Question 11 pts Corporal Punishment is another way of saying: Group of answer choices Putting your child in time out in a dedicated space Punishing your child Children in juvenile detention Spanking or other physical punishment Flag question: Question 2 Question 21 pts Family is a term that is difficult to define. When studying sociology it is important to remember that: Group of answer choices Sociologists only consider people who live in the same household to be a family. Sociologists only consider traditional marriage as a requirement to be a family. Sociologists try to keep the definition open so that people who walk by each other on the street are a family. Sociologists try to keep the definition open to encompass all types of people who are deeply emotionally close to each other. Flag question: Question 3 Question 31 pts Open mate selection means: Group of answer choices People are increasingly likely to date and marry a person of a different race, religion, or education level Choosing a partner opens up a new type of stress for young adults People are more likely to live together openly without being married, rather than living together secretly Young people are choosing to be in open, non monogamous relationships rather than monogamous relationships Flag question: Question 4 Question 41 pts Male victims of IPV are most likely to report which type of violence? Group of answer choices Rape and sexual assault Physical violence Financial abuse Emotional abuse Flag question: Question 5 Question 51 pts In which part of the family life cycle, do sociologists point to as the most stressful time for a marriage? Group of answer choices The engagement period. The birth of the first child. The first year of marriage. The birth of the last child. Flag question: Question 6 Question 61 pts Passing on one’s heritage, possessions, and wealth is: Group of answer choices Generally based on one’s relationship with one’s younger siblings. Generally based on lineage, which is defined by one’s culture and family. The right of the first born female in every country in the world. The right of the first born male in every country in the world. Flag question: Question 7 Question 71 pts Peter finds that he always reacts differently to correction from his father than from his mother. What might a symbolic interactionist studying families make of this situation? Group of answer choices Peter plays different roles with his father and mother. Peter needs professional counseling. Peter’s lack of respect for his mother means he’ll probably get divorced when he’s older. Peter needs a sibling. Flag question: Question 8 Question 81 pts The majority of children who do not live with their parents are: Group of answer choices Living with their grandparent(s) Living with an aunt or uncle Living with foster parents Living with their older brother or sister Flag question: Question 9 Question 91 pts To a conflict theorist, marriage and families are fascinating because: Group of answer choices Within the family are social standings and power struggles All teenagers always fight with their parents. No one ever gets what they want, so everyone compromises. All married men and women fight every single day of their lives. Flag question: Question 10 Question 101 pts Watching television shows can be a good way to understand and study families because: Group of answer choices They teach us how a family on screen can represent the values of the era in which they aired. They teach us how to think through the consequences of certain actions. They teach us what the ideal family should look like. They teach us how to behave when parents get upset. Flag question: Question 11 Question 111 pts What is one of the biggest challenges facing groups and organizations that try to prevent intimate partner violence (IPV)? Group of answer choices The victims of IPV do not report the abuse. IPV is not taken seriously by the court system. IPV almost never happens, so it is difficult to locate and predict. Most people do not know what IPV is. Flag question: Question 12 Question 121 pts What is the relationship, if any, between people who cohabitate and then get married, and those people who wait to live together after they marry when it comes to divorce? Group of answer choices It does not matter because divorce occurs when two people are incompatible and does not depend on how long people have lived with each other. Cohabitating, unmarried partners have a slightly lower divorce rate after they get married than those who don’t cohabitate until after marriage. Cohabitating, unmarried partners have the exact same divorce rate as the people who don’t cohabitate until marriage. Cohabitating, unmarried partners have a slightly higher divorce rate after they get married than those who don’t cohabitate until after marriage. Flag question: Question 13 Question 131 pts Which factors do sociologists suspect were the cause for such a high divorce rate during the 1960’s? Group of answer choices Most people divorcing in the 1960’s grew up during World War II and struggled to make the austerity of their childhood correlate with their more abundant and fruitful lifestyles in the 1960’s. Men were granted more freedom and often allowed to work from home which put more strain on their marital relationships, and which also coincided with women becoming more educated and more aware of their legal rights. There was an increase in women working outside of the home, and also, greater social acceptance of divorce. The 1960’s saw the birth of the zero-tolerance concept, which many men and women applied to their marriages, and which, many in society thought a great idea. Flag question: Question 14 Question 141 pts Which of the following is NOT a reason why the average age of first marriage in America is rising? Group of answer choices lack of desire for marriage in general economic uncertainty more people going to college and graduate school decreasing stigma of premarital sexual activity Flag question: Question 15 Question 151 pts Why do sociologists find the study of family to be so important when trying to grasp the mores and norms of a culture? Group of answer choices Families provide for each other as well as carry out and teach a particular culture to other members of the family. Families almost never reinforce the values of the society in which they live, and thus can bring about change without much effort. Families are so isolated from society at large that they become tiny independent societies. Families tend to be apathetic towards culture whereas young unmarried people reinforce social rituals and ideologies. Flag question: Question 16 Question 161 pts Which of the following is NOT a major recent trend in the American family? Group of answer choices Couples are getting married younger More and more households are “non-traditional” in format Cohabitation rates are rising fast Fertility rates are declining Flag question: Question 17 Question 171 pts Sociologists have adopted the phrase, “the graying of the United States.” What does this phrase mean? Group of answer choices With industrialization and the building of big cities, there is very little green nature left and everything is the color of steel. Gray is culturally considered beautiful and thus people are bleaching their hair. People are living under so much stress now, that they are going gray early. An increasingly large percentage of the population is reaching the age of 65 and entering old age. Flag question: Question 18 Question 181 pts Longer life expectancy is a reflection of women’s better health status than men’s. Group of answer choices True False Flag question: Question 19 Question 191 pts Elizabeth Kübler-Ross’s book On Death and Dying added much content knowledge to which field? Group of answer choices Ontology Teleology Thanatology Metrology Flag question: Question 20 Question 201 pts Some conflict theorists ascribe to the idea that as time and technology move forward, elderly people are left behind and they lose social standing and power. Which specific theory does this describe? Group of answer choices Age stratification theory Modernization theory Continuity theory Exchange theory Flag question: Question 21 Question 211 pts What is the approximate divorce rate for couples on their first marriage? Group of answer choices 15% 20% 30% 50% Flag question: Question 22 Question 221 pts Your aunts and uncles are part of your: Group of answer choices Family of procreation Family of orientation Extended family Nuclear family Flag question: Question 23 Question 231 pts Which mass cultural change indirectly shaped the modern form of marriage? Group of answer choices The Industrial Revolution The Agricultural Revolution The onset of postmodernism The rise of feminism Flag question: Question 24 Question 241 pts Across the world, the vast majority of marriages when one spouse is married to several other spouses (who are not married to each other are specifically: Group of answer choices Polygynous Polygamous Polyamorous Polyandrous Flag question: Question 25 Question 251 pts Which of the following is NOT a way that families regulate sex? Group of answer choices Disallowing cohabitation Tying inheritance to legitimate offspring Requiring religious acknowledgement of marriage Limiting sex to marriage Flag question: Question 26 Question 261 pts Conflict Theorists would see class and power in which family arrangement? Group of answer choices A woman leaving her own children in the Philippines to work as a nanny in the US New parents in Canada switching off months of paid parental leave Each child in a family having different chores Families from different cultures having different traditions Flag question: Question 27 Question 271 pts In heterosexual couples in the US today, which is true of housework and childcare? Group of answer choices Housework and watching kids isn’t real work Women do far more in-home work, regardless of the amount of outside work This conflict is caused by kids doing fewer chores than they did in the past Men and women do equal work when time inside and outside of the home are added Flag question: Question 28 Question 281 pts What are some social realities our families shape? Group of answer choices Defining who makes up a family, following hegemonic norms of society, creating definitions of being a “good” mom/dad/child/etc Shaping financial position, structuring norms around politeness and manners, creating definitions of being a “good” mom/dad/child/etc Defining who makes up a family, structuring norms around politeness and manners, creating definitions of being a “good” mom/dad/child/etc Defining who makes up a family, structuring norms around politeness and manners, following external laws Flag question: Question 29 Question 291 pts Which of the following is NOT a reason why cohabitation rates are rising in the US? Group of answer choices Increasing cost of living Increasing secularization in young people Increasing acceptance of sexual activity outside of marriage Increasing age at which couples have their first child Flag question: Question 30 Question 301 pts Which of the following is NOT a reason why birth rates are decreasing in theUS and globally? Group of answer choices Increasing immigration to developed nations Increasing numbers of people moving from rural to urban environments Increasing rates of education for women and girls Increasing access to contraceptives Flag question: Question 31 Question 310 pts I promise that this work represents my own understanding and that I have used only allowed resources. Group of answer choices True False ChatGPT
Here are the answers to the questions based on the provided content:
- Spanking or other physical punishment
- Sociologists try to keep the definition open to encompass all types of people who are deeply emotionally close to each other.
- People are increasingly likely to date and marry a person of a different race, religion, or education level.
- Emotional abuse
- The birth of the first child.
- Generally based on lineage, which is defined by one’s culture and family.
- Peter plays different roles with his father and mother.
- Living with their grandparent(s)
- Within the family are social standings and power struggles.
- They teach us how a family on screen can represent the values of the era in which they aired.
- The victims of IPV do not report the abuse.
- Cohabitating, unmarried partners have a slightly higher divorce rate after they get married than those who don’t cohabitate until after marriage.
- There was an increase in women working outside of the home, and also, greater social acceptance of divorce.
- Lack of desire for marriage in general.
- Families provide for each other as well as carry out and teach a particular culture to other members of the family.
- Couples are getting married younger.
- An increasingly large percentage of the population is reaching the age of 65 and entering old age.
- True
- Thanatology
- Modernization theory
- 50%
- Extended family
- The Industrial Revolution
- Polygynous
- Requiring religious acknowledgement of marriage
- A woman leaving her own children in the Philippines to work as a nanny in the US
- Women do far more in-home work, regardless of the amount of outside work.
- Defining who makes up a family, structuring norms around politeness and manners, creating definitions of being a “good” mom/dad/child/etc
- Increasing age at which couples have their first child
- Increasing immigration to developed nations
- True