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14 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
SOCIALIZATION |
Refers to a lifelong social experience by which people develop their human potential and learn culture. |
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ENCULTURATION |
Process by which people learn the requirements of their surrounding culture and acquire the values and behaviors appropriate or necessary in that culture. |
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JEFFREY J. ARNETT |
Sociologist who outlined his interpretation of the three primary goals of socialization. Has paper entitled "Broad and Narrow Socialization: The Family in the Context of a Cultural Theory" |
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SELF |
Is a sociological concept. |
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GEORGE HERBERT MEAD |
According to him, Self develops through social interactions--a set of situations where individuals learn to assume roles and meet the increasing level of complexity of each situation. |
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FERAL CHILDREN |
Children raised by animals and lived in extreme social isolation |
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IDENTITY FORMATION |
Is the development of an individual's distinct personality, which is regarded as a persisting entity in a particular stage of life by which a person is recognized or known. |
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SELF-CONCEPT |
Is the sum of a being's knowledge and understanding of his/herself. |
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SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS |
Is an awareness of one's self. |
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CULTURAL IDENTITY |
Is one's feeling of identity or affiliation with a group or culture. |
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ETHNIC IDENTITY |
Is the identification with a certain ethnicity, usually on the basis of a presumed common genealogy or ancestry. |
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NATIONAL IDENTITY |
Is an ethical and philosophical concept whereby all humans are divided into groups called nation. |
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RELIGIOUS IDENTITY |
Is the set of beliefs and practices generally held by an individual involving adherence to codified beliefs and rituals and the study of ancestral or cultural traditions, writings, history, and mythology, as well as faith and mystic experience. |
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MASTER IDENTITY |
Gives order to the operation of the other identities individually or collectively. |