Chapter 5, Society, Social Structure and Interaction

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Groups Terms and Titles….
Advertisements

Society Changes over time
Chapter 5. What is social structure? Social Structure: the underlying patterns of relationships in a group 1.
SOCIAL INTERACTION Social interaction - emphasizes how people react when in the presence others. Social structure - patterned relationship between people.
C HAPTER 5: S OCIETY, S OCIAL S TRUCTURE, AND I NTERACTION.
Chapter 4 Social Structure
Social Interaction in Everyday Life
PEOPLE WHO INTERACT IN A DEFINED TERRITORY AND SHARE CULTURE
Social Structure and Social Interaction Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. This multimedia product and its contents are protected.
Social Interaction and Social Structure
Chapter Four Society and Social Interaction. Society Society is a large grouping that shares the same territory and is subject to the same political authority.
Some Important Sociological Concepts. © Copyright 2009 The McGraw Hill Company 2 Social Interaction Social interaction: the ways in which people respond.
Social Structure & Interaction in Everyday Life
Social Structure and Interaction in Everyday Life
SOCIAL INTERACTION IN EVERYDAY LIFE
Chapter 4 Social Structure: A Guide to Everyday Living
Social Interaction Chapter 4 (At least the last 7 pages of the chapter)
CHAPTER 5 SOCIAL INTERACTION.
Chapter 4: Society, Social Structure, and Social Interaction
Sociology In Our Times Chapter 5:
Chapter 5, Society, Social Structure and Interaction Social Structure: The Macrolevel Perspective Components of Social Structure Societies, Technology.
Chapter Four: Society and Social Interaction. Social Structure and Social Interaction Macrosociology  Large-Scale Features of Social Life Microsociology.
Social Structure and Social Interaction
Building Blocks of Social Structure Chapter 4 – Section 1.
Chapter Four - Social Structure. Food For Thought u “We are none of us truly isolated; we are connected to one another by a web of regularities and by.
Social Interaction and Social Structure
Society- population that occupies the same territory
Social Interaction, Social Structure, and Groups Chapter 5.
Society, Social Structure, and Interaction
&NR=1 Free hugs.
Social Interaction in Everyday Life What controls your social interaction? © Robert J. Atkins, Ph.D. 1.
Social structure. foundations of social structures statuses: the positions people occupy in a group or society statuses: the positions people occupy in.
Social Interaction in Everyday Life Social interaction is the process by which people act and react in relation to others In every society, people build.
Some Important Sociological Concepts. 2 Social Interaction Social interaction: the ways in which people respond to one another How we interact with people.
Chapter Four Social Interaction in Everyday Life.
Chapter 4 Social Structure and Interaction in Everyday Life.
Social Groups andOrganizations Chapter 6. Social group  Consists of a number of people who have a common identity, some feeling of unity, and certain.
© Copyright Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. CHAPTER 5 Social Structure and Interaction in Everyday Life.
Social Structure and Society
Social Structure & Society
Chapter 4: Social Structure & Social Interaction
Chapter 4, Social Structure And Interaction In Everyday Life Social Structure: The Macrolevel Perspective Components of Social Structure Societies: Changes.
Chapter 4 Society and Social Interaction What Is Society? Theories About Analyzing Social Interaction Forms of Nonverbal Communication Interpersonal Attraction.
Sociology Chapter 6 Social Interaction. Diff Questions
Chapter 4 Social Interaction. The process by which people act and react in relation to others Social construction of reality – the process by which people.
Previous units have looked into Socialization and the transmission of culture to society’s members This unit deals with the Structure, Organization &
Chapter 5 SOCIAL STRUCTURE AND SOCIETY. Social Structure and Status  Social Structure- the pattern of social relationships within a group. -Helps people.
Chapter 4 Social Structure And Interaction In Everyday Life.
Society, Social Structure, and Interaction Chapter Five.
Ch. 4: Social Structure and Social Interaction 2 ways to view world- macro/micro sociology 2 ways to view world- macro/micro sociology Social structure-
Social Interaction Groups, Institutions, & Social Construction of Reality.
The Microlevel Perspective
Social Interaction MeaningIdentitiesRolesInteractionsContexts.
Social Structure The complex framework of social institution and practices that establish limits on behavior.
Click anywhere to play. Status A socially defined position in a group or society characterized by certain expectations, rights, and duties Using your.
SOCIOLOGY CHAPTER 3 SOCIAL STRUCTURE. SECTION 1 SOCIAL STRUCTURE THE INTERRELATED STATUSES AND ROLES THAT GUIDE HUMAN INTERACTION.
Social Structure and Society
TYPES OF SOCIETIES WHAT DEFINES A SOCIETY?. SOCIETY IS ANY GROUP OF PEOPLE LIVING WITHIN DEFINED TERRITORIAL BORDERS AND WHO SHARE AC COMMON CULTURE.
Chapter 5 Social Structure and Interaction in Everyday Life.
Seeing and Thinking Sociologically
Social Structure The complex framework of social institution and practices that establish limits on behavior.
Socialization, Roles, and Statuses
Social Structure and Interaction in Everyday Life
Ch. 5: Social Interaction, Groups & Social Structure
Social Structure The complex framework of social institution and practices that establish limits on behavior.
Social Structure and Society
Social Structure and Social Interaction
Societies and Nations Key Terms
Some Important Sociological Concepts
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 5, Society, Social Structure and Interaction Key Terms

social interaction The process by which people act toward or respond to other people. social structure The stable pattern of social relationships that exist within a particular group or society.

status A socially defined position in a group or society characterized by certain expectations, rights, and duties. ascribed status A social position conferred at birth or received involuntarily later in life. (Examples: age, race/ethnicity, gender)

achieved status A social position a person assumes voluntarily as a result of personal choice, merit, or direct effort. (Examples: occupation, education) master status The most important status a person occupies; it dominates all of the individual's other statuses and is the overriding ingredient in determining a person's general social position.

status symbol Material signs that inform others of a person’s general social position. role A set of behavioral expectations associated with a given status.

role expectation A group's or society's definition of the way a specific role ought to be played. role performance How a person actually plays a role.

role conflict Occurs when incompatible role demands are placed on a person by two or more statuses held at the same time. role strain Occurs when incompatible demands are built into a single status that a person occupies.

role exit Occurs when people disengage from social roles that have been central to their self‑identity. social group Consists of two or more people who interact frequently and share a common identity and a feeling of interdependence.

primary group Small, less specialized group in which members engage in face‑to‑face, emotion‑based interactions over an extended period of time. secondary group A larger, more specialized group in which the members engage in more impersonal, goal‑oriented relationships for a limited period of time.

formal organization A highly structured group formed for the purpose of completing certain tasks or achieving specific goals. social institution A set of organized beliefs and norms that establish how a society will attempt to meet its basic social needs.

hunting and gathering society Use simple technology for hunting animals and gathering vegetation. pastoral societies Based on technology that supports the domestication of large animals to provide food.

horticultural societies Based on technology that supports the cultivation of plants to provide food. agrarian societies Use the technology of large-scale farming, including animal-drawn or energy-powered plows and equipment, to produce their food supply.

Industrial societies Based on technology that mechanizes production. postindustrial society One in which technology supports a service-and information-based economy.

mechanical solidarity Refers to the social cohesion in preindustrial societies where there is minimal division of labor and people feel united by shared values and common social bonds. organic solidarity Refers to the social cohesion found in industrial societies in which people perform very specialized tasks and feel united by their mutual dependence.

Gemeinschaft Traditional society in which social relationships are based on personal bonds of friendship, kinship and intergenerational stability. Gesellschaft Social bonds are based on impersonal and specialized relationships with little long‑term commitment to the group or consensus on values.

social construction of reality Process by which our perception of reality is shaped by the subjective meaning that we give to an experience. self-fulfilling prophecy A false belief or prediction that produces behavior that makes the originally false belief come true.

ethnomethodology The study of the commonsense knowledge that people use to understand the situations in which they find themselves. dramaturgical analysis Study of social interaction that compares everyday life to a theatrical presentation.

impression management People's efforts to present themselves to others in ways that are most favorable to their own interests or image. nonverbal communication The transfer of information between persons without the use of speech (e.g. facial expressions, head movements, body positions, and other gestures).

personal space The immediate area surrounding a person that the person claims as private.