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35 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
family
two or more people related by birth, marriage ,or adoption residing in the same unit
household
all people who occupy a housing unit regardless of a relationship
family of origin
family into which we are born or brought into by adoption
family of procreation
family unit that is formed when we marry and produce children
nuclear family
consists of a biological father, a biological mother, and their biological or adopted children
extended family
a family unit where two or more generations of close family relatives live together in one household
familism
an extended family that consists of several generations
single-parent family
result from divorce, death of a spouse, or unmarried parenthood
childless/childfree
unable to conceive or bear children or adopt/no children as a choice
socioeconomic status (SES)
government's measure of the family's relative economic and social ranking within a community
gini index
expresses the degree of income inequality in a society, breaks down into quintile (5) levels of income, ranging from poorest to richest
Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA)
confirms that marriage is a legal union of one man and one woman as husband and wife
monogamy
two-person form of marriage, practice of having one sexual partner
monogamism
belief that monogamy is the only true morally and socially appropriate type of marriage or love relationship
polygamy
practice of having more than one marriage partner
polygyny
practice of a man having multiple wives at the same time
polyandry
woman have multiple husbands at the same time
cenogamy
group marriage, every man and woman is married to each other at the same time
developmental tasks
achieving certain biological, physical, cognitive/intellectual, social, emotional, and spiritual tasks across the lifecourse
normative
tasks that come at relatively predictable points in our lives
on-time events
walking between 1-2 years, physical changes between 10-16 years, more independence and freedom, etc.
off-time events
events that occur at atypical points in the lifespan...like: when a teen gives birth
non-normative
kids getting cancer, children dying, severe reading disability, socially delayed
infancy
0-2 years, babies learn to walk, talk, and trust their caregivers. baby earns that the world is a secure place
early childhood
2-6 years, play years, learning social and emotional skills. learn empathy, and show concern for others' feelings
middle childhood
7-12 years, the school years. attempt to master physical, emotional, and relational skills, tolerance for diversity develops, sexual development
adolescence
13-21 years, children begin to discover who they are, rapid body changes, moral understanding,
early adulthood
22-34 years, form and engage in emotionally mature intimate relationships, learn to steer the course in interdependence, mutuality, and reciprocity in relationships
middle adulthood
35-60 years, adults look beyond themselves and focus their energies on the next generation and on others, such as their aging parents. mature unselfish
late middle ages
60-70 years, begin to take steps to pass torch to next generation,
late adulthood
75+, grief, loss retrospection, are benchmarks, come to grips with the legacy they will leave to future generations, must accept death
psychosocial
social and emotional aspects of development
family life cycle
comprises multiple exits and entrances from the family of origin (baby born, kids off to college, death in family)
attained SES (socioeconomic status)
parents' socioeconomic status, typically, family's SES is associated with its social class or social rank
SES of origin
describes a child's family's socioeconomic status ,