialization

Socialization. How society effects human development, nature v. nurture, are we prisoners of socialization. What is Human Nature?.

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Socialization

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  1. Socialization How society effects human development, nature v. nurture, are we prisoners of socialization

  2. What is Human Nature? Socialization is the process by which people learn the characteristics of their group- knowledge, skills, attitudes, values and actions appropriate for them • Nature and nurture effect human development • Societal interaction is a key to human development- shown in studies of feral and isolated children • Language, social contact and interaction allow humans develop in emotionally “healthy” human beings. This is known as the social environment (entire human environment including direct contact with others) • Language is not natural it is learned • The family is the primary agent of socialization

  3. Theories of Human Development • Humans develop reasoning skills, personality, emotions, morals and a sense of self through social observation, contact and interaction. • Major theories- Cooley’s “looking glass self”, Mead and role taking, Piaget and stages of development, Kohlberg’s stages of development, and Carol Gilligan’ stages of development.

  4. Looking Glass Self and Role Taking Looking Glass Self (1902) • Each to a looking glass reflects the other that doth pass. • Charles Cooley- coined the term. It is the process by which a person’s sense of self develops from interactions with others. • 1-Imagine how we appear to those around us 2-Intrperet others reactions 3- develop self- concept • The self is never a finished product, it is always a process Mead and Role Taking (1934) • In order to take the role of the other the person needs to put themselves in the other persons shoes • Not born with this ability- during childhood this is developed through play • Children first learn to take on the role of the significant other eventually take the role of the “generalized other”

  5. Three Stages of Role Taking • Three and Under- mimic gestures and words of others • Three to Six- Take role of others, firefighter, superhero • Games- play organized games that require them to take multiple roles

  6. “I” and “Me” and the Mind as a Product of Society • Self is divided into two parts-”I” and the “Me” • I is the self as subject, creative, active part of self • Me is the self as an object • Mead drew the conclusion that not only the self but the human mind is a social product • We think using symbols. • Symbols come from societies, like language. If society did not provide symbols we could not think • The mind is a product of society

  7. Piaget and the Development of Reasoning (1954) • Piaget concluded that children go through four stages as they develop the ability to reason • 1. Sensormotor stage • 2. Preoperational stage • 3. Concrete operational stage • 4. Formal operational stage

  8. Piaget and the Development of Reason • Sensormotor Stage • understanding limited to direct contact. • Can’t recognize cause and effect- • birth to age two • Preoperational Stage • do not understand common concepts like size and speed, do not understand numbers. • Can’t take the role of the other • Two to age seven

  9. Piaget and the Development of Reason • Concrete operational stage • Reasoning ability remains concrete • Children can understand causation • Take the role of others and participate in games • Need concrete examples to talk about concepts • Ages seven to twelve

  10. Piaget and the Development of Reason • Formal Operational Stage • Children capable of abstract thinking • Can talk about concepts based on general principles • Children know right from wrong without needing concrete examples • After age twelve

  11. Lawrence Kohlberg described development of moral reasoning (what we consider right and wrong) • As we develop we pass through levels of moral thinking

  12. Global Aspects of the Self and Reasoning • Cooley, Mead, Kohlberg and Piaget’s ideas are universal • Children enter stages at different times • Piaget’s main idea demonstrates that a basic structure underlies the development of reasoning, children all over the world begin with the concrete and move to the abstract • Some people get stuck in stage four of Kohlberg’s scale. Studies show that college nurtures stage five and people without this experience have less ability for abstract thought. • Social experience and culture can modify these stages.

  13. Freud and the Development of Personality • Along with development of the mind is the development of the personality • Sigmund Freud, Austrian psychologist theory of the three elements of personality • The id • The ego • The superego

  14. Freud and the Development of Personality • Id- all people are born with it. The inborn drive that leads us to seek self gratification. • Ego- the id is blocked by the needs of others. To adapt to these needs the ego develops. It is the balancing force between the id and societies needs to suppress it. • Superego- the culture within us. The norms and values we have internalized from our social groups. The moral component of our personality. • Freud does not take into account the fact that social class and roles in groups underlie our behavior

  15. Socialization and Emotions • Emotions essential to what we become. • depend on socialization • Six universal emotions- anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness and surprise • expressed differently in different cultures • byproduct of culture, class and relationship • Childhood socialization centers on learning the norms of emotion, how to express our emotions in a variety of settings

  16. The Self and Emotions as Social Control • Socialization is needed to turn us into conforming members of society • What factors influence how we act? • Our social mirror – the result of being socialized into a self and emotions- sets up effective controls to our behavior

  17. Socialization and Gender pp.75-78 • Society uses gender socialization that set different expectations for males and females • By adulthood most of us act, think and feel according to cultural guidelines, what is appropriate about our sex • Parents are the first significant others that teach us about our roles

  18. Gender and the Family • Studies show that boys are subconsciously rewarded for being active and independent and girls are rewarded for being passive and dependent • Boys and girls have different toys, play differently, boys get dirty, girls are more compliant • Socialization lies at the heart of male-female differences

  19. Gender Messages from Peers and Mass Media • Sorting process begins with family and continues with peer groups, individuals of roughly the same age linked by common interest • Television, movies and video games reinforce societies expectations of our behavior • Television and movies can reinforce stereotypes or display stereotype breaking characters • Are video games changing or reinforcing stereotypes? Read Mass Media in Social Life, page 79, and answer the questions. • Gender serves as the primary basis for social inequality-privileges and obligations given to one group and not another- makes gender images important to understand

  20. Agents of Socialization pp.78-85 • Groups that influence our orientation toward life- our self concept, emotions, attitudes and behavior- are called agents of socialization. • Major Agents of Socialization • The Family • The Neighborhood • Religion • Day Care • School and Peer Groups • Sports and Competitive Success • The Workplace

  21. The Family • Study of how working class families and middle class families raise their children. • Job type is a defining characteristic of child rearing style.

  22. The Neighborhood • Parents try to move to better neighborhoods Children from low income neighborhoods are more likely to get into trouble, get pregnant, drop out of school and have a disadvantaged life. More affluent neighborhoods people watch out for each other more because the population is more stable. This keeps children out of trouble and safe

  23. Religion • Religion influences values • 40% of Americans attend church regularly • Even people who do not go to church regularly religion provides a framework for morality • Teaches ideas about dress, speech, manners that are appropriate for formal occasions

  24. Latent and Manifest Functions • Latent functions- unintended consequences of people’s actions • Manifest functions- intended beneficial consequences of people’s actions

  25. Day Care • A study that followed children from age infancy to kindergarten reported that children that spent more time in day care than with their mothers were more uncooperative and unaffectionate toward their mothers. This was regardless of social class or the families social status • A positive finding was the children scored higher on language tests regardless of income or social status. This is probably due to the social interaction with other children at day care.

  26. School and Peer Groups • As children enter school the influence of the parents and family lessens • When this occurs there is a transfer of values too those of the peer group • Children separate themselves by sex group

  27. School and Peer Groups • School gives children a broader perspective that helps them prepare for the world beyond the family • Children learn universality- the same rules apply to everyone regardless of how special they may be at home • Corridor Curriculum-What students teach each other outside of classroom • Schools around the world reflect and reinforce their nation’s social, economic and political systems

  28. Boys Norms Athletic Ability Coolness Toughness Academic Achievement for boys lowered their popularity Girls Norms Popularity based on family background Physical appearance The ability to attract popular boys Academic achievement increased standing among peers School and Peer Groups

  29. School and Peer Groups • It is almost impossible to go against your peer group • Those who conform are “insiders”. Those that don’t are “outsiders”. • Standards of peer groups dominate our lives and influence our choices

  30. Sports and Competitive Success • Sports teach values- “how to be a team player” • Boys learn to achieve in sports to gain prestige • Encourages boys to develop instrumental relationships- those based on what you can get out of people • Girls construct their identities on meaningful relationships, not competitive success

  31. The Workplace • We learn different perspectives about the world from our co-workers and workplace • Before we become engaged in a career we become involved in anticipatory socialization-learning to play a role before entering it. This allows us to become familiar with a role and become aware what is expected of us • The more we participate in a line of work the more it becomes part of your self concept, people describe themselves by their line of work

  32. Resocialization pages 85-87 • Occurs when people learn new norms, values and attitudes to match their new situation. When new ideas become incorporated into the person, they view life as fundamentally different. • Examples of Resocialization • Divorce • Going to college • AA

  33. Total Institutions • A place where people are cut off from the rest of society and are totally controlled by the officials that run the place. • Examples • Boot Camp • Prison • Concentration Camps

  34. Total Institutions • When a person enters a total institution they go through a degradation ceremony • This is an attempt to strip away the persons identity- shaved head, take away personal items, undergo examination in public, given a uniform • All routine is standardized, takes away individuality • This experience brands a person for life

  35. Life Course pages 87-90 • The stages we go through in life from birth to death are the life course • As we pass through life it effects your behavior and orientations • Life course differs because of social location (corners in life people occupy because of where they are located in society) • Race , ethnicity, gender map out different experiences

  36. Childhood (Birth- 12) • Historically childhood was not a special time • Industrialization changed how we view childhood • They began to attend school, attitudes of dependency and children needing gentle guidance to develop emotionally, intellectually and morally. • Today this view is taken for granted and seen as natural • Technology can change the nature of childhood, TV images of war, rape, murder expose children to a world that used to be hidden from them. • In Least Industrialized Nations childhood is still not seen as a special time

  37. Adolescence (13-17) • Not a natural division but a social division • Industrial Revolution brought material abundance that allowed teens to stay out of the labor force, this stage created by society not biology • At the same time education became important , this created a gap between childhood and adulthood • In industrialized nations adolescents must find their own identity- leaving the younger world and not yet in the older world • Adolescents develop their own clothing, attitudes, language, music- their own subculture • In tribal societies there are initiation rites as a person passes from childhood to adulthood

  38. Transitional Adulthood (18-29) • Post industrial societies have extended adolescence, this period called transitional adulthood (adultolescence) • Mostly freed from control of parents, yet they do not have to support themselves • Young adults attend college, graduate and either establish a career or “find themselves” • At some point during this period people take on a full time job, get married , go into debt , etc.

  39. The Middle Years 30-65 • Early Middle Years 30-49 • People become sure of themselves and their goals in life • Women have trouble with the transition during this time- supermom, career, superwives • Pressures of too little time and too much to do • Many adjustments during this period

  40. Middle Years • Later Middle Years 50-65 • Health issues and morality play a role during this stage • Change in orientation of thinking- from birth to time left to live • Compare what they have accomplished with how far they hoped to go • Evaluation of the past and come to terms of what lies ahead • Many care for children and aging parents • Many enjoy job security and the children are grown • Idea of self is firmly planted and fewer upheavals are likely to occur

  41. Older Years 65 and on • In modern industrial societies the older years begin after 65 • Until the early 1900’s most people died before reaching this age, industrialization brought better public health and nutrition that prolonged life • Early Older Years- 65 to 80 • Many people view this as an extension of the middle years • The idea of death becomes less abstract • People feel time closing in on them • Later Older Years- 80 + • People see others around them pass away • Stage is marked by growing frailty and illness

  42. Sociological Significance of the Life Course • When you live and your social location determine your life course. • Being born ten years later or earlier can change the direction your life takes • Social Location- your gender, social class and race- is also significant. Societies events will have similar effects on people of the same social location • Individual factors also influence your life course. examples – marrying early, entering college late

  43. Are we Prisoners of Socialization? • We are not completely products of socialization- socialization does not go in and behavior comes out. • Socialization effects us all, but we each have a self. • The self is dynamic not a passive sponge, we are each actively involved in the construction of the self. • Some social institutions, like the family, provide us with the basic elements of our personality. We voluntarily join other social groups that have an effect on our self. People can change the self and social location along with the options available within society.

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