Test Bank Chapter 1 What Is Sociology And Why Should I Care? - Social Problems Action 1e | Solution Bank McNamara by Robert McNamara. DOCX document preview.
Chapter 1: What Is Sociology and Why Should I Care?
Test Bank
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 1
1) The general textbook definition of Sociology is
Section reference: 1
a. the practice of studying historic societies.
b. applying social skills and critical thinking to everyday life.
c. the belief that all human life can be measured by comparison of interactions.
d. the scientific study of society, culture, group behavior, and social interaction.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 2
2) Microsociology examines
Section reference: 1
a. individual day-to-day interactions, relationships, experiences.
b. large context of groups, social institutions, the functions of society.
c. relationships between people in small groups and isolated events.
d. comparison across societies from different cultures and time periods.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 3
3) Macrosociology examines
Section reference: 1
a. individual day-to-day interactions, relationships, experiences.
b. large context of groups, social institutions, the functions of society.
c. relationships between people in small groups and isolated events.
d. comparison across societies from different cultures and time periods.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 4
4) The goal of a Social Problems course is
Section reference: 1
a. to educate students about the unique social problems in the U.S. that have little hope of ever being solved.
b. to expose both the misguided notions about social problems that have contributed to conventional thinking, as well as offer examples of solutions based on critical thinking and careful observation that actually work.
c. to make students comfortable and confident in their own conventional thinking about the way the world works.
d. to promote a specific political agenda that all sociologists adhere to in their studies of society.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 5
5) Which of the following is NOT one of the three primary benefits of storytelling, according to Mehl-Madrona?
Section reference: 1
a. Stories allow us to understand a person’s world from their point of view and help us to develop empathy.
b. Stories offer a way to consider life beyond our own individual existence, and can stimulate thought about the possibilities of life and people’s places in it.
c. Stories help spark our imagination and relax; they are purely for entertainment purposes.
d. Stories can be instructive, because they frequently contain an element of morality which help demonstrate the formation of our social identities.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 6
6) The sociological perspective is
Section reference: 1
a. grounded in wanting to craft and promote specific narratives of the human story.
b. an unbiased approach to human social life, behaviors, groups, and interactions that can be focused on an individual level or a broader societal level.
c. sharing one’s own individual beliefs and experiences to contribute to broader conventional thinking.
d. a combination of anthropology, history, psychology, political science, and economics.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 7
7) C. Wright Mills defines the sociological imagination and suggests that the “promise” of sociology is found in
Section reference: 1
a. the expression of a sociologist’s personal world view and imparting one’s unique wisdom for the world.
b. telling the story of an individual and/or their social groups by identifying the intersection between biography and history, or the interplay between the person and the world.
c. macrosociology and understanding the big picture of how the world works.
d. the practice of theorizing explanations for how other countries can become more developed like the U.S.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 8
8) How can the sociological imagination be applied to the Covid-19 pandemic?
Section reference: 1
a. By examining the individual lifestyle choices and behaviors that determine how people will make it through the pandemic.
b. By comparing the U.S. epidemiological response and government recover efforts with that of other countries.
c. By considering specific segments of the population, features of the health care system, as well as specific industries in our economy where there are many forces beyond individuals’ control that influence how people are able to manage the pandemic physically and financially.
d. By unpacking the lessons learned from past pandemics the world has faced and applying those historical lessons to today’s issues.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 9
9) How do sociologists handle their own bias in their work?
Section reference: 1
a. Sociologists embrace their biases and prejudices in their work in order to offer their own unique wisdom and conventional thinking to the greater understanding of society.
b. One can never be certain that they are being completely objective. Given these difficulties, the objective and unbiased sociological perspective is a goal to aspire to rather than an absolute technique or provable tactic.
c. By virtue of the scientific method, sociologists are able to abandon all bias and prejudice in their studies of the social world.
d. The discipline of sociology is equipped with a diverse set of world views and perspectives that is collectively responsible for reviewing all work and culling out any individual bias in any given study.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 10
10) The three foundational theories in sociology—structural functionalism, conflict theory, and symbolic interactionism—are often referred to collectively as
Section reference: 2
a. classical sociological theory.
b. socialism.
c. contemporary sociological theory.
d. Social Science.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 11
11) Which of the following is NOT a useful metaphor for understanding the perspective of structural functionalism?
Section reference: 2
a. The interplay in a society of important institutions such as the government, the education system, health care, and the economy
b. The interrelationships of individual and distinct human body parts that are collectively responsible for keeping the human body alive
c. The inequality and unequal treatment across different race/ethnicity groups in a society
d. The parts of a clock all working interdependently to perform the tasks of keeping and displaying the time
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 12
12) Examples of social institutions include all but which of the following:
Section reference: 2
a. Racism
b. Legal system
c. Mass Media
d. Religion
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 13
13) According to structural functionalism, if something does not contribute to society in a positive way, then that condition or phenomenon is considered
Section reference: 2
a. dysfunctional.
b. obsolete.
c. deviant.
d. contradictory.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 14
14) Three key points to remember about structural functionalism are balance, contributions to society, and
Section reference: 2
a. equity: fair and just access to opportunities.
b. synergy: how the parts of society fit together.
c. justice: equal distribution of resources.
d. philanthropy: promoting the welfare of others.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 15
15) The basis of structural functionalism comes from the work of the French philosopher _____ considered the father of sociology, and the French sociologist _____ whose work was central to the development of sociology as a whole and structural functionalism in particular.
Section reference: 2
a. Auguste Comte (1798-1857); Émile Durkheim (1858-1917)
b. Émile Durkheim (1858-1917) ; Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
c. Charles Darwin (1809-1882) ; Émile Durkheim (1858-1917)
d. Auguste Comte (1798-1857) ; Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 16
16) What was the term Durkheim used to describe the integration that people experience as a result of having similar lifestyles and performing the same or similar tasks and traditions as part of a whole well-functioning system?
Section reference: 2
a. Mechanical solidarity
b. Organic solidarity
c. Gemeinschaft
d. Gesellschaft
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 17
17) What was the term Durkheim used to describe the integration that people experience as a result of being divided in their labors and more specialized such that relationships are developed based on need from each other?
Section reference: 2
a. Mechanical solidarity
b. Organic solidarity
c. Gemeinschaft
d. Gesellschaft
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 18
18) Durkheim felt that in those societies characterized by ______, the collective conscience would be strong, as people in such societies are on the same page with regard to social life; however, this becomes more difficult with increasing industrialization and division of labor.
Section reference: 2
a. heterogeneity
b. anomie
c. organic solidarity
d. mechanical solidarity
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 19
19) According to Durkheim, which type of suicide is attributed to normlessness, where the norms that organize people’s lives no longer have value or are broken, causing people great fear and anxiety?
Section reference: 2
a. Fatalistic
b. Egoistic
c. Anomic
d. Altruistic
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 20
20) While ______ tends to focus on a consensus model to explain the social order (where everyone is on the same page about social life), ______ argues that this does not reflect the way the world actually works.
Section reference: 2
a. conflict theory ; symbolic interactionism
b. symbolic interactionism ; conflict theory
c. functionalism ; symbolic interactionism
d. functionalism ; conflict theory
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 21
21) Which sociological theory argues that those with economic, social, and political power will use that power to keep what they have and to prevent others from acquiring it or even challenging it?
Section reference: 2
a. Functionalism
b. Conflict theory
c. Symbolic interactionism
d. Postmodern theory
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 22
22) Under capitalism, Karl Marx (1818-1883) said that society consists of which classes, divided in what way?
Section reference: 2
a. The aristocracy and the peasants separated by land ownership
b. The traditionalists who preferred mechanic solidarity and the revolutionaries who were pushing for organic solidarity
c. Men and women divided by the patriarchy division of labor
d. The bourgeoisie (owners) and the proletariat (workers) divided by ownership of the means of production
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 23
23) Both conflict theorists, ______ was completely focused on class relations in the capitalist system whereas ______ was more interested in the ways that our economic structure is kept in place by our culture, interactions, value system, and norms.
Section reference: 2
a. Durkheim ; Marx
b. Marx ; Weber
c. Durkheim ; Weber
d. Comte ; Marx
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 24
24) Max Weber (1864-1920) argued that in capitalism and its related society, people became trapped in
Section reference: 2
a. a verstehen (understanding) where a sympathetic understanding of the true human condition is strong and overshadows the profit motive.
b. chaotic and normless lives that are unstructured and only motivated by greed and profit.
c. an iron cage of rationality whereby people do not realize how limited they have become in their reliance on logic and technology in place of their traditions, values, and emotions.
d. stagnant cycles of starting and failing at new businesses without any efficient, goal-oriented, or logical processes.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 25
25) What is the purpose of Erving Goffman’s (1922-1982) concept of dramaturgy?
Section reference: 2
a. To demonstrate that we are all acting and following scripts in our interactions, hoping to achieve good impression management when we are performing front stage, and able to be our true selves when we are backstage.
b. To recognize how people can become very dramatic if they are unable to achieve their goals or conform to the rules of society.
c. To explain the dynamics between the different actors and roles of the bourgeoisie, the proletariat, and the lumpenproletariat.
d. To illustrate that all of life is a stage, and people are free to authentically express themselves without fear of how their audience will perceive them.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 26
26) An intersectional theory approach incorporates
Section reference: 3
a. perspectives from two or more founding classical sociological theorists.
b. the overlapping views of functionalism, conflict theory, and symbolic interactionism.
c. multiple intersecting issues of power and control in society and how each intersection is distinct across variables such as gender, race/ethnicity, social class, and sexual orientation.
d. theories from sociology as well as psychology and criminology.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 27
27) Which theorists were among the first to see the connections between popular culture and capitalism, and were also among the first to note the influence of the media in shaping people’s understanding of social institutions and various classes of people?
Section reference: 3
a. Critical theorists
b. Conflict theorists
c. Feminist theorists
d. Queer theorists
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 28
28) This theory began with the Civil Rights movement and focuses on institutional discrimination.
Section reference: 3
a. Feminist theory
b. Critical race theory
c. Critical theory
d. Intersectional theory
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 29
29) This theory highlights mini-narratives offering varying insights and explanations of a given event as opposed to grand narratives which serve to justify dominant beliefs.
Section Reference: 3
a. Postmodernism
b. Critical theory
c. Feminist theory
d. Queer theory
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 30
30) Deconstructionism refers to
Section reference: 3
a. pursuit of an objective truth to explain the human life.
b. taking apart and examination of existing narratives and explanations of life, rather than the pursuit of an objective truth.
c. abolishing dominant social institutions in favor of communism.
d. encouraging people to break down their false narratives and identities to embrace their back-stage selves.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 31
31) The conclusions drawn from sociological research are generally based on
Section reference: 4
a. causality.
b. statistical proof.
c. probabilities.
d. educated guesswork.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 32
32) In order for a survey’s results to be generalizable, the respondents to the survey must be
Section reference: 4
a. interested and excited to participate in the survey.
b. the entire population of a given group of interest.
c. a representative sample of a given population.
d. manipulated or tricked into giving raw and honest answers as opposed to risking their performance of impression management.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 33
33) In a scientific experiment, what is a control group?
Section reference: 3
a. The group of sociologists or social scientists that is charged with carrying out a valid study
b. The variable that is manipulated to see what kind of impact its change may have on the dependent variable
c. The cause and effect variable—the one we want to see changed in some way
d. The group that does not experience any intervention or change in the independent variable in order to serve as a safeguard and comparison group for the experimental group
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 34
34) In sociology, what methods are used most commonly?
Section reference: 4
a. Surveys and qualitative designs
b. Autobiographies
c. Embedded multi-year ethnographies
d. Experimental and quasi-experimental designs
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 35
35) Instead of large representative samples and using mathematical calculations to describe the population under study, _____ researchers study fewer cases in more depth and detail.
Section reference: 4
a. quasi-experimental
b. qualitative
c. theoretical
d. quantitative
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 36
36) Participant observation research is another term for
Section reference: 4
a. biographical analysis.
b. quasi-experimental analysis.
c. representative sample survey.
d. ethnography.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 37
37) The ultimate goal of ethnographic research is ______, which means writing about what was seen, heard, and understood in such a way that the reader gets a vivid image, as if they were standing next to the researcher as he or she made those observations.
Section reference: 4
a. replicability
b. generalizability
c. deconstruction
d. thick description
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 38
38) What is a life history approach?
Section reference: 4
a. Ethnography
b. A researcher tells their own story and analyzes it sociologically.
c. The researcher interviews subjects repeatedly over time to gain detailed insights into a respondent’s behavior and attitudes.
d. Using biographical and archival data
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 39
39) The example of the domestic violence diversion program director who told the author that the program had “a 100% success rate” because no offender ever returned to the program demonstrates that
Section reference: 4
a. most well-meaning organizations and programs do not require sociological analysis to determine if they are achieving their goals.
b. people do not generally understand how statistics operate.
c. most people have not been trained in how to conduct and evaluate social science research to best answer questions such as how successful a given program may be.
d. it is extremely difficult to confront macro-level scale social problems when people have unrealistic perspectives.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 40
40) In defining a social problem, C. Wright Mills focuses on
Section reference: 5
a. personal issues that individuals are unhappy about and want to discuss with a professional.
b. problems that affect a large number of people and is a topic deemed worthy of societal intervention in the form of programs, laws, and/or policies.
c. individual struggles that the larger society thinks are unimportant but that cause even a small number of people to suffer.
d. public issues that are often debated as to whether they have positive or negative impacts on society.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 41
41) When enough people in a society agree that a condition or situation exists that threatens the quality of their lives and their values, and they further agree that something should be done about that condition, this constitutes
Section reference: 5
a. a social problem.
b. organic solidarity.
c. personal troubles.
d. class consciousness.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 42
42) C. Wright Mills would designate the issue of teenage access and addiction to prescription painkillers nationwide as a _____ and the struggle of one family with a daughter who is abusing painkillers as a _____
Section reference: 5
a. personal issue ; public trouble.
b. personal trouble ; public issue.
c. public trouble ; personal issue.
d. public issue ; personal trouble.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 43
43) Claims makers are people who
Section reference: 5
a. have professional or educational expertise in order to be qualified to determine or claim whether or not an issue is a social problem.
b. identify a problem or condition in society as harmful to others and make the claim (backed by evidence and credentials) that the public should pay attention to the issue.
c. share their personal experience with an individual struggle that helps inform public debates over whether or not to claim a struggle is a social problem.
d. seek to profit from falsely identifying social problems so that they can formally represent individuals who file claims about those issues.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 44
44) Two key factors in defining a social problem are
Section reference: 5
a. major media campaigns and educational outreach.
b. powerful individual stories of suffering and federal government policy attention.
c. large-scale negative impact on many people and widespread agreement that the issue is worthy of concern.
d. political backing and public consensus that a given issue is solvable.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 45
45) Some claims makers have influence in society to convince people of the importance of a given issue and attempt to shape and reshape the society’s cultural values on an issue—usually by changes in laws and/or social policy. These people are known as
Section reference: 5
a. moral entrepreneurs.
b. professional claims makers.
c. lobbyists.
d. systemic attributors.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 46
46) Which stage of the evolution of a social problem involves claims makers and moral entrepreneurs bringing about awareness and promoting actions be taken to face a given issue?
Section reference: 5
a. Stage 1: Identifying the problem
b. Stage 2: Elevation of the problem
c. Stage 3: Debating the causes
d. Stage 4: Changing social policy
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 47
47) Social problems are generally attributed to factors beyond any one individual’s control due to structural factors. This is referred to as
Section reference: 5
a. social constructionism.
b. personal attribution.
c. systemic attribution.
d. moral entrepreneurship.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 48
48) Contextualizing one drunk driver’s failure to moderate alcohol intake and/or avoid driving by focusing on the broader failure of laws to better prevent and punish drunk driving is an example of
Section reference: 5
a. social constructionism.
b. personal attribution.
c. systemic attribution.
d. moral entrepreneurship.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 49
49) Sociologists contribute to Stage 4 in the evolution of a social problem by
Section reference: 5
a. confirming whether a given issue is related to personal or systemic attribution.
b. advocating for change and positioning with one side of a given debate.
c. researching an issue to see if it merits a designation as a social problem.
d. analyzing and providing accurate information about a problem to inform policymakers, or even by applying their expertise to offer insight and guidance to influence policy changes or approaches.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 1 Question 50
50) This view essentially argues that social problems are determined by people (such as policymakers, the general public, or other influential people in society) as part of a very subjective and political process.
Section reference: 5
a. Social constructionism
b. Personal attribution
c. Systemic attribution
d. Moral entrepreneurship
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Social Problems Action 1e | Solution Bank McNamara
By Robert McNamara