Deviance and Stratification of the Underprivileged
... drugs; however, the danger from law enforcement and violence associated with drugs would hardly be called a comfortable wealth. Thus, things like a good education and healthcare are denied. The respect or regard with which a person or status position is regarded by others or prestige (Kendall, 253) ...
... drugs; however, the danger from law enforcement and violence associated with drugs would hardly be called a comfortable wealth. Thus, things like a good education and healthcare are denied. The respect or regard with which a person or status position is regarded by others or prestige (Kendall, 253) ...
Attitude Formation and Change
... Attitudes are created by first creating beliefs. Consumer beliefs are the knowledge that a consumer has about objects, their attributes, and the benefits provided by the objects. Consumer beliefs are created by processing information--cognitive learning. ...
... Attitudes are created by first creating beliefs. Consumer beliefs are the knowledge that a consumer has about objects, their attributes, and the benefits provided by the objects. Consumer beliefs are created by processing information--cognitive learning. ...
Social marketing
... • A fear appeal needs a threat, something bad will happen, and a recommended response that will help to avoid the threat. ...
... • A fear appeal needs a threat, something bad will happen, and a recommended response that will help to avoid the threat. ...
Sociology 100, Spring Quarter 2007
... Review Guide for Exam #3: Friday, May 18, 2007 The exam will consist of any combination of the following: multiple choice, short answer, matching, and fill in the blank. Questions on the exam are based on the following materials: Henslin textbook, Chapters 7 & 9; Howard Readings 10, 11, & 14; and th ...
... Review Guide for Exam #3: Friday, May 18, 2007 The exam will consist of any combination of the following: multiple choice, short answer, matching, and fill in the blank. Questions on the exam are based on the following materials: Henslin textbook, Chapters 7 & 9; Howard Readings 10, 11, & 14; and th ...
Ch. 7 Deviance & Social Control
... identifying particular members as deviant • Sometimes of two people breaking the norm only one may be labeled a deviant – Teenage pregnant mom vs. the father ...
... identifying particular members as deviant • Sometimes of two people breaking the norm only one may be labeled a deviant – Teenage pregnant mom vs. the father ...
Social-Cognitive Models and Skills
... (1980) presented aggressive and nonaggressive boys from grades two, four, and six with four stories involving ambiguous provocation (e.g., milk is spilled on the child and the provocateur’s intent is unclear). In two of the stories the provocateur was an aggressive classmate (identified by name) and ...
... (1980) presented aggressive and nonaggressive boys from grades two, four, and six with four stories involving ambiguous provocation (e.g., milk is spilled on the child and the provocateur’s intent is unclear). In two of the stories the provocateur was an aggressive classmate (identified by name) and ...
A model for the new frontier of social work
... Soon after this approach was initiated the New Zealand Christian Council of Social Services developed its Poverty Indicator Project (PIP). This was a national project aimed at routinely gathering structured information about poverty as experienced by food bank users. The aim of this data gathering w ...
... Soon after this approach was initiated the New Zealand Christian Council of Social Services developed its Poverty Indicator Project (PIP). This was a national project aimed at routinely gathering structured information about poverty as experienced by food bank users. The aim of this data gathering w ...
1 The risk society
... key explanatory variables such as class and gender. As Lash and Urry suggest, for post-modernists, ‘all that is solid about organised capitalism, class, industry, cities, collectivity, nation-states, even the world, melts into air’ (1987: 313). Other theorists have been more cautious in their interp ...
... key explanatory variables such as class and gender. As Lash and Urry suggest, for post-modernists, ‘all that is solid about organised capitalism, class, industry, cities, collectivity, nation-states, even the world, melts into air’ (1987: 313). Other theorists have been more cautious in their interp ...
Buried Prejudice: The Bigot in Your Brain
... their everyday lives. These included avoiding or excluding blacks socially, uttering racial slurs and jokes, and insulting, threatening or physically harming black people. In a second study reported in the same paper, Rudman and Ashmore set up a laboratory scenario to further examine the link betwee ...
... their everyday lives. These included avoiding or excluding blacks socially, uttering racial slurs and jokes, and insulting, threatening or physically harming black people. In a second study reported in the same paper, Rudman and Ashmore set up a laboratory scenario to further examine the link betwee ...
- White Rose Research Online
... Policies and practical approaches to change individual’s actions are based on academic theories ranging from the theory of planned behaviour from social psychology to the sociology of habits and practice. There is a tendency for policies to be based on a school of thought such as the ‘nudge unit’ re ...
... Policies and practical approaches to change individual’s actions are based on academic theories ranging from the theory of planned behaviour from social psychology to the sociology of habits and practice. There is a tendency for policies to be based on a school of thought such as the ‘nudge unit’ re ...
Chapter One
... • Categorization: Classifying People into Groups – Spontaneous categorization • Social identity theory implies that those who feel their social identity keenly will concern themselves with correctly categorizing people as us or them • Necessary for prejudice ...
... • Categorization: Classifying People into Groups – Spontaneous categorization • Social identity theory implies that those who feel their social identity keenly will concern themselves with correctly categorizing people as us or them • Necessary for prejudice ...
Innovations in communication: need for new ideas to engage the
... to have users and followers who generate influence, who, in addition to informing, are able to present information in a favourable light, link, motivate and direct the communication. This is a great change from the past, when communication was controlled by the brands. Therefore, the brand’s audienc ...
... to have users and followers who generate influence, who, in addition to informing, are able to present information in a favourable light, link, motivate and direct the communication. This is a great change from the past, when communication was controlled by the brands. Therefore, the brand’s audienc ...
Booklet social - Beauchamp Psychology
... as the Cold War with the Soviet Union was just beginning and activities regarded as ‘unAmerican’ were frowned upon and even discouraged. People were very concerned about stepping out of line and appearing to be different. Perrin and Spencer (1981) used a similar set-up as Asch and found virtually no ...
... as the Cold War with the Soviet Union was just beginning and activities regarded as ‘unAmerican’ were frowned upon and even discouraged. People were very concerned about stepping out of line and appearing to be different. Perrin and Spencer (1981) used a similar set-up as Asch and found virtually no ...
ACTIVE SOCIAL SYMBOLIC SELVES: THE PRAGMATIC TRADITION WITHIN AMERICAN SOCIAL SCIENCE
... has many affinities with both. Historically, there were some connections among them: all had common roots in Hegel; Vygotsky read and cited James and Dewey; Simmel and Husserl read and cited James; Thomas and Park did dissertation work under Simmel in Germany; Schutz interpreted James’s theories (se ...
... has many affinities with both. Historically, there were some connections among them: all had common roots in Hegel; Vygotsky read and cited James and Dewey; Simmel and Husserl read and cited James; Thomas and Park did dissertation work under Simmel in Germany; Schutz interpreted James’s theories (se ...
Midterm Study Guide
... Midterm Study Guide Key Terms and Concepts Your midterm will be comprised of approximately 70 multiple choice questions. Your test will cover all material introduced in class thus far, plus chapters 1-6 from the text. The list of terms and concepts below should aid you in your study. The number of a ...
... Midterm Study Guide Key Terms and Concepts Your midterm will be comprised of approximately 70 multiple choice questions. Your test will cover all material introduced in class thus far, plus chapters 1-6 from the text. The list of terms and concepts below should aid you in your study. The number of a ...
Chapter One - Webcourses
... Perception of outgroup members as more similar to one another than are ingroup members Own-race bias Tendency for people to more accurately recognize faces of their own race ...
... Perception of outgroup members as more similar to one another than are ingroup members Own-race bias Tendency for people to more accurately recognize faces of their own race ...
Alastair Crombie Active Maladaptive Strategies
... coherence and consistency and, more positively, as Angyal puts it, synergy. system in which development is uneven or unbalanced, or which lacks an effective central coordinating mechanism, may survive well enough, but will not achieve the economies of effort that synergy implies. ...
... coherence and consistency and, more positively, as Angyal puts it, synergy. system in which development is uneven or unbalanced, or which lacks an effective central coordinating mechanism, may survive well enough, but will not achieve the economies of effort that synergy implies. ...
The Good Subject Motive and the Apprehensive Subject Motive: An
... that the evidence on subject motives was for the most part equivocal at best. With scanty evidence in the psychological literature in general, and seemingly equivocal evidence in the attitude literature, one wonders if the methodological recommendation of Kiesler !:!. al. (1969) might not be prematu ...
... that the evidence on subject motives was for the most part equivocal at best. With scanty evidence in the psychological literature in general, and seemingly equivocal evidence in the attitude literature, one wonders if the methodological recommendation of Kiesler !:!. al. (1969) might not be prematu ...
Sociology Ch. 3 S. 3 Social Change
... change among US citizens soon developed. Responding to public pressure, Congress passed a number of civil rights laws, including the voting Rights Act of 1965. This act outlawed the various methods that had been used to deny African American the vote. ...
... change among US citizens soon developed. Responding to public pressure, Congress passed a number of civil rights laws, including the voting Rights Act of 1965. This act outlawed the various methods that had been used to deny African American the vote. ...
Prejudice as an Attitude
... Toronto Police Service, 31 Division advises of the following incidents that occurred off-campus: On Monday, September 30, 2002 at approximately 8:50 P.M., two male suspects approached a male student from behind while walking alone on Shoreham Drive, near the intersection of Jane Street and Finch Av ...
... Toronto Police Service, 31 Division advises of the following incidents that occurred off-campus: On Monday, September 30, 2002 at approximately 8:50 P.M., two male suspects approached a male student from behind while walking alone on Shoreham Drive, near the intersection of Jane Street and Finch Av ...
Scope and Sequence Texarkana Independent School District 2009
... The individual in society. The student understands behavioral, social learning, and cognitive perspectives of motivation to describe his or her role and impact on economic systems. The student is expected to: apply various perspectives of motivation to a given economic (A) situation such as the choi ...
... The individual in society. The student understands behavioral, social learning, and cognitive perspectives of motivation to describe his or her role and impact on economic systems. The student is expected to: apply various perspectives of motivation to a given economic (A) situation such as the choi ...
Types of Social Groups - HOPE Schoolof Leadership
... Another negative effect of groups is social loafing, which is the tendency for people to exert less effort to achieve a goal when they are in a group. This goes against the adage that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. I'm sure you can think about school groups that you've been a part o ...
... Another negative effect of groups is social loafing, which is the tendency for people to exert less effort to achieve a goal when they are in a group. This goes against the adage that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. I'm sure you can think about school groups that you've been a part o ...
Social Dominance Theory: The Explanation behind Social Hierarchy
... Dominance Theory (SDT). The theory was constructed with a foundation from a variety of preexisting psychological models, social-psychological models, structural-sociological models, and lastly evolutionary models (Sidanius & Pratto 1999). Though Sidanius and Pratto drew from several interdisciplinar ...
... Dominance Theory (SDT). The theory was constructed with a foundation from a variety of preexisting psychological models, social-psychological models, structural-sociological models, and lastly evolutionary models (Sidanius & Pratto 1999). Though Sidanius and Pratto drew from several interdisciplinar ...
Dynamic Social Impact and the Evolution of Social Representations
... across a social space become, over time, distributed into clusters that define cultural knowledge o r beliefs (Latane, this issue). DSIT thus offers a very simple set of rules through which we can understand why cultural stereotypes are generally, but not perfectly, consensual and how they may diffe ...
... across a social space become, over time, distributed into clusters that define cultural knowledge o r beliefs (Latane, this issue). DSIT thus offers a very simple set of rules through which we can understand why cultural stereotypes are generally, but not perfectly, consensual and how they may diffe ...
Attitudes and the Spiritual Life-003
... In being a type of attitude they imply that a person can have different mental postures towards a proposition, for example, believing, desiring, or hoping, and thus they imply intentionality.Linguistically, they are denoted by an embedded "that" clause, for example, 'Sally believed that she had won' ...
... In being a type of attitude they imply that a person can have different mental postures towards a proposition, for example, believing, desiring, or hoping, and thus they imply intentionality.Linguistically, they are denoted by an embedded "that" clause, for example, 'Sally believed that she had won' ...