Midterm 1 Vocab Flashcards
weeks 1-5 (79 cards)
Postmodernism
a condition characterized by a questioning of the notion of progress and history, the replacement of narrative within pastiche, and multiple, perhaps even conflicting, identities resulting from disjointed affiliations
Social Construction
an entity that exists because people behave as if it exists and whose existence is perpetuated as people and social institutions act in accordance with the widely agreed-upon formal rules or informal norms of behavior associated with that entity
Midrange Theory
a theory that attempts to predict how certain social institutions tend to function
Microsociology
a branch of sociology that seeks to understand local interactional contexts; its methods of choice are ethnographic, generally including participant observation and in-depth interviews
Macrosociology
a branch of sociology generally concerned with social dynamics at a higher level of analysis—that is, across the breadth of a society
Sociology
Study of human society
Sociological imagination
the ability to connect the most basic, intimate aspects of an individual’s life to seemingly impersonal and remote historical forces
Social Institution
a complex group of interdependent positions that, together, perform a social role and reproduce themselves over time; also defined in a narrow sense as any institution in a society that works to shape the behavior of the groups or people within it
Verstehen
German for “understanding.” The concept comes from Max Weber and is the basis of interpretive sociology in which researchers imagine themselves experiencing the life positions of the social actors they want to understand rather than treating those people as objects to be examined
Anomie
a sense of aimlessness or despair that arises when we can no longer reasonably expect life to be predictable; too little social regulation; normlessness
Positivist Sociology
a strain within sociology that believes the social world can be described and predicted by certain observable relationships (akin to a social physics)
Double consciousness
a concept conceived by W. E. B. Du Bois to describe the two behavioral scripts, one for moving through the world and the other incorporating the external opinions of prejudiced onlookers, which are constantly maintained by African Americans
Functionalism
the theory that various social institutions and processes in society exist to serve some important (or necessary) function to keep society running
Conflict Theory
the idea that conflict between competing interests is the basic, animating force of social change and society in general
Symbolic Interactionism
a micro-level theory in which shared meanings, orientations, and assumptions form the basic motivations behind people’s actions
Research Methods
approaches that social scientists use for investigating the answers to questions
Quantitative Methods
methods that seek to obtain information about the social world that is already in or can be converted to numeric form
Qualitative Methods
methods that attempt to collect information about the social world that cannot be readily converted to numeric form
Deductive Approach
a research approach that starts with a theory, forms a hypothesis, makes empirical observations, and then analyzes the data to confirm, reject, or modify the original theory
Inductive Approach
a research approach that starts with empirical observations and then works to form a theory
Correlation / Association
simultaneous variation in two variables
Causality
the notion that a change in one factor results in a corresponding change in another
Reverse Causality
a situation in which the researcher believes that A results in a change in B, but B is causing A
Dependent Variable
Outcome researcher is trying to explain