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Socialization, Social Groups, and Stratification

Socialization, Social Groups, and Stratification. The process of learning how to participate in a group Begins at infancy. Agents of socialization Family Peers Media Religion Education Work. Socialization. Looking Glass Self.

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Socialization, Social Groups, and Stratification

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  1. Socialization, Social Groups, and Stratification

  2. The process of learning how to participate in a group Begins at infancy Agents of socialization Family Peers Media Religion Education Work Socialization

  3. Looking Glass Self • An image of yourself based on what you believe others think of you • People shape themselves based on other people's perception, which leads the people to reinforce other people's perspectives on themselves

  4. Self Concept • An image of yourself as having an identity separate from others • Contains three parts: 1. Self-esteem it is where one makes judgments about his or her self-worth. • Stability refers to the organization and continuity of one's self-concept. • Self-efficacy is self-confidence. It is specifically connected with one's abilities, unlike self-esteem

  5. Social Interactions • The process of influencing each other as people relate

  6. Significant Other • Those people whose reactions are most important to your self concept

  7. Social Exchange • A voluntary action performed in the expectation of getting a reward in return • Social exchange theory states all human relationships are formed by the use of a subjective cost-benefit analysis and the comparison of alternatives. • If I help my mom she will give me gas money

  8. Coercion • Interaction in which individuals or groups are forced to behave a particular way

  9. Conformity • Behavior that matches the group’s expectations

  10. Group Think • Self deceptive thinking that is based on conformity to group beliefs and created by group pressure to conform

  11. Cooperation • Interaction in which individuals/groups combine their efforts to reach a goal

  12. Conflict • Interaction aimed at defeating an opponent

  13. Group/”Cliques” • Composed of people who share several features • Usually begins in early adolescence • Usually consist of five or six people who are homogeneous in age, gender, race, social status, and socioeconomic background • During late adolescence, the clique typically dissolves into associated sets of couples, which then remain the primary social unit into and throughout adulthood.

  14. Features of a group • Frequent contact with each other • Similar ways of thinking feeling and behavior • Similar reaction to one another’s behavior • One or more interests or goals

  15. Social Category • People who share a social characteristic Ethnicity/Nationality Occupation Gender Race Age Marital Status

  16. Social Aggregate • People temporarily in the same place at the same time but do not interact or share the same characteristics

  17. Mechanical Solidarity • People feel connected through similar work, educational and religious training, and lifestyle

  18. Organic Solidarity • Social cohesion based upon the dependence individuals have on each other in more advanced societies • Although individuals perform different tasks and often have different values and interest, the order and very solidarity of society depends on their reliance on each other to perform their specified tasks

  19. Status • A position a person occupies within a social structure

  20. Ascribed Status • Position that is neither earned nor chosen but it assigned

  21. Achieved Status • A position that is earned or chosen

  22. Master Status • A position that strongly affects most aspects of a person’s life Religious Beliefs Sexual orientation Age and Gender Race and Ethnicity

  23. Social Stratification • Division of large numbers of people according to power, property, gender and prestige. • This applies to nations, societies, sexes and other groups

  24. Social Class • Segment of society whose members hold similar amounts of resources and share values, norms, and identifiable lifestyles • Based on money and material things

  25. The amount of money received by an individual or group over a specific period of time Income

  26. Wealth • Total economic resources held by a person or a group

  27. Power • The ability to control the behavior of others even against their will

  28. Prestige • Recognition, respect, and admiration attached to social positions • Jobs that pay more, require more education, entail more abstract thought, offer greater autonomy • Job prestige brings power- Elite- the top people in corporations, military, politics that make nations major decisions • Different occupations have different levels of prestige

  29. False Consciousness • Adoption of the ideas of the dominant class by the less powerful class

  30. Class Consciousness • Identification with the goals and interests of a social class

  31. Absolute Poverty • The absence of enough money to secure life’s necessities

  32. Relative Poverty • Measure of poverty based on the economic disparity between those at the bottom of society and the rest of society

  33. Social Mobility • The movement of individuals or groups between social classes

  34. Horizontal Mobility • A change in occupation within the same social class

  35. Vertical Mobility • A change upward or downward in occupation status/social class

  36. Intergenerational Mobility • Class status change from one generation to the next

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